Munich – Around Town : Schwabing & University District (part 1)

Encompassing Schwabing,
Maxvorstadt, and the fringes of Lehel, this district covers the entire
area lying to the left and right of Ludwigstraße and Leopoldstraße. At
the beginning of the 19th century, the expansion of the Old Town north
and west of Odeonsplatz began with the development of Maxvorstadt, then a
suburb. This is where you will find numerous museums, the university,
polytechnics, colleges, and libraries. Schwabing, an idyllic suburb to
the north, became a well-known bohemian district inhabited by artists
and intellectuals toward the end of the 19th century. Even today, you
can still feel the flair of this interesting area, the centre of Art
Nouveau in Germany.

Jugendstil

Munich is the
birthplace of Jugendstil, the German equivalent to Art Nouveau. In 1896,
the first issue of the art journal Jugend (Youth) was published here,
which gave the new movement – characterized by its decorative, linear
style of undulating tendrils and plant stems – its name. Over 100
artists had joined forces to protest the “tyranny” of painter baron
Franz von Lenbach.




Sights

  1. Ludwigstraße & Siegestor

    After
    the old town wall was pulled down, Ludwig I commissioned a monumental
    boulevard in the Italian Renaissance style – the Ludwigstraße (1815–50).
    This splendid street is bounded by the Feldherrnhalle to the south and the Siegestor (Victory Gate) to the north. Based on the Arch of
    Constantine in Rome, the Siegestor is crowned by the figure of Bavaria
    riding a chariot drawn by four lions. Designed for victory parades in
    honour of the Bavarian army, the gate, damaged in World War II, has been
    restored. The 1958 inscription reads “Dedicated to victory, destroyed
    in war, an entreaty for peace.”




    Siegestor (Victory Gate)

  2. Ludwigskirche

    Designed
    in the Italian Romanesque style, St Ludwig’s Church (1829–43) is home
    to the second-largest church fresco in the world .




  3. Bayerische Staatsbibliothek

    The
    Bavarian State library is the second-largest municipal library in
    Germany, with more than 6 million volumes, 70,000 manuscripts, and
    valuable handwritten documents and prints. It has as its nucleus the
    16th-century collections of Albrecht V and Wilhelm V. Today’s building
    is the work of F von Gärtner (1832–43) in the style of Italian
    Renaissance palaces.




    Bayerische Staatsbibliothek

  4. Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität

    Ludwig
    I transferred the 15th-century university from Ingolstadt to Munich.
    The main assembly hall fronts on Geschwister-Scholl-Platz and is
    surrounded by faculty buildings.




    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität and fountain

  5. Akademie der Bildenden Künste

    The
    Academy of Fine Arts was built between 1808 and 1886 in the Italian
    Neo-Renaissance style. The list of students around 1900 is a who’s who
    of modern art – Kandinsky, Klee, Kubin, Marc.




  6. Leopoldstraße & Münchner Freiheit

    Passing
    beneath the Siegestor, you will enter Schwabing and the district’s
    principal promenade, the Leopoldstraße. Flanked by shops, pavement
    cafés, and fast-food outlets, the boulevard has lost some of its 1960s
    and ‘70s air, when a new generation of film-makers, students, and
    bohemians set the tone, but there are still some interesting pockets.
    One of the route’s highlights is the Walking Man (1995), a 17-m-
    (55-ft-) high sculpture by Jonathan Borofsky at Ainmillerstraße 36. On
    the northern end of the Münchner Freiheit, in a café of the same name,
    tables are set out in summer beneath a larger-than-life statue of actor
    Helmut Fischer. Beautifully preserved Art Nouveau houses are to be found
    on several side streets off Leopoldstraße, notably Georgenstraße (Nos.
    8–10) and Ainmillerstraße (Nos. 20, 22, 33, 34, 35, and 37). Take a
    detour onto Kaiserstraße for a glimpse of a pretty ensemble from the
    Foundation Period. Hohenzollernstraße and the section of Maxvorstadt
    bounded by Schelling-, Türken-, and Barerstraße, are packed with fun and
    eccentric boutiques (see Boutiques & Shops
    ). Nearly all side streets off the south side of Leopoldstaße lead to the Englischer Garten.




    Art Nouveau decoration, Ainmillerstraße house



    Art Nouveau ornament



    Walking Man, by J Borofsky, Leopoldstraße



    Pacelli-Palais – Art Nouveau Schwabing style

  7. Englischer Garten

    Schwabing’s
    “backyard” is Germany’s largest urban park, offering a host of leisure
    opportunities – walks, beer gardens (Seehaus, Chinesischer Turm,
    Hirschau), jogging, boating, and – for the adventurous – surfing in the
    Eisbach, a small rocky stream with icy waters. The streets to the south
    of Münchner Freiheit lead almost directly to the Kleinhesseloher See and
    the Seehaus beer garden in the park.




  8. Around Königsplatz

    Munich
    owes its Royal Square, or Königsplatz, to Ludwig I and the vision of
    architect Leo von Klenze. The Propyläen (Doric) and the Glyptothek
    (Ionic), housing a magnificent sculpture collection, and the
    Antikensammlung (Corinthian), a collection of antiquities, were all
    built between 1816 and 1862. Directly behind the Propyläen lies the Lenbachhaus ; and one block farther down, the Paläontologische Museum.
    On the east side, the Königsplatz merges with the Karolinenplatz. The
    obelisk at its centre is a memorial to Bavarian soldiers who died in
    Napoleon’s Russian campaign. During the Nazi era, Königsplatz was used
    for rallies and parades. Another relic of that era is today’s Academy of
    Music and Theatre, then the so-called Führer-Bau, in which the infamous
    Munich Agreement was ratified in 1938. Today, this magnificent square
    is used for open-air events in summer.




    Leo von Klenze’s Propyläen on Königsplatz

  9. Museum District

    Near Königsplatz on Barer Straße are the three large Pinakotheken . Additional museums are planned for this district.




  10. Olympiapark

    Completed
    for the 1972 Summer Olympic Games, this vast park and complex to the
    north has become Munich’s main sports and amusement park complex .