- Former barracks
- Existing barracks
- See also
- External links
- References
The Bavarian capital Munich was home to many military barracks. The first ones were located near the historical center of Munich. At the end of the 18th century a lot of military installations were built to the north of the historical center. Most of the installations were renamed during Nazi Germany, once more during the occupation of Germany after World War II when the installations were used by the United States Army, and once more when the Bundeswehr got them for use. Only three of them are currently used. The barracks of Munich are listed on a memorial stone which is located in Bayern-Kaserne. Former barracks name | built in / closed in | other names | remarks | Kreuzkaserne | 1670–1883 | Alte Isarkaserne | 1700–1892 | Kosttor-Kaserne | 1705–1855 | Max-Joseph-Kaserne | 1804/1807–1899/1900- Infanterie-Leibregiment-Kaserne
- Hofgartenkaserne
| Lehel-Kaserne | 1806–1901 | Seidenhauskaserne | 1808–1899/1900 | Neue Isarkaserne | 1811–1902 | Türkenkaserne | 1824–1945- Neue Infanteriekaserne am Türkengraben
- Prinz-Arnulf-Kaserne
| see also Türkentor | Salzstadelkaserne | 1849–1890 | Maximilian-II-Kaserne | 1865–1945 | Marsfeldkaserne | 1888–1945- Infanteriekaserne
- "Einser"-Kaserne[1]
| Eisenbahnkaserne | 1890–1976- Kasernement des Eisenbahnbataillons (Bavarian army use)
| Oberwiesenfeldkaserne | 1893–1969 | Luftschifferkaserne | 1896–1999 | Prinz-Leopold-Kaserne | 1902–1945 | Telegraphenkaserne | 1909/1910 – | Kradschützen-Kaserne | 1931–1994- Indiana Depot (U.S. Army use)
- Stetten-Kaserne (Bundeswehr use)
| Korpsnachrichten-Kaserne | 1934–1994- Saar-Kaserne
- Jensen Kaserne (U.S. Army use)
- Waldmann-Kaserne (Bundeswehr use)
| Funkkaserne | 1936–1992 | Prinz-Eugen-Kaserne | 1937–2009- Lohengrin-Kaserne (Nazi Germany)
- Peterson Kaserne (U.S. Army use)
| McGraw Kaserne | 1945–1992 | parts were used from the Reichszeugmeisterei (Nazi Germany) | Kronprinz-Rupprecht-Kaserne | 1963–1994- Virginia Storage Area / Alabama Storage Area (U.S. Army use)
| |
Existing barracks name | built in / closed in | other names | remarks | Bayern-Kaserne | 1935 –- General-Wever-Kaserne (Nazi Germany)
- Henry Kaserne (U.S. Army use)
| sold in 2007 | Fürst-Wrede-Kaserne | 1936 –- Will Kaserne (U.S. Army use)
| parts were sold in 2006 | Ernst-von-Bergmann-Kaserne | 1936 –- Kaserne "München-Freimann" (Nazi Germany)
- Warner Kaserne (U.S. Army use)
|
See also - List of United States Army installations in Germany
External links - {{Commons category-inline|Barracks in Munich}}
- [https://archive.is/20110522155301/http://www.muenchen.de/Stadtleben/Specials/Kulturgeschichtspfade/neuhausen_nymphenburg/querschnitt/144169/quer_militaer.html Militär] (German)
- U.S. Army installations - Munich, USAREUR
References 1. ^Von der Kaserne zum Finanzamt{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} (German), Munich tax office.
5 : Barracks in Munich|German military-related lists|Military of Bavaria|Lists of buildings and structures in Germany|Munich-related lists |