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The Free State pays the lion's share of veterinary medicine campuses

2024-02-29T10:25:24.209Z

Highlights: The Free State pays the lion's share of veterinary medicine campuses. The LMU Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at the English Garden suffers from a lack of space. The plan is to combine all veterinary facilities on a modern campus with its own energy center in Oberschleißheim. Institute buildings as well as veterinary clinics and experimental facilities will be located on the campus. Of the 150 parking spaces, 56 will be built with charging points. The approximately 2,000 veterinary students will focus on Obershleiussheim, which will make the community much more attractive.



As of: February 29, 2024, 11:15 a.m

By: Günter Hiel

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The campus construction site in Oberschleißheim (archive photo) © Bert Brosch

The Free State is giving twelve million euros to develop the campus in Oberschleißheim.

What Mayor Markus Böck hopes for the community:

Oberschleißheim

- The Free State of Bavaria is paying for the almost 12 million euro development of the campus area for the veterinary faculty of the Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU) in Oberschleißheim, reports constituency representative Maximilian Böltl (CSU), who was involved in the decision as a member of the budget committee .

The LMU Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at the English Garden suffers from a lack of space and technically inadequate buildings.

The plan is therefore to combine all veterinary facilities on a modern campus with its own energy center in Oberschleißheim.

Institute building including veterinary clinics and experimental facilities as well as 2000 students

In the final expansion, institute buildings as well as veterinary clinics and experimental facilities will be located on the campus.

The approximately 2,000 veterinary students will focus on Oberschleißheim, which will make the community much more attractive as a science location.

The community's wishes are taken into account in the planning

The development measures were defined in an urban development contract in close coordination with the municipality.

These include the parking lot for the campus, the pedestrian and cycle path connections, and the construction of a pumping station for discharging wastewater into the sewer system.

Other requests from the community were included in the planning: open spaces, electric routes for charging stations and outdoor lighting, bus stops and a traffic light system.

Of the 150 parking spaces, 56 will be built with charging points

The Free State will cover all costs for the development measure.

The municipality only pays 40 percent for the traffic lights.

The mobility concept required by Schleißheim is also being fulfilled: 56 of the 150 parking spaces will be built with charging points, the new paths will be incorporated into the supra-regional cycle path network and attention will also be paid to car sharing options.

MP Maximilian Böltl and Mayor Markus Böck see great opportunities

“The planned new LMU campus is of crucial importance for Oberschleißheim.

As a result, we can establish businesses and generate additional trade tax revenue, which we can use to enable important projects for the local people,” Mayor Markus Böck (CSU) is quoted as saying in a press release.

Maximilian Böltl expects that the transfer from science to business will have a positive impact locally.

And says: “Further steps will follow so that people’s quality of life can grow with the campus and the community and its citizens benefit.”

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-29

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