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This park was created out of rubble from World War II. The restaurant in the Baroque Bamberger Haus features ornate dining rooms and a pretty terrace for outdoor dining during warm weather.
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In 1865 Martin Achleiter, the lock-keeper at Auer-Mühlbach, built this timber chapel to give thanks for having survived floods and falling rocks in the gorge.
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Square with Königsbau and Nationaltheater developed to the south of the Residenz from 1820 onward.
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This Rococo jewel in the Lehel district was built by Johann Michael Fischer, with ornamentation by the Asam brothers.
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Next door to the Pinakothek der Moderne, this museum houses a large collection of crystals and minerals.
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The upper stretch of Prinzregentenstraße is home to the Haus der Kunst, the National Gallery (Nationalmuseum), and the Schack Galerie (see Museums & Galleries).
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The upper end of Prinzregentenstraße is home to the Haus der Kunst, the Bayerisches National-museum, and the Schack-Galerie (see Museums & Galleries).
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This small church, first mentioned in historical records in 1313, is set on the banks of the Isar. The cloister is a mirror image of that at Altötting.
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At the corner of Sieges- and Josephsstraße you’ll come upon this tranquil square. The Seidlvilla (1905) was saved from demolition and converted into a centre for readings, concerts, and exhibitions.
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A beautiful residential neigh-bourhood, with villas flanking both sides of the boulevard leading to the palace.
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