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Vienna: Attractions and Travel Guide

Things to Do in Vienna, best attractions and things to See.

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89
Museums, monuments, streets, neighborhood
23
Parks, tours, sightseeings
31
Shopping
28
Nightlife
There are a total of 15 attractions/things to do in the travel guide
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1 Schonbrunn Palace
Overall rating:
Rank: 1 About 186

Schonbrunn Palace is among the main cultural monuments in Vienna, Austria.Built in 1696, the palace exemplifies the interests and ambitions of the Hasburg royals....

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Type: Landmarks and Historic sites + Share


2 Hofburg
Overall rating:
Rank: 2 About 186

It is one of the major tourist attractions in Vienna, the Imperial Palace was the heart of the Habsburg Empire which gives us an authentic insight through its three main attractions: the Imperial Apartments, the Sisi Museum and the courts Imperial...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Heldenplatz 1
Type: Landmarks and Historic sites + Share


3 Belvedere Palace
Overall rating:
Rank: 3 About 186

The Belvedere Palace is a baroque palace complex which was built by Prince Eugene of Savoy in the third district of Vienna to the south east side of the city. It is home to the Osterreichische Galerie Belvedere...

Reviewed by:
Address: Prinz Eugen-Straße 27
Type: Museums + Share


4 Stephansdom
Overall rating:
Rank: 4 About 186

Stephansdom or the St. Stephen’s Cathedral is the mother church of the Archdiocese of Vienna. This is also the seat of the Archbishop of Vienna with its Romanesque and Gothic...

Reviewed by: Angha
Type: Landmarks and Historic sites + Share


5 Stephansplatz
Overall rating:
Rank: 5 About 186

This is the main square in Vienna which seems to blend ancient and modern cultures: on the one hand it is the imposing St. Stephen's Cathedral, on the other stands the modern Haas House of Hans Hollein. Stephansplatz is lively and full of life because...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Stephansplatz
Type: Streets, Squares and Neighbourhoods + Share


6 Leopold Museum
Overall rating:
Rank: 6 About 186

Leopold Museum is a famous museum of modern art in Vienna. It is located at the Museum Quarter 7, Museumsplatz 1 in Vienna. This is the whole and sole place where one can see the largest collection of Austrian modern art. It is the...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Museumsplatz 1
Vienna
Type: Museums + Share


7 Museum of Vienna
Overall rating:
Rank: 7 About 186

An interdisciplinary museum, with offices located throughout the city. The city is examined from every point of view, from the history to art, fashion and modern culture, starting from it's origins to come to the present day: here you can really get...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Wien Museum

Type: Museums + Share


8 Parliament palace
Overall rating:
Rank: 8 About 186

The building of the Council of the Kingdom, dating from the late nineteenth century and now the main headquarter of both chambers is in neoclassical style and looks like a real Greek temple in honor of the ancient Greek symbol and the birthplace of...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Ring Strasse, Vienna
Type: Landmarks and Historic sites + Share


9 Albertina
Overall rating:
Rank: 9 About 186

Albertina is a museum situated in the Innere Stadt of Vienna, Austria, and has one of the finest art collections in the world. Housing one of the largest and significant print rooms in the world,...

Reviewed by: Angha
Address: Albertinaplatz 1
Type: Museums + Share


10 San Michele Church
Overall rating:
Rank: 10 About 186

Built in the thirteenth century, is in Gothic-Romanesque style but with a facade built later in the neoclassical style. Famous for it's crypt, which houses the remains of rich and nobles, and for the fact that it is where Mozart's Requiem was played...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Michaelerkirche
Type: Landmarks and Historic sites + Share


11 The House of music
Overall rating:
Rank: 11 About 186

In the worlds capital city of classical music, extraordinary performers such as Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven are celebrated in the six floors of this museum that mixes real and virtual environments. There is also a room where you can hear the famous...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Type: Museums + Share


12 Ring
Overall rating:
Rank: 12 About 186

Built by Francis Joseph, this avenue ring, 4 km long, surrounds the historic center of Vienna and to go though it means to immerse yourself in it's glorious history: in fact it is home to famous buildings like the Imperial Palace, Parliament, City...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address:
Type: Streets, Squares and Neighbourhoods + Share


13 St. Karl's church
Overall rating:
Rank: 13 About 186

It is Vienna's most popular sacred building in baroque style, and has many references to the terrible plague of 1713, during which the city was entrusted the protection of St. Carlo Borromeo, to whom the church is dedicated. It has a dome 72 meters...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Type: Landmarks and Historic sites + Share


14 Technisches Museum Wien The Vienna Museum of Technology
Overall rating:
Rank: 14 About 186

Technisches Museum Wien or the Vienna Museum of Technology is located in the Austrian city of Vienna. It lies at the Mariahilfer Straße 112, 1140 in Wien. This is a 22,000 sq. meters spread exhibition space. This museum...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Mariahilfer Str. 212
Type: Museums + Share


15 Prater
Overall rating:
Rank: 15 About 186

A green oasis but also a great amusement park which houses the famous Ferris wheel in addition to the historical museum and the planetarium. At prater you can participate in big events, you can relax in nature and you can eat in one of the many...

Reviewed by: Editorial Staff
Address: Prater
Type: Other attractions + Share

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Print the pdf Guide customized with attractions and things to do

Overview to visit Vienna at its best

Schönbrunn Palace

1130 Wien
www.schoenbrunn.at
info@schoenbrunn.at
Tel: +43-1-811 13-0
Fax: +43-1-812 11-06

How to get there:
Schönbrunn is not far from the city centre and easy to get to by public transport:
Underground: U4 (green line), alight at Schönbrunn; tram: 10, 58, alight at Schönbrunn; bus: 10A, alight at Schönbrunn
The imperial palace of Schönbrunn with its ancillary buildings and extensive park and its long and momentous history is one of Austria's most important cultural monuments. Classified as a listed monument, the whole ensemble including the palace, the park and its numerous architectural edifices, fountains and statues as well as the world's oldest zoo, was placed on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage List in 1997.
Inclusion in this list confirmed the significance of the palace and its park as a unique Baroque ensemble.

The World Cultural Heritage Site of Schönbrunn Palace with its park and gardens will take you into a world of imperial Baroque splendour. Inside the palace you can learn interesting facts about the imperial family, and you can enjoy the wide spaces of the park on a relaxing walk through the gardens.
The park and other attractions at Schönbrunn draw 6.5 million people a year, while the palace alone is toured by 1.2 visitors. (Tip: schedule your visit to the palace for the afternoon when it's likely to be less crowded.)
A total of 7.7 million visitors come to see the impressive palatial complex at Schönbrunn each year.
The palace park and its attractions:
The palace park
Around 1779 the palace park was opened to the public and has been a popular recreational area for Vienna's inhabitants and international visitors alike ever since. Extending 1.2 kilometres from east to west and 1 kilometre from north to south, the park offers ample scope for recreation.
The palace park is open all the year round and can be visited free of charge.

 

 Attractions in the palace park:

  • Privy Garden
  • Maze and Labyrinth
  • Gloriette with panorama terrace

Some of the attractions in the park at Schönbrunn are run by independent institutions and thus have different opening hours and charges. For more information please contact these institutions directly:

  • Schönbrunn Zoo (www.zoovienna.at)*)
  • Palm House (www.bundesgaerten.at)*)
  • Carriage Museum (www.khm.at/static/page157.html)*)
  • Marionette Theatre (www.marionettentheater.at)
  • Orangery (www.imagevienna.com)
  • Palace Chapel (www.schlosskapelle.at)

*) can also be visited with the combined ticket “Schönbrunn Gold Pass”.

 

The Imperial Furniture Collection • Vienna Furniture Museum

Andreasgasse 7
1070 Wien
www.hofmobiliendepot.at
info@hofmobiliendepot.at
Tel: +43-1-524 33 57-0
Fax: +43-1-524 33 57-666

Opening hours: Tue – Sun 10 am – 6 pm
The museum is wheelchair-accessible.

How to get there:
Located just off bustling Mariahilfer Strasse, the museum offers you a comprehensive tour of the interiors and furniture of past centuries. Completely redesigned in the 1990s, the museum is ideal for combining shopping and culture, lying directly on the orange underground line U3 (alight at Zieglergasse, take the Andreasgasse exit).

The Museum:
The museum is a rarity among Vienna's sights and an insider's tip. Visitors should allow at least an hour in order to view the approximately 4,000 exhibits on the museum's four floors. The objects displayed range from items of furniture used by all the Austrian emperors since Charles VI (the father of Maria Theresa), furniture by the Thonet Brothers to Jugendstil, the Viennese Modernist movement and contemporary Austrian architects and designers such as E.A. Plischke, Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, Luigi Blau and Franz West. The museum will open a new permanent exhibition of the furniture of the Empress Sisi as well as the film legend Sissi end of July.
The Imperial Furniture Collection is a "paradise for lovers of furniture and people with a professional interest in interior design". The museum has one of the largest collections of furniture worldwide. On display is furniture from five centuries: Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, the Josephine Age, Empire, Biedermeier, Historicism, Jugendstil and the Viennese Modernist movement. The major part of the exhibits derives from the holdings of the imperial court furniture depository founded by Maria Theresa.
The complex embraces the museum, restoration workshops and the offices of the Federal Furniture Administration, which is still responsible for the location and deployment of the furniture. The storerooms house furniture and fittings used on state occasions such as the red carpet rolled out whenever a foreign head of state pays an official visit to Austria, or the large numbers of red, white and gold chairs used at state receptions.
Visitors can dip into the history of furniture, interior design, developments in craftsmanship and technological changes, sit on original Biedermeier chairs and discover how the Habsburgs really lived: you'll find the Baroque gaming table used by Charles VI, eight chairs personally embroidered by Empress Maria Theresa and her daughters, the canaries named Biberl and Büberl and the gardening tools owned by Emperor Franz (II) I, the cot slept in by the children of Emperor Franz Joseph and Sisi, the 'escape cupboard' (a secret door camouflaged as a wardrobe) of the heir to the throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the furniture from the office of the last emperor of Austria, Karl I, and much, much more besides…. A visit to the Imperial Furniture Collection (like the Imperial Silver Collection) is the perfect complement to a tour of Schönbrunn Palace and the other Habsburg residences, especially as the wealth of exhibits displayed here conveys a vivid impression of the differing tastes of the Austrian monarchs over the ages.
Besides these historic pieces, there are also alcoves furnished as typical interiors to convey an impression of the atmosphere of Biedermeier lifestyle. The museum contains 15 of these Biedermeier alcoves, three Empire alcoves and three alcoves furnished in the Historicist style.
Besides the permanent furniture collection the museum also hosts two to three temporary special exhibitions on furniture design and photography each year. Information on the current special exhibitions can be found at www.hofmobiliendepot.at (exhibitions).
The shady interior courtyard provides welcome relaxation, especially in summer. And if after - or even while - looking at all that imperial furniture you start to hanker after imperial cuisine – then why not pay a visit to the Restaurant “Zum kaiserlichen Thron” (Imperial Throne Restaurant) run by master chefs Zhang & Deng. Their fine Sechzuan cuisine has been deemed worthy of one of the sought-after stars awarded by top gourmet restaurant guide Gault Millaut. But you can also take a seat in an original café interior from the 1950s and simply enjoy a cup of coffee or tea.

 

Imperial Apartments, Sisi Museum and Imperial Silver Collection in the Vienna Hofburg

Hofburg – Michaelerkuppel
A-1010 Wien
Entrance: Michaelerkuppel (exit: Ballhausplatz)
www.hofburg-wien.at
info@hofburg-wien.at
Tel.: +43-1-533 75 70
Fax: +43-1-533 75 70-33

Opening hours: daily from 9 am to 5 pm (July and August: 9 am to 5.30 pm)
The museums are wheelchair-accessible.
The Hofburg, former residence of the Habsburgs, is located at the heart of Vienna and houses several museums, cultural institutions and state offices, including the offices of the Federal President of Austria.

How to get there:
On foot from the 1st district; the nearest underground station is U3 Herrengasse; tram: Lines 1, 2, D, J, alight at Burgring; bus: Lines 2A or 3A, alight at Hofburg.
By purchasing just one ticket you can visit three different museums. The best way to begin your tour is with the Imperial Silver Collection on the ground floor. Afterwards the Emperor's Stairway takes you up to the Sisi Museum which leads into the Imperial Apartments with the private suites of Emperor Franz Joseph and Empress Elisabeth.
The entrance to the museums is directly under the Michaelerkuppel (the large dome over the entrance to the Hofburg opposite the end of the Kohlmarkt) and the exit is on Ballhausplatz (opposite the Federal Chancellery), which means that coats and bags cannot be left at a cloakroom or in a locker (we suggest you bring only light bags with you and postpone your visit to the museum shop until after your tour!). There are two shops at visitors' disposal: one on the ground floor and the other at the end of the tour.
Café Hofburg is also on the ground floor and can be visited during your tour – the ideal point on your tour being between the Imperial Silver Collection and the Sisi Museum (however, you will have to return your audio guides temporarily while you're in the café).
Audio guides are available free of charge in the following languages: German, English, Italian, French, Spanish, Japanese, Czech and Hungarian. They can be obtained from the desk immediately beside the entrance to the Imperial Silver Collection.

Imperial Apartments:
The Vienna Hofburg was the residence of the Habsburgs for over 600 years. The original medieval fortress was rebuilt several times and extended into a truly impressive complex of buildings embracing 18 wings and almost 2,600 rooms. Today 19 rooms in the former apartments of Emperor Franz Joseph and Empress Elisabeth are open to the public. Emperor Franz Joseph occupied his apartments from 1857 to his death in 1916.
Here the visitor enters the private sphere of the monarch's life. Franz Joseph regarded himself as the foremost official of state; his suite is sparsely furnished for an emperor and reflects his innate modesty of character.
Painstaking research and an active acquisitions programme mean that numerous personal objects are exhibited, conveying an authentic impression of the imperial couple's everyday life. In Franz Joseph's study is the well-known portrait of Empress Elisabeth by Franz Xaver Winterhalter depicting Sisi wearing her famous hair loose, one of the emperor's favourite portraits of his wife.
In the apartments of the empress, after the living-cum-bedroom, the visitor comes to the famous exercise-cum-dressing room, where the beauty-conscious empress spent many hours. A set of wall-bars and gymnastic rings attest to her love of physical exercise. Sisi was the first member of the imperial family to have a bathroom in the modern sense installed in her suite.
The tour concludes with a festively-decked table in the dining room which was used for family dinners.

Sisi Museum:The six rooms forming the Sisi Museum were opened on 24 April 2004 and are intended to convey a sensitive staging of Empress Elisabeth's personality in the historic surroundings of the Hofburg, exploring the origins of the "Sisi myth" and illuminating the historical personality of Elisabeth.The vicissitudes of her life and objects once owned by the empress bring home to the visitor how a carefree young girl from Bavaria became a restless, unapproachable and melancholic empress. The rigid constraints of court ceremonial, her cult of her own beauty, her obsessive dieting and reclusiveness present a stark contrast to scenes from the series of "Sissi" films starring Romy Schneider with their image of a popularly acclaimed, selflessly noble empress. The Sisi Museum presents a true-to-life picture far removed from the popular clichés about the empress. Examples of Empress Elisabeth's poetry provide the theme for each section of the museum.

Imperial Silver Collection:

This is the world's largest museum of objects associated with a courtly household. The exhibits all derive from the former Court Table and Silver Room and convey a vivid impression of the imperial household, court ceremonial and the culture of dining at the Habsburg court. An astonishing range of objects has been preserved, from utensils to decorative objects that are works of art in their own right. On the tour you will see saucepans from the imperial kitchens, moulds from the court confectionery, table linen from the court linen room, glass services, silver dinner services, porcelain from the Vienna Porcelain Manufactory as well as dinner services from the manufactories of Meissen, Sèvres and Herend, and impressive gilt-bronze centrepieces in a variety of styles – Gothic-Romantic, oriental or neo-Rococo. In addition there are many personal objects once owned by individual rulers, including the gold cutlery and cruet set belonging to Empress Maria Theresa or the silver travelling service used by Empress Elisabeth.

Special Thanks

Fiona Rötzer


Latest reviews Vienna

2/8/2013
Overall rating: 9
Nice place. I would call it City of Classic Music. Nice historical, monumental buildings, well renovated and maintained... I love such. Very impressive...
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1/15/2013
Overall rating: 8
So many places to see, don't think of a weekend even-though super, but need more time, Transport is super an easy esp.the S.bann. Parking in some areas...
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2/15/2013
Overall rating: 10
Vienna is the heartbeat not only of Austria but entire Europe. A cultural and ethical center of Europe with a presence and diversity of Human from all...
Not to be missed:
View from Kahlenberg
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A Concert
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The Sacher
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