Am Riesenfeld is the westernmost of the three subdistricts of the Munich city district 11 Milbertshofen-Am Hart.
In the southwest, the boundary of the district Am Riesenfeld to the district of Neuhausen-Nymphenburg runs along the Willi-Gebhardt-Ufer to the Spiridon-Luis-Ring, which forms the western boundary of the Olympia Park on the western border of the larger Olympiaberg, and then along to Ackermannstraße.
The compact development in the Olympic Village provides for a quiet, child-friendly living, as the traffic within the residential area (on the Connollystraße or the Helene-Mayer-Ring) runs in the built-up basement below the pedestrian level.
The München Caribes train in the northern part of the Zentrale Hochschulsportanlage or the Sports Center of the Technical University of Munich.
[6] This is to improve the network of cycle paths in Munich and create a High line-like park trail towards Dreiseenplatte.
It goes back to the couple Andrä von Riß, Hofkammerrat (Council of the Court Chamber) in Freising and Theresia, which on 12 June 1796 bought the bleacher based on a Dutch (English) system, operated since 1790 at the canal curve, from the brothers Franz Xaver and Joseph Lunglmayr.
Olympia 1972, it was called Oberwiesenfeld and housed only a large airfield in addition to its use as a military site, on which the first commercial airport of Munich was located from 1929 to 1939 and the aircraft engines manufactured in the neighboring factory of BMW were tested until 1945 and from 1957 to 1968 the general aviation harbored.