Vienna - Wenen

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Vienna (Vienna) is the capital of Austria and also the largest city in Austria.

Info

The historic city center is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is safe to say that the tourist scene is dominated by Sissi (Elisabeth of Austria), the secular woman who travels and made hugely popular by the Sissi films of the 50s and 60s and the well-known composer Mozart who spent much of his life spent in Vienna. Everywhere you can Mozart balls to buy. The former dictator of Germany, Adolf Hitler, who was an Austrian, also lived in Vienna for a while. Namely in the Stumpergasse 31. There is much more to see than the tours built around these famous figures in Vienna. The city has enormously extensive museums that are among the largest of their kind, thanks to the collection habits and wealth of the Habsburgs.

Vienna consists of 21 neighbourhoods: Schottenring and Alsergrund, Museum and Rathaus district, Opera and Naschmarkt, Belvedere district, Hofburg district and Stephansdom district, among others. Each district has its specific places of interest. For example, you will find the imperial buildings and Sissi's apartment in the Hofburg district.

Vienna has long been a center of classical music and opera. Since the application of television, the Vienna Philharmonic has turned the world's attention to its traditional broadcast of the New Year's Concert, which is followed by more than a billion viewers. In October 2006, the orchestra was voted "best orchestra in Europe" by connoisseurs, closely followed by the Concertgebouw Orchestra and, at a distance, the Berliner Philharmoniker.

Arrive

By plane

Vienna has one airport: de Vienna International Airport (IATA:VIE) (ICAO:LOWW) is located outside of Vienna in Schwechat. The airport Vienna Schwechat is the basis of Austrian Airlines and the budget airline Sky Europe and Fly Niki. Most European airlines have good and direct connections to Vienna. From the airport Brussels Airport Brussels Airlines and Austrian Airlines have a direct connection to Vienna International Airport.

Flies from Amsterdam Schiphol KLM 3x a day to Vienna and Austrian Airlines 2x per day. The easiest and cheapest way to reach the center of Vienna from the airport Schwechat is (6 EUR) by bus to Schwedenplatz. Here, at the final stop of the airport bus, stood the Gestapo House during the Second World War. It was razed to the ground after the war and a park was laid out. A memorial to the many victims was erected on the spot from the fragments of the house. Bus tickets can be purchased from the driver. The ride takes about 25 minutes. A bus leaves every 30 minutes.

Another option is with the S-Bahn (train): it runs every half hour directly to the station Wien Mitte, where there is a connection to the metro network of the city.

Low budget carriers

  • Sky Europe has a direct connection between Brussels Airport and Vienna International Airport and also from Schiphol. They also fly Bratislava (an hour and a half by bus).
  • GermanWings has a connection between Cologne/Bonn airport and Vienna.
  • Ryan Air has no direct connection from Belgian airports . The information we provide here is for international travelers or travelers who are willing to make a detour via, for example, the airport of London Stansted. Ryanair flies to Linz (one and a half to two hours by train), Graz (two hours and a half by train) and brno.
  • EasyJet has no direct connection from Belgian and Dutch airports.

Ryanair also flies to Bratislava, from where a bus takes about 1 hour to the center of Vienna. Price one way : 10 euros, return 16 euros (May 2010)

Departing from Vienna International Airport there are three options to reach the city center: taxi, City Airport Train, S-Bahn.

By train

The easiest way to travel from the Netherlands and Belgium is by ICE to Köln. From Köln there is a daily night train of the Austrian Railways to Vienna. This train has seats, berths (couchette) or its own sleeping compartments. A one-way ticket based on a seat is available from 29 Euro p.p. if you book early. Optionally (if you take the first ICE from the Netherlands or Belgium) you can travel entirely by ICE to Vienna within a day by changing trains in Cologne or Frankfurt.

Vienna has two main stations: Westbahnhof and Southbahnhof. Night trains connect major European capitals such as Paris, Bucharest, Berlin and Venice. The train to Prague takes less than 5 hours.

If you are quick you can get the cheap Spar-Night-get tickets for the night train to destinations in Germany and Italy, but also to Paris and other destinations. These cost 29 euros for a seat one way and 39 euros for a couchette or 59 euros for a sleeping compartment. The big advantage is that you arrive immediately in the city center compared to air travel.

There is a special arrangement for a round trip from Budapest what they call kirandulójegy. For 29 euros you can return from Budapest to Vienna valid for four days, including a ticket for public transport within zone 100. If you calculate that a 3-day pass costs 12 euros, you can go back and forth for 17 euros! This is especially interesting if you are planning to go back to Budapest.

Note: the nearest metro station to Southbahnhof is 400m away. The trains from Germany arrive at Westbahnhof. Trains to Bratislava depart every hour from Southbahnhof and sometimes in Westbahnhof.The trains to and from Budapest also use the Westbahnhof, this is because most trains to and from Budapest continue to Munich or Frankfurt.

For further information you can visit the website of the BB consult.

By car

By bus

Eurolines has a connection between Brussels and Vienna, further between Bratislava and Vienna. These buses usually stop at the Erdberg metro station (U3).

By boat

On the Danube, regular service boats run between Vienna and Bratislava.

Travel around

By bus, tram and U-Bahn (metro)

By bike

Vienna is an ideal city to explore by bike. The 1,300 kilometers of cycle paths ensure that you can move effortlessly from A to B. You can take your own bike or rent one. In addition, Vienna also uses a bicycle plan (Vienna Citybike) as many other large cities now do.

Vienna Citybike service now has 1200 bicycles that you can take with you at 90 different stations throughout the city. This bicycle plan is not only very popular among locals, tourists can also use it. You can find more information about this via this website City bike Vienna

Here are a few traffic rules that apply to cyclists in Vienna.

  • Cyclists can cycle on the right-hand side of roads on the designated cycle paths or combined walking and cycling paths. Make sure you always cycle on the right side of the road.
  • You must be at least 16 years old to cycle with a child. And children under 8 are required to use a child seat.
  • Children under the age of 12 are only allowed to cycle when accompanied by a person who is 16 years of age or older. There is an exception for children aged 10 and older if they are in possession of a bicycle license and have passed a bicycle exam.
  • Always give priority to trams, buses and other service-oriented means of transport.

If you want to go cycling in Vienna you can download a number of maps with cycling routes on this site: http://www.wien.gv.at/english/transportation-urbanplanning/cycling/cycling-map.html

To look at

Museums

Gate of Oberes Belvedere
  • The Belvedere Castle (Castle Belvedere), Prinz Eugen-Strasse 27 431 7955 7134, e-mail: . Daily 10:00-18:00. Originally intended as the summer residence of Prince Eugene of Savoie, the Belvedere Palace was built outside the city walls. The palace is divided into two segments:
    •    Above Belvedere (Oberes Belvedere). The works of recent Austrian and international artists of the past two centuries are exhibited here. It is to this day the exhibition space of the Austrian artists. Viennese art of the early twentieth century is well represented in the permanent collection "Vienna around 1900 and the Art of Classical Modern".
    •    Down Belvedere (Unteres Belvedere). This is used for temporary exhibitions.
Hofburg, Neue Burg
  • The Hofburg complex with, inter alia:
    •    The New Hofburg (Neue Hofburg). The New Palace is the newest and largest section of the Imperial Palace. It houses the Ethnological Museum and three branches of the Fine Arts Museum. The Ephesus Museum has a collection of classical art from Asia Minor, the collection of historical musical instruments speaks for itself and the crown jewel of the New Palace is the weapon collection. This collection is the second largest in the world and contains an immense amount of weapons from the past centuries.
    •    The Treasury (Schatzkammer). Is in the Hofburg (also known as the secular and ecclesiastic treasure) is an absolute must when visiting Vienna. The treasury is part of the art history museum and contains 20 rooms with priceless jewels that give a good picture of the wealth and gracious life of the Habsburgs over the various centuries.
  •    The Museum of Fine Arts (Kunsthistorisches Museum). One of the great museums in the world in a palace that is a work of art in itself. As in the Louvre you can hang out here for a few days as an art lover without getting bored. The mother of all Austrian museums - that is the best description you can give to the museum. As an average tourist, you can spend a full day if you want to pay the necessary attention to the important works on display here. Another option if you have less time is to pay attention to only a few sections or else quickly walk through the museum but then you will miss many beautiful things and the impact of it. You can eat and drink good quality in the museum, it is not cheap but you do have a beautiful environment. The museum contains an excellent collection of ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman art. The coin and medal collection is also very extensive of its kind.
  •    The Imperial Furniture Museum (Hofmobiliendepot Möbel Museum), Andreasgasse 7. One of the largest museums of its kind in the world. It is a lesser known museum of Vienna. The pieces on display include furniture that has been used by all Austrian emperors starting from Charles VI (the father of Maria Theresa), furniture designed by the Thonet brothers through Jugendstil, the Viennese Modern movement and contemporary Austrian architects and designers such as E.A. Plischke, Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, Luigi Blau and Franz West. In addition to the permanent furniture exhibition, there are also two to three temporary exhibitions on furniture design and photography. Information regarding the special exhibitions can be found on the website. You can buy a single ticket or a Sissi ticket which also allows you to tour the Schönbrunn Palace, the Imperial Apartments and the Sissi Museum and the Imperial Silver Collection in the Hofburg.
  •    The Talker. The Vienna Prater was opened to the general public in 1766 by Emperor Joseph II. Before that it was a hunting ground of the emperor. At first the Prater was a place of entertainment for the common man in the street, but slowly the more well-to-do people also found their way to the Prater. In 1895, the park hosted the opening of Venice in Vienna, an imitation of Venice with gondolas' canals. It attracted all walks of life.
    •    Riesenrad. In 1896 the English engineer Walter B. Basset started construction. He had already built such a Ferris wheel in London and Blackpool and was therefore not on his test piece. The building permit was granted under strict construction obligations and construction started in November 1896. The installation took 8 months. On July 3, 1897, the Viennese public could take a seat in one of the 30 carriages. There was room for 20 people in each carriage. From 1914 to 1916, activities were halted due to the ongoing First World War. It was even proposed by a new owner to dismantle the wheel in 1915 but he could not afford the demolition costs so that it was seized in 1918. Bombs ravaged the wheel at the end of the Second World War and 30 wagons were destroyed along with the company installation. The Ferris wheel was renovated. It was put back into service on May 25, 1947, but now with 15 wagons. Technical data: Height 64.75m - Height to shaft 34.20m - Diameter 60.96m - Weight 430 tons - turning speed 0.75 m/s. In the movie The third man and the James Bond-movie The Living Daylights the wheel played an important role.
  •    MuseumsQuartier. contemporary art and culture temples that attract three million visitors every year. The Museumsquartier is located in the former imperial stables. It is enough to look up to discover the numerous carved horse heads and harness on the walls. But also modern buildings such as the Leopold Museum with an impressive collection of work by Egon Schiele, Kunsthalle Wien a space where provocative art is displayed and the Museum of Modern Art were built there. On the square where it is pleasant to sit, there are benches made of soft concrete. You can also eat and drink something there and there is a pond that offers refreshment in sweltering summers.
  •    Freud MuseumBerggasse 19. Located in the first floor apartment where Freud lived and worked on his theory of psychoanalysis. He also received his patients here until the Nazis forced him to leave Vienna in 1938. If you want to enter, you have to ring the bell and the door is opened, but a single room still breathes something of the atmosphere of the past when Freud lived with his family. The other rooms are either empty or used as a meeting room. There are pictures of what it used to look like. Still a bit disappointing.
  •    Mozart houseDomgasse 5 A, 1010 Vienna. Daily 10:00-19:00. Of all the apartments Mozart lived in, this is the only one that remains. He stayed there from 1784 to 1787 and wrote, among other things, The Marriage of Figaro. You take the elevator up to the third floor to begin your visit. On this floor is an exhibition about Vienna from Mozart's time. On the second floor Mozart's music world is discussed and there is a learning center. The living quarters are located on the first floor. It is absolutely forbidden to take pictures.
  •    Birthplace of SchubertNussdorfer Strasse 54. Franz was born in this house on 31-01-1797.
  •    Apartment where Schubert diedKettenbrückengasse 6 (not far from the Naschmarkt). Franz lived in this 2-room apartment at the invitation of his brother Ferdinand. He died there on 19-11-1858.
  •    Beethoven's home in HeiligenstadtProbusgasse 6, 1190 Vienna. This is where the will of Heiligenstadt is said to have been written by Beethoven in 1802 in which he worries about his increasing deafness. The letter was never sent and was addressed to his brothers. There is quite a bit to do about this house because there is no evidence that Beethoven actually lived here. Some of the exhibits in this small home relive the time of Beethoven. What is certain is that in the summer months he often stayed in this region between the vineyards.
  •    Beethoven's Eroica House1190 Vienna Doplinger, Hauptstrasse 92. Fri 15:00-18:00 and by appointment. This is where the composer is said to have composed his famous Eroica in 1803.
  •    AlbertinaAlbertina Square 1. Daily 10:00-18:00. Masterpieces of Western European art. This collection belonged to Count von Sachsen-Teschen and contains about sixty thousand drawings.
  •    Haus der Music (music house), Seilerstatte 30 (U1/U2/U4, trams 1/2/62/65/J/D, stop Karlsplatz/Opernring),  43 1 513 4850fax machine: 43 1 512 0315, e-mail: . Daily 10:00-22:00, last admission 21:30. This is a relatively new and special museum focused on an interactive learning experience. It shows the history of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, the history of Vienna as a music center (Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Mahler, Schubert and others). Furthermore, there are more experimental parts about futuristic music and sound experiences. You can also conduct an orchestra yourself!

Other places of interest

  •    The Zentralfriedhof. Cemetery with many Biedermeier accents. Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms are buried here. Mozart can be found in the other cemetery St Marx.
  •    The cemetery of Kahlenberg. If you walk from the Kahlenberg to Nussdorf, you will pass this well-hidden cemetery among the trees. Karoline Traunwieser, the most beautiful girl from Vienna in 1815, is buried here.
  •    The Hundertwasser House. Social housing project, designed by artist Friedensreich Hundertwasser. His vision was that architecture should also be seen as a free art form. This housing complex was his first actually completed building. More buildings followed throughout Austria, including some in Vienna itself. The Hundertwasserhaus cannot be visited from the inside (it's just people living in it), but the outside also attracts a lot of tourists.

To do

  • Grinzing is the winegrowing region, located in the north of Vienna. The old tram 38, direction Grinzing, arrives at the Schottentor metro station. The ride takes about 20 minutes. Get off at the final stop in Grinzing and take a walk through this wine village. There are several winegrowers to quench the thirst. You can then take bus 38 A even further to Kahlenberg and enjoy the magnificent view over Vienna. On Metro and Tram, the traveler is informed about possible connections with other lines before each stop.
  • Walk through the gardens of Schönbrunn . Palace (open access). In addition to the castle itself, there is also a zoo (founded in 1752, making it the oldest in the world), a children's playground with a maze (not open in winter) and a puppet theatre. The Gloriette is a beautiful building on a hill. From here you have a view of the garden and the castle and you can have breakfast, drink coffee and eat cake in a chic atmosphere.
  • Pen Klosterneuburg Monastery where an excellent wine is made. The monastery can be visited and there is a restaurant and a wine shop. S-Bahn station Klosterneuburg Kierling is about a 10-minute walk from the monastery (Line S40 from Wien Franz Joseph Bahnhof, timetable see the site of the BB).

To learn

To work

To buy

Opening hours

In Austria, Sunday rest is observed. This means that shops are closed on Sundays and public holidays, only in the busy tourist streets there are still open shops. Christmas Eve is an exception to this. This is one of the most important holidays: shops and museums are closed from 2 pm that day. Also on Christmas Day, 25 December, almost nothing is open, but the Christmas markets, on the other hand, are running at full capacity that day.

Christmas markets

From mid-November, there are various atmospheric Christmas markets in the city, where all kinds of snacks, drinks and goodies are sold in wooden stalls - strongly aimed at tourists. The Christmas markets are in any case located on the square in front of Schönbrunn Palace, in front of the town hall and on the square in front of the Karlskirche. After December 26, the Christmas markets will be closed.

Food

In Vienna you can taste a lot of food that is quintessentially Austrian (or maybe even quintessentially Viennese). As in every city, eating and drinking in the center (including in the streets around Stephansplatz) is considerably more expensive than in the surrounding neighborhoods.

Hot food

the well-known Wienerschnitzel, not from the freezer, but freshly breaded. Available in many restaurants and restaurants, and always juicy and quite large.

Snacks

  • Schnitzel sandwich Just get it at an imbiss (=food stall/snack bar). Tasty, cheap, special and truly Austrian.
  • Langos: A large, flat and deep-fried dough thing. Tastes a bit like oliebollen and is best when it has just come out of the deep fryer.
  • Kartoffelpuffer (literally: potato cake): Sold in small roadside stalls. Is a kind of rösti-like cake, made from potatoes.

Pastry

Sachertorte is perhaps the most famous cake in the world. The cake from Vienna consists of chocolate cake, filled with apricot marmalade and covered with a thick layer of chocolate icing. The cake is a widely exported product. They are shipped all over the world in four different sizes, packed in wooden boxes. The shelf life is particularly long, thanks to the thick layer of glaze.

In most coffee houses you can also get a snack and pastries at certain times. That is always a party. Mohr in Hemd: Chocolate pudding in hot chocolate sauce and whipped cream. Apple strudel: whether or not hot. palatschinken: pancakes filled with fruit or sauce. doboschnitten: one point of a Dobostorte consisting of several layers of chocolate and biscuit dough glazed with caramel. Rehrucken: Chocolate cake in the shape of a venison back and decorated with almonds.

Going out

Almdudler, you must have tasted. It is a lemonade with a bit of an unusual taste, which is widely available in Austria. Very refreshing and not too sweet.

Coffee: The offer is overwhelming. Vienna has an extensive coffee culture, with:

  • brauner: coffee with milk. Can be obtained in a larger cup (Verlängerter) or small.
  • blend: As much hot milk as coffee.
  • Kurz: extra strong small coffee.
  • waiters: Coffee with whipped cream.
  • Kapuziner: Black coffee with a cloud of whipped milk.
  • Espresso: black strong coffee. If you ask stretched, he will be made less strong.
  • consul: black coffee with a cloud of cream.
  • more turkish : Strong Turkish coffee.
  • schlagobers: strong black coffee with cream or whipped cream.
  • kaiser blend: black coffee with egg yolk and brandy.

In almost all cases, a glass of water is given.

Restaurants and eateries

For a quick bite you can go to the naschmarkt justly. It is pleasantly busy and you can also make your purchases there. While you walk through the market you have a good view of the 19th-century buildings on the Linke Wienzeile. There is also an extensive market on Saturdays.

Spatzennest. A pleasant place near the St Ulrich Church where the daily specials are very affordable. You can get traditional Viennese fare here. Address: St Ulrichs-Platz 1. The atmosphere is homely and friendly. Highly recommended.

Cafe Sperl is a Viennese coffee house that dates back to 1880 and has always kept the same decor. Siegmund Freud came here to enjoy his coffee. Address: Gumpendorfer Strasse 11. The Viennese coffee houses have fulfilled the role of clubhouse and meeting place for centuries. For example, you can play billiards in Café Sperl.

Alte Backstube. An old bakery that was in operation from 1701 to 1963. Now it is a bread baking museum and restaurant. Don't get stuck in the front part but slide to the back where it is really picturesque. The Table spitz with G'röste there is excellent. Address: Lange Gasse 34.

Franz, a café where you can also eat well, located on the corner of Pressgasse and Mühlgasse, near the Kettenbrückengasse metro stop. It is just outside the tourist center, so you are mainly among the locals. Good schnitzel for about 12 bucks and also open during the Christmas period. Gasthaus Ubl, at the same intersection across the street, seems to be more characteristic and even cheaper, but unlike Franz, the manager of that tent is on holiday at Christmas.

Franceschi. This restaurant is behind the Ibis Mariahilf Hotel and very close to the Raimund Theatre. From the outside it looks very simple and from the inside too time seems to have stood still. Don't let that put you off: the food is delicious, still real Viennese and Gary and Inge are very hospitable. The portions are large and there is also a menu in English as the owner is American and the owner is Austrian. When the weather is nice, a few tables and umbrellas are put outside. Address: Aegidigasse 15 (District 6).

Going out

Movie theaters

There are many movie theaters (Kinos) in Vienna. Most of the films are in German, but some cinemas also offer films in their original language. In the center are these Artis International (Schultergasse 5) and Burg Kinoz (Opernring 19), slightly beyond is this Englisch Cinema (Mariahilfer Strase 57).

In addition to the most recent blockbusters, Burg Kino still screens the film "The Third Man", an English film classic from 1949, set entirely in the half-destroyed post-war Vienna, every week. Other classic films (from the Marx Brothers to Quentin Tarantino) are shown in Austria Film museum (Augustinerstrasse 1 [1]). An overview of all cinemas can be obtained at the tourist information point, which has a branch diagonally opposite the film museum.

music performance

A visit to Vienna is actually not complete without a visit to a musical performance. Tickets for performances of well-known pieces by Mozart and Strauss, such as the concertos of the Wiener Hofburg Orchestra, are offered at various tourist attractions, and cost a few tens per person. You don't always have to worry about your tourist clothes at the real tourist performances, but check with the seller just to be sure.

stay overnight

The prices for overnight stays are slightly higher in the high season (i.e. summer and Christmas holidays) than outside of that.

Budget

  • Happy HostelKurzgasse 2 (Five minutes walk from the Westbahnhof, and also near the metro stop 'Gumpendorfer Strasse.'),  43 676 6757 457, e-mail: . Breakfast from €3, washing clothes around €2 per wash, free internet use at the reception. Popular tent for backpackers Dormitory room: from €17 per bed. Double room: approx. €50 (including your own kitchenette if desired!).

Average

  • NH Vienna Airport. The NH Vienna Airport hotel is located directly opposite the airport terminal and the World Trade Center Vienna Airport.
  • Hotel Zipser. Without restaurant only breakfast. The rooms on the garden side are very quiet.
  • Hotel Graf Stadium***Buchfeldgasse 5, Vienna 8. Josefstadt (Metro station (U2 'Rathaus') and tram stops nearby),  43 1 4055284fax machine: 43 1 4050111, e-mail: . The house was built in the Biedermeier style in 1824/1825 and is registered as a historic monument. It has been run as a hotel since 1897 in Josefstadt's Old Town district. 39 single and double rooms with bath with shower / WC, hairdryer, SAT flat screen TV, radio, telephone and free WLAN in the entire hotel. From €75.

Expensive

Safety

Vienna is a safe city. It is also a clean city. There is sometimes a cup or a newspaper lying around, but it is not comparable to other large cities. As everywhere you have to be careful in the entertainment areas and there are of course beggars. To discourage the latter, the government asks that nothing be given to them directly, but rather a donation to charities.

Contact

Daily life

all around

  • Around Vienna there are many Heurigen, wine taverns where the wine from that region can be drunk and where wine festivals are held. Excursions are organized here especially for tourists, where, in addition to wine, music and dance provide the right mood.
  • It is located just outside Vienna Vienna Woods.
  • Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, is a stone's throw from Vienna. A train leaves every hour, and boat trips from Vienna can also be booked. Both take about an hour.
  • Also Budapest, the capital of Hungary, is not far away. There are boat trips that can be booked in Budapest in three hours. It is also possible to make a cheap trip by train.
This is a usable article. It contains information on how to get there, as well as the main attractions, nightlife and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but dive in and expand it!
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