Fürstenrieder Straße
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The Fürstenrieder Straße is an almost five-kilometer-long[1] important inner-city connecting road in Munich, Germany. It is named after the Fürstenried Palace, which lies near its southern end.[2]
The Fürstenrieder Straße leads through the districts of Laim,[3] Sendling-Westpark and Hadern[4] to the northern edge of Fürstenried and forms a section of the only partially completed Outer Ring. Over almost its entire length it is made up of six-lanes with a green central strip. It is also part of the shortest inner-city connection between the Bundesautobahn 8 (Westast) and the Bundesautobahn 95.
The road starts at Landsberger Straße in Laim as the southern continuation of Wotanstraße. It runs in a straight line to the south, crosses Agnes-Bernauerstraße and Gotthardstraße and crosses the Bundesautobahn 96 at junction 38. It passes close to Westpark, from which it is separated only by several school buildings (Erasmus-Grasser-Gymnasium,[5] Ludwigsgymansium).[6] It then passes Waldfriedhof[1] to the east. It crosses under the Bundesautobahn 95 leading into the city at exit 2 Kreuzhof and changes there into Boschetsrieder Straße and therefore into a west-eastern tangential road of the Outer Ring.