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Accommodation in Vienna
Spittelberg, the best location in the heart of Vienna. Our hostel is located right in the middle of everything you wish for....
Our hostel is located in the ancient 'Spittelberg-Area' right at the edge of Vienna´s very centre...
We have 60 bright, friendly rooms with either 2, 4, 6 or 8 beds in an awesome location...
The Do Step Inn is small, cosy and friendly budget accommodation with a cental location in Vienna...
The friendly hostel with a great international atmosphere just a 3min walk from Westbahnhof Rail Station....
Our pleasant guesthouse is situated just an 8 minute drive on the Underground towards the west of the historical centre.
Our rate includes breakfast. We are located close to the center only a 2 min. walk from west-rail-station.
This small guesthouse is located in a good living area with all facilities you need close by...
Newer, better, nicer! Opened in May 2006, this is our 2nd hostel in town. Top location right on Vienna´s main shopping road. Train and underground stations are only a 1 minute walk away.
Vienna´s famous backpacker haven since 1999! The Wombat's 'Base' Hostel was voted into the top ten hostels worldwide by users who booked through this site in 2002, 2003 and 2004.
Welcome to Lauria's where you will find a laid back atmosphere at very good rates...
Bed & Breakfast Vienna is a big flat that consists of three double bedrooms, one single room, a nice kitchen and one bathroom with shower and WC for the guests.
Always included: ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT breakfast buffet, BEDLINEN and TOWELS! Our new Hostel, opening in October 2007, is located directly next to Vienna's Shopping Mile, Favoritenstrasse, and is the perfect Choice...
Individually designed, separate apartments for 1-4 persons, with all comforts and absolute privacy...
We have 41 rooms with 4 beds in our hostel which has probably the best location in Vienna...
Our family-run pension is located on a main street with a lot of shop and restaurants nearby. They are only a few steps to the next tramway station, with which you reach the city center within 10 minutes
HappyHostel, the happy Hostel for happy people! HappyHostel apartments and rooms are located in the centre of Vienna in two buildings close together in a safe residential area near by the famous shopping street Mariahilfer Strasse
If you would like to spend your Viennese holiday living in a quiet and affordable central location, then we can highly recommend the Bag & Map Apartment Guesthouse
The comfortable Pension with breakfast is situated in a recently renovated house on the 4th floor (lift).
Welcome to the Hotel Cyrus! Our hotel has 20 rooms, a bar and a restaurant and is located near the city
A family-run business we offer you and your guests tasteful surroundings and a very personal and warm-hearted atmosphere...
Our 3-star pension in heart of Vienna is family run. All the famous monuments such as parliament, city hall, Stephansdom the museums and even the university are easy to reach walking.....
The Hotel Goldener Baer is a small and cosy hotel conveniently situated in the centre of Vienna...
Just 300 metres to metro! 24h reception! Few minutes to city centre! All rooms are equipped with private shower...
A heartfelt welcome to Vienna! Stay at our family-run house with affordable rates.
We run a small boarding house with a family atmosphere on the biggest shopping street in Vienna...
Hotel Haydn is a pleasant and comfortable hotel located close to the Haydn monument...
Hotel Pension Arian is a first class, family-run Hotel situated in the City Centre right on the 'Mariahilfer Strasse Nr.58', the main shopping street in Vienna
The magnificent setting in Neustift am Walde and green surroundings will make you feel more than welcome and after a walk through the vineyards you will feel at home...
Hotel Karolinenhof is the ideal base from which to explore the cultural wealth of Vienna...
This first class hotel is just 8 miles from Vienna Airport and is ideally situated between the inner city of Vienna and Schonbrunn Castle...
The Hotel Mate Depenance is the perfect starting point for any visit to the Austrian capital...
The centrally located and comfortable Hotel Congress was built in 1900 as the Hotel Riva, it already hous
Vienna4rent offers cozy, comfortable and nicely furnished apartments near the city center.
Our hotel has 15 rooms and is ideally located in Vienna, barely a two minute walk from City Hall...
The Alibi Hostel is the newest hostel located in the centre of Vienna. You can choose between various types of rooms.
Alla Lenz is pleased to welcome you to our family run hotel where we are delighted to meet the individual needs of our guests, in the pursuit of excellent service...
The Art Hotel Vienna is a stylish and modern 3 star hotel centrally located in downtown Vienna with easy connections to the inner city and close to the Naschmarkt, theatre land and numerous antique stores...
We have a wonderful reputation due to our typical Viennese atmosphere, excellent service and modern comfort...
Welcome to the Hotel Cristall Vienna. The comfortable Hotel Cristall is centrally located, making it the perfect place to stay in Vienna - for business travellers as well as for city tourists...
This is a 3 star hotel located in the city centre of Vienna close to all the major sights.
Enjoy the comfort of the 4-star Hotel Park Inn Vienna, your home away from home in Vienna...
We offer you a great location to experience Vienna. Our hotel has been awarded with the "Austrian Eco Label" by the ministry for economic affairs.
The hotel consists of 31 rooms, two rooms suitable for 4 and two more apartments with 2 rooms...
We are a small, family-run hostel just a stone's throw away from the very centre of Vienna.
Welcome to our Pension, located in an old classical building in traditional old Vienna style...
The Pension Stadthalle has a great location and presents itself in a warm and modern atmosphere...
We offer comfortable hotel quality rooms with private bathroom, refrigerator and telephone in each room, at hostel prices.
The Strawberry Hostel, located in the center of Vienna, offers comfortable rooms with private bathroom and refrigerator, no bunk beds!!! 24 hours reception.
Sightseeing, shopping or clubbing no matter what your favourites are the Vienna City Hostel is ideally located to fulfill your wishes!
The Westbahn Hotel Vienna Am Europaplatz is centrally located next to the main railway station and airport bus stop...
regional info

Nestled throughout the city are the graceful art-nouveau buildings of turn-of-the century architects Otto Wagner and Adolf Loos. The buildings are one of the many remnants of the artistic and intellectual flowering that took place in Vienna at the turn of the century. Of course, the buildings and the city’s history are only a backdrop for the daily culture that can still be found in the concert halls, opera houses, and cafes.
Before traveling to Vienna, try to reserve tickets to the main attractions in advance, as ticket requests from outside of the country are given priority. We recommend the Vienna State Opera, the Spanish Riding School with its famous Lipizzaner stallions, and the Vienna Boys Choir, which is particularly moving. If tickets for the State Opera aren’t available try, the Volksoper, which features operettas, musicals, and ballets. If all else fails, the Gothic Rathaus (city hall) hosts a popular Christmas market in the winter and free concerts in the summer. Take a tour of the city to get oriented either on foot or in a Fiaker (a horse-drawn carriage). If you’d prefer a more elevated impression of the city, go up to the top of the Donauturm (Danube Tower)—at 846 ft/258 m it provides quite a panorama from its observation platform, as well as two revolving restaurants. You can see from there that Vienna is quite a large city — its sights are dispersed throughout so you’ll want to buy bus/subway passes for the number of days that you’ll be there.
The pulse of the city can be found along Ringstrasse, according to most tourist guides. Perhaps they are correct, if we think of Vienna as a 19th-century invention. As you walk around the area, be sure to take a break at a sidewalk cafe and have one of the city’s superb pastries. The Viennese invented cafe society, and there is no better pastime than to linger over a torte, read a newspaper and watch the Viennese. Each café has its own personality; while the lavish cafes inside the Ringstrasse are most impressive, the smaller ones just outside have a charm and authenticity that should also not be missed. And don’t just stick to coffee — the Austrian fruit teas and black teas are so flavorful that you’ll wonder what you’ve been drinking all these years. Other cafes that are not as stodgy and expensive as the ones on the Ring are the illustrious, beautiful and comfortable Cafe Sperl (2nd district); any of the cafes near the Naschmarkt, Freud's house, the house designed by Wittgenstein, and gorgeous St. Charles Church--a must-see; Hawelka (1st district); Brauenerhof, where the lacerating and hilarious writer Thomas Bernhard spent his mornings (1st district); and many others. While the Biedermaier pulse of Vienna, long associated with the upper-middle class and collective repression, may be found along the Ring, its darkly satirical flip side is found in these and similar haunts.
After a coffee or a cup of tea you should be ready to visit one of the many world-class museums along the Ring. The Kunsthistorisches Museum has works of art by Bruegel, Rembrandt, Caravaggio and Titian, as well as Roman and Egyptian antiquities. Just across the plaza is the Naturhistorisches Museum, which has the 25,000-year-old Venus of Willendorf, one of the oldest works of art in existence. The Museum of Applied Art, located farther down the Ring, has an amazing one-million piece-collection of Rococo Baroque and Jugendstil furniture, glass porcelain, and fabric. Just off the Ring is the brilliant Secession Building, one of the must-sees of Vienna. Built as a reaction to the overblown Ringstrasse buildings, the museum is a work of art in itself, and—except for Gustav Klimt’s Beethoven Frieze—generally better than the hit-or-miss contemporary art exhibited inside.
If the Ringstrasse is the pulse of the city, the Innere Stadt (the old city) is the heart. This is where the city’s main attractions are located, and since it is a pedestrian zone, it is also a great place to stroll. For an overview, climb the bell tower of the 450-ft-/137-m-high St. Stephen’s Cathedral. The cathedral, built in 1258, is easily identifiable by the zigzag pattern of its roof tiles. Between St. Stephen’s and the State Opera House is Karntnerstrasse, Vienna’s main shopping street. Nearby is the Albertina museum, which houses more than 200 000 drawings (works by Albrecht Durer among others). At another corner of the old city is the Hofburg Palace, a massive complex that contains the Burgkapelle (the chapel where the Boys Choir sings Mass), the Stallburg (where the Spanish Riding School performs on Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings), the Imperial Treasuries (Habsburg Crown Jewels), and the elaborate Austrian National Library.
Across the river from the old city is Prater Park, an enjoyable amusement park that dates from the 18th century. The park’s main attraction is the Riesenrad, the giant Ferris wheel seen in the film The Third Man (the film plays every summer in one of the theaters on the Ring), and the goofy statues scattered around the park, one of which shows a enormous baby taking his tiny father for a walk.
On the other side of the old city near the Südbahnhof is the Belvedere Palace, which houses a stunning collection of Viennese art from the art-nouveau era, including Gustav Klimt’s “The Kiss.” These enchanting pictures are reason enough to visit Vienna. The palace also has a spacious garden with a great view of the city.
Another enjoyable museum is the quirky KunstHausWien designed by the artist Hundertwasser. The museum is a fantasy of colorful and lumpy tile floors and peculiar architecture (trees grow out of the third floor window). Just down the street is a block of apartments that was also designed by the artist. Though not open to visitors, the colorful fairy-castle facade always draws a crowd of onlookers. If you still have a hankering for modern art, visit the Museum of the 20th Century.
You'll thoroughly enjoy seeing the homes of famous Viennese: Sigmund Freud (his psychoanalytic couch and other possessions are on display), Johann Strauss Jr. (where he composed The Blue Danube ), Beethoven (he wrote his Third Symphony here), and Mozart (called Figarohaus: it’s where he composed The Marriage of Figaro).
In addition, you'll also enjoy seeing where some famous Viennese are buried! Probably the most famous grave is Mozart’s, hidden somewhere in the cemetery in village of St. Marx— when he died the great composer was buried in a communal grave, not a pauper's grave as many people believe. Vienna later began to bury its famous people in clearly marked graves in the Central Cemetery, which now holds the graves of Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert, Schoenberg, and other Viennese dignitaries. To round out the cemetery tour, travelers can visit the Imperial Burial Vault (Kaisergruft), the final resting place of the emperors and empresses of the last 300 years of the House of Habsburg. As a matter of fact, the Augustinerkirche vault houses the hearts - literally - of many of the Habsburgs.
Visitors shouldn’t miss the elaborate 17th-century Schönbrunn Palace, which was the Habsburg summer home. Often crowded with sightseers it is nonetheless a must-see. Highlights include the State Rooms, the Hall of Mirrors (where Mozart made his debut at the age of 6), the magnificent Wagenburg Imperial Coach collection, the enormous gardens, and the Tiergarten, Europe’s oldest zoo.
If you feel like taking a short excursion out of the city, consider having a picnic in the Vienna Woods (beech-covered hills), relaxing in the charming wine gardens attached to nearby vineyards, or strolling along the scenic Danube River.
There are also several sights nearby Vienna that merit a visit if you have the time. One is Klosterneuburg, an abbey begun in the 12th century, which features the Verdun Altar. Also south of the city is Baden, a pretty wooded town where Beethoven and Mozart lived. Appropriate to its name, Baden has a huge open-air thermal bathing complex with a treatment center. The town’s sulphuric waters are believed to provide healing; following the footsteps of Mozart’s wife Constanze, thousands go there every year seeking rejuvenation, and once rejuvenated, they attend festivals and operettas (in the summer) or head to the casino.
Another composer’s town was Eisenstadt south of Vienna, where Joseph Haydn lived (he was court musician at the Esterhazy Palace). And don’t miss St. Polten, with its Baroque frescoes; and (in summer) Rust and its famous storks.
Every year orchestras from around the world take part in The Vienna International Festival. Churches, mansions, and palaces across the city host more than 150 different concerts ranging from sacred music to opera and choral music to symphony.
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