The Tulbeckstraße is a street in Munich and lies west of the city center in the district Schwanthalerhöhe.
A road formed at its southern end, named Tulbeckstraße since 1878, and was gradually built from east to west.
The street is completely depicted in the 14th edition, from 1891, of the Brockhaus Konversations-Lexikon and already shown to be built past the Bergmannstraße.
A total of 23 built historical buildings between 1882 and 1924, are located directly on the Tulbeckstraße, and mainly in the style of the Neo-Renaissance, German Renaissance and Art Nouveau.
[2] Apartment buildings of Kastulus Binderberger (2a), Georg Schillinger (3), Johann Grimm (5), Franz Buchold (6, 8), Karl Albert (7), Heinrich Hermann (11), Georg Müller (22), Ludwig Naneder (33), Jakob Heilmann und Max Littmann (41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51) und Leonhard Moll (52) The house is also known as the "House with the Red Flag" and since the early 1970s, has been considered the center of the workers' culture and the Munich labor movement.