The 500-meter-long road[2] runs between the end of the Ohlmüllerstraße (beginning of the street Am Nockherberg) and the Kolumbusplatz at the foot of the Isar river terrace.
[1] The middlepoint of the road was two mills on the Auer Mühlbach (15th century) and buildings for hunters from the electoral Falkenhof with the tavern Zum Jägerwirt.
The original name of the street was Jägerhäuselgasse or Bei den Jägerhäuseln, as noted in the official register of house numbering for the Au suburb of 1857.
In addition to the agricultural areas, ponds and cattle stables, production facilities began to establish, first with one of the largest bedspring factories in southern Germany and after the Second World War, a branch of Rohde & Schwarz.
During the Second World War, a large part of the houses was destroyed and not rebuilt on the slope side in favor of a planned green corridor.