Helene-Mayer-Ring

The Helene-Mayer-Ring is a street in the Olympic Village of the Olympic Park Munich in Munich, Germany.

Helene-Mayer-Ring
Steinquader fountain (Wolfgang Zacharias), Helene-Mayer-Ring / corner Lerchenauer Straße
LocationOlympic Village of the Olympic Park Munich in Munich, Germany
Other
Known forNamed after the Olympic fencing champion Helene Mayer
Ecumenical Church Center on Helene-Mayer-Ring

Description

The Helene-Mayer-Ring is named after the Olympic fencing champion Helene Mayer. The road is accessible to pedestrians on the surface and underground for motorists.

The Helene-Mayer-Ring is the shopping street of the village with 36 shops, designed and occupied by the Olywelt eG u.a. who became engaged through buying stores.[1] At the Helene-Mayer-Ring 4, stands the 88-meter-high Olympia Tower, on Helene-Mayer-Ring 10 another tower block with a height of 76 meters. At the Helene-Mayer-Ring 23/25 lies the Ecumenical Church Center of the Olympic Village.

To the east, the Helene-Mayer-Ring joins Lerchenauer Straße and in the west the Connollystraße branches off.

gollark: If you have *any* device there broadcasting stuff, it can be trilaterated.
gollark: If I were this person, I would run nukes from my tablet, or possibly the internet.
gollark: I mean, the not-very-stealthy way would be to edit... I think the component libraries or something... and make modem.broadcast/modem.send a no-op.
gollark: How stealthy do you need?
gollark: You can do that, but it's hard to be ENTIRELY hidden.

References

  1. Thomas Kronewiter (31 July 2015). "Erfolgreiches Modell" (in German). Süddeutsche Zeitung. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
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