New edition of the to-do list '22: This is what's coming up in Oberschleißheim this year
Created: 01/10/2023 15:01
By: Andreas Sachsen
The end of a never-ending story is approaching: the plans for the Stutenanger area are in place, a Penny supermarket and a building with commercial premises on the ground floor and four residential floors are being built here.
© Dieter Michaelek
A number of projects that were already present in 2022 are also occupying Oberschleißheim this year - with one exception.
Oberschleißheim – not much has happened in Oberschleißheim.
You have to be honest.
A look at the list of projects for 2023 reveals striking similarities with the '22 to-do list.
The money is missing
In fact, there are reasons for the Schleissheim dilemma – similar to last year, only more dramatic.
After the Greensill bankruptcy and the loss of 75 percent of the reserves and three years of Corona, the excesses of the Ukraine war, the energy crisis and lack of raw materials, as well as the generally collapsing economy, had an impact on the budget.
Because of Greensill and Corona, costly projects had to be put on the back burner.
It doesn't look any different for 2023.
Topics such as indoor swimming pools and the station forecourt no longer appear on the list.
With plenty of protected landscape around and little space for businesses, Oberschleißheim is one of the low-income communities in the district.
As Deputy District Administrator Annette Ganssmüller-Maluche (SPD) announced, Oberschleißheim was one of the communities for years that were nurtured by key assignments.
According to the deputy district administrator, the funds were not available this year, which caused irritation in the town hall.
Allocations are an instrument of municipal financial equalization.
Municipalities that are weak in taxes or contributions benefit.
model settlement
A new quarter is emerging here in Mittenheim.
The key data: 424 apartments and a day care center.
© Dieter Michaelek
Projects that the community has been working on for a long time have their place on the to-do list.
First and foremost is the new residential area with a day-care center in Mittenheim.
The settlement with 424 apartments embedded in a "park-like structure" is praised as exemplary.
This also applies to the cooperation with the Catholic men's welfare association, which owns the land and, thanks to its social orientation, shows little interest in maximizing profits.
Most of the apartments are rented in a socially responsible manner.
In early summer, the excavators roll in.
Mittenheim Bridge
Mayor Markus Böck (CSU) can also confidently present the renovation of the Mittenheim Bridge as a success story.
The enormously important north-south connection was opened to traffic before Christmas.
Nine months earlier than planned.
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My space
council flats
The community is breaking new ground with the residential building for community employees in Frauenfeld.
© Dieter Michaelek
The house on Frauenfeld reserved for community workers is developing no less as desired.
After the groundbreaking in April 2022, the house should be ready for occupancy at the end of this year.
The community is breaking new ground with the three-story building.
The eleven two- to four-room apartments are only intended for community employees, educators, kindergarten teachers and nursing staff as well as employees of charitable institutions.
discharge
The 220 apartments on Kreuzacker are intended to help relieve the tense market in the north of Munich.
For years, the municipality has been pushing ahead with the two-part measure ("Am Schäferanger" and "Westlich St. Margarethenstraße").
It keeps getting stuck.
Archaeologists are on site.
As you can hear, the Bavaria Atlas shows the area of archaeological monuments.
The new center
It seems that land is finally in sight in the never-ending story of the Rewe market and the new center.
The company that once misled the community with full-bodied promises has been flattened at Stutenanger.
Mayor Böck is hopeful that work on both the Penny market and the Sedlmayr building with commercial premises on the ground floor and four residential floors above will start this year.
"If things go well, anyway."
says Bock.
Sedlmayr has not yet submitted an application.
What remains is the commercial area south of the B 471, which is still controversial. At the citizens' meeting in December, the mayor appealed to the critics not to "close their eyes to the extremely important project".
In order to cope with the steadily increasing burden of work, the municipality needs money.
Böck does not see alternatives to the site.
He promised the people of Schleissheim that he would support a location with a clean, research-related business.
Traffic
As far as transport is concerned, one of the big issues in the municipality, one remains largely dependent on third parties.
Whether it's the western bypass or the underpass, the tunnel under the railway, nothing has moved for years.
Böck hopes to talk to Bavaria's Transport Minister Christian Bernreiter (CSU).
More news from Oberschleißheim and the district of Munich can be found here.