Balanstraße Explained

The Balanstraße is a street in Munich which begins at the Rosenheimer Platz and runs in a southerly direction through the districts Haidhausen, Giesing and Ramersdorf to the district of Fasangarten. It ends at the border road directly on the city boundary to the municipality Neubiberg in the district of Munich.

Description

The Balanstraße is, except for a small section between the Rosenheimer Platz and the Metzstraße where it is a one-way street about 30 m long, passable in both directions with one lane in each direction. Between Fasangartenstraße and Grenzstraße it only has one lane for both directions.

Bicycle paths run almost continuously along it.

History

The street was named in 1880 after the French town of Balan near Sedan in the Ardennes. Where in 1870, the Battle of Sedan[1] (Prussia v. France) took place, in which regiments of the Bavarian army alongside of Prussia took part. Since 1867, its previous official name was "Irrenweg" because of the Kreisirrenanstalt Munich located there since 1859 (until 1900, since 1919 it is the Salesianum for disadvantaged young people). After several residents had successfully protested against the streets name, it was renamed in favor of "glorious memories for the Bavarian army, especially for the Munich Regiments".

Road access

The stop Balanstraße at the "Mittlerer Ring" serves the bus lines 59, 139 and 145. The line 59 crosses the Balanstraße. The line 139 comes from the Chiemgaustraße ("Mittlerer Ring") onto the Balanstraße in the southern direction and leaves it again on the Hochäckerstraße. The line 145 comes from the Claudius-Keller-Straße and follows the Balanstraße to Fasangartenstraße. Line 54 departs from Orleansstraße onto Balanstraße and follows it to Werinherstraße. Slightly different from the daily lines are the associated night bus lines.

Public facilities

Historical buildings

On the Balanstraße are mainly residential buildings. The house numbering goes to number 395.

There are fourteen historical buildings in the northern part of Balanstraße:

At the Balanstraße 20, corner Barnabasstraße, stands the tower of the original parish church of St. Wolfgang by Hans Schurr (1920).

In 1963, Klaus Backmund designed a fish fountain in front of Balanstraße 73.

The church of Isaiah in Obergiesing from 1966 has the number 361.

Various

The street is eponymous for the district Balanstraße West in the district of Ramersdorf-Perlach, which is also referred to as Ramersdorf South or Nußdorf.[3] The district is bounded in the west and south by the route of the S-Bahn line to Kreuzstraße. There, the Balanstraße crosses the S-Bahn at a limited level crossing.

The television series Die Hausmeisterin, which was produced in three seasons with a total of 23 episodes, each 45 minutes long, for Bayerischer Rundfunk between 1987 and 1992 and was broadcast in the evening program of the Das Erste and in the third program of the Bavarian Television, it takes place in the old rental building on Balanstraße 19 in the Munich district Haidhausen.

The television series Polizeiinspektion 1 used the residential house Balanstraße 37 as a police station.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Geschichte von Sedan . sedan.fr . German . 1 December 2017.
  2. Web site: Angekommen im Klassenzimmer . 7 December 2016 . Süddeutsche Zeitung . German . 1 December 2017.
  3. Web site: Balanstraße West . 15 December 2014 . muenchen.info . German . 1 December 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160305031459/http://www.muenchen.info/ba/16/info/i_balan.htm . 5 March 2016 . dead .