The Goldschmiedplatz is a 2.31- hectare urban open space at the northern end of Schleißheimer Straße in Munich 's Hasenbergl district. It was originally a combined bus and train stop and is now a meeting place for residents and activity area. The founding family Goldschmied from the 14th century gave the square its name.
17-532: The 23,100 m Goldschmiedplatz is located at the eastern end of the Hasenbergl settlement in the far north of the city of Munich and borders directly on the Panzerwiese , a heath area of around 200 hectares, to the east. In the south lies the residential area Nordhaide . Schleißheimer Straße, coming from the city centre in the south, ends in a loop around Goldschmiedplatz. With a length of more than eight kilometres, it
34-501: A location for cultural events. 48°13′09″N 11°33′44″E / 48.21917°N 11.56222°E / 48.21917; 11.56222 Panzerwiese The Panzerwiese is a 200 hectare heath area in Milbertshofen-Am Hart in the north of Munich , Germany . It bears its name due to its former military use as a training area for tanks ( German : Panzer and meadow German : Wiese ). The name "Nordhaide"
51-585: A multifunctional open space for leisure and residential activities. The centre is formed by the Blauer Punkt (Blue Point), the 25 m tram house managed by a residents initiative of the Diakonie Hasenbergl with the roofing of the former stop. A number of private and public events take place here, such as a regular flea markets or the Hasenbergl-Nord residents get-together. There is also a barbecue area,
68-473: A viewing platform and a climbing playground for children. There is also a community garden supervised by Green City. For sporting activities, a volleyball court, table tennis , two chess fields, a boules court, a summer curling track and a large skate park are integrated into the surrounding park. Here you will also find a sculpture by Hanns Goebl and the Hasenbergl Monument, which commemorates
85-632: Is a borough in the northern part of the city of Munich in Bavaria , Germany . It contains the S-Bahn railway station of München-Feldmoching . Feldmoching-Hasenbergl is surrounded by: Allach-Untermenzing , Moosach and Milbertshofen-Am Hart in the south, and Karlsfeld and Oberschleißheim in the north. It contains four lakes, the Lerchenauer See , Fasaneriesee , Feldmochinger See ( Dreiseenplatte ) and Landschaftssee Allacher Lohe as well as part of
102-641: Is often used analogously to Panzerwiese due to the settlement of the same name. It is part of the " Naturschutzgebiet " (protected nature area) Panzerwiese und Hartelholz . It belongs to the Munich Green Belt. It has been registered with the EU as a Fauna-Flora-Habitat area (heathland and turf forests north of Munich). North of it lies a forest area, the Hartelholz, northeast the Fröttmaninger Heide and in
119-610: Is the second longest road in the city and forms the current end point of the Fürstenachse (princely axis). On this road the Bavarian electors once drove in carriages from Schleissheim Palace , about three kilometres to the north, to the Munich Residence . Along the visual and historical princely axis of Schleißheimer Straße, between Goldschmiedplatz and Dülferanger, there is a promenade with various thematic activity areas into which
136-547: The electoral hunt in the 18th century. According to the Development Plan No. 40 Part 1 of 6 December 1966, the area is designated as a public transport area. The Goldschmiedplatz is governed by the green spaces charter of the state capital Munich. As part of the Historische Sichtachse Schleißheimer Straße (historical visual axis), the square is a place of cultural history and occasionally
153-520: The Goldschmiedplatz is also integrated. The axis, which runs along the middle section of Schleißheimer Straße, can only be seen today from the city centre to Goldschmiedplatz. From there you can see the towers of the Munich Frauenkirche , 10 km away. To the north, Fortnerstraße branches off from Goldschmiedplatz and to the west Aschenbrennerstraße and Kugystraße. The Goldschmiedplatz is
170-506: The Red List. From the early summer of each year, the Panzerwiese is also used as a sheep pasture. Until the end of the 1980s the Panzerwiese was used as a military training area ("Training Area Warner Kaserne " - M-T-238); until the end of the 1960s the airfield Warner Strip was found here and was closed to the public, some concrete fragments still remind us of this past. As the blockade
187-440: The conclusion that only the southern part of the meadow should be developed. The settlement known as Nordhaide comprises several three- to eight-storey apartment blocks with around 2,500 residential units, including a student residence, as well as various commercial areas (medical centre, Mira shopping centre and others). Until 1993, the underground line U2 was extended from Scheidplatz to Dülferstraße . The line passes under
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#1732872728195204-535: The construction of the settlement "Nordhaide" were trees planted in the residential area. About 180 plant species were identified on the Panzerwiese, 23 of which are listed on the Red List , for example the Clusius gentian . In addition, the Panzerwiese meadow with the hardwood to the north provides habitat for various animal species ( partridge , sparrow hawk , wild rabbit or various bee species), of which 35 species are on
221-523: The hardwood bordering to the north and reaching up to the A 99 , the remaining area of the Panzerwiese - total area with forest about 280 hectares - was designated a protected nature reserve on 5 June 2002 and registered with the EU as a fauna-flora habitat area . 48°13′01″N 11°34′34″E / 48.217°N 11.576°E / 48.217; 11.576 Feldmoching-Hasenbergl Feldmoching-Hasenbergl ( Central Bavarian : Fejdmoching-Hosnbeagl )
238-527: The south settlement areas along the Neuherbergstraße. In the west the meadow is bordered by Schleißheimer Straße (near Goldschmiedplatz ) and in the east by Ingolstädter Straße or Ingolstädter Landstraße (B13). The Panzerwiese is located between the districts Hasenbergl and Harthof (district Milbertshofen-Am Hart, district Am Hart) and Neuherberg. The Panzerwiese is located in the Munich gravel plain in
255-407: The south-western part of the Panzerwiese between Harthof and Dülferstraße. The tunnel and the double-track railway station were mostly built in an open cut, as the Panzerwiese was still undeveloped at that time. The exit of the underground station Dülferstraße to the Panzerwiese was not completed until 2002, since there was no need for it before due to a lack of residential buildings. Together with
272-504: The subarea of the Garching gravel tongue on the glacial gravel deposits of the Isar . The soil type is a shallow and nutrient-poor harvestation soil with high water permeability and low filtration capacity. The meadow is overgrown with limestone meadows and represents about one third of the remaining heath area of the Munich gravel plain. The meadow is practically treeless and shrubless. Only with
289-409: Was only communicated by isolated signs and was not visibly monitored, especially from the mid-1970s onwards, civilian use by walkers and children already prevailed at this time. The city of Munich bought the site in 1994. The open space was to be developed in order to counter the tense housing market in Munich. An expert opinion already drawn up in 1990, referring to the ecological significance, came to
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