Stockdorf

At least 21 cairns were well preserved when Freiherr von Metting, a forest superintendent from Starnberg opened two of these graves and discovered a bronzen bowl, a sword of iron and other smithery.

[2] Between 1715 and 1745, the Bavarian prince-elector Max Emanuel enclosed a large piece of land in the south west of Munich as a park for coursing deer.

As the Würm Valley became the typical suburban resort for wealthy citizens from the nearby Bavarian capital, the population of Stockdorf grew from 75 in 1866 to more than 1,500 in 1960.

After Stockdorf became an independent Catholic parish in 1949 a new church was built by Hans Heps and consecrated to St. Vitus in 1953. Notable is the deep longing gable roof and the turret which give pleasant proportions to the stately structure.

The eastern facade, above the main entrance of this westward oriented church, shows the fresco of St. Veit (Vitus) by Erich Schickling.

The Lutheran church, a plain cubical building of fairfaced concrete, neighboured by an L-shaped vicarage was erected in 1959 by J. Semler and J. Haider.

Since the opening of the Railroad there is the 'gate house' at the former level crossing, a two-story brick building with overlapping gabled roof (ca.

Stockdorf has a number of mansions and houses under preservation order dating before World War I which give the village its typical sight.

15 (2005 by Felix Bembé and Sebastian Dellinger)[10] The BauindustrieZentrum at Heimstraße was revamped in 1990 based on the "Lehrwerkstätte des Bayerischen Baugewerbeverbandes" by Willi Lorch 1937.

The George-Vithoulkas-Stiftung für Klassische Homöopathie, an endowment for the promotion of research and teaching of classic homeopathy was founded in Stockdorf 1992.

Stockdorf Bennostraße 6/8
Stockdorf Zumpestraße 2
Stockdorf Zweigstraße 2