Visit Empress Sisi’s former summer residence. This baroque complex contains an enchanting park, the Palm House, the Gloriette and a zoo. Read more.
Vienna's Ringstraße is 5.2 kilometers long. Long enough to provide space for numerous monumental buildings. Read more.
The Spanish Riding School in Vienna with its famous Lipizzan ballet can be experienced live in the baroque ambiance of the Imperial Palace. Read more.
This legendary literati café which counted Arthur Schnitzler, Peter Altenberg and Adolf Loos among its regulars has a charm of its own that transforms a visit into an experience. Read more.
Enjoy the authentic Viennese coffee house atmosphere with a slice of original Sachertorte and a cup of Sacher coffee. A magnificent winter garden frames uninterrupted views of the State Opera House. Read more.
Founded in 1880, Sperl is considered to be a classic synonym for Viennese coffeehouse culture. Read more.
Diners at one of the old city’s last surviving monastic cellars are spoilt for choice when it comes to Viennese cuisine (pork knuckle, roast chicken, Wiener Schnitzel). Read more.
“Viennese cuisine as it always used to be” is the watchword here. This restaurant remains true to the essence of Viennese cuisine, which is among the bestknown in the world. Read more.
A sophisticated bistro with top-class Viennese cuisine, where Franz Schubert loved to dine. The restaurant is well-known for the particularly good way it prepares offal. Read more.
A Viennese institution with a long tradition and excellent quality. Countless artists and well-known personalities have been guests here. The restaurant focuses on fine Viennese tradition. Read more.
Vienna’s best-known luxury restaurant. The Tafelspitz is an absolute must – a tender joint of boiled beef that simply melts in the mouth. Read more.
The Kunsthistorisches Museum (Art History Museum) was built in 1891 near the Imperial Palace to house the extensive collections of the imperial family. Read more.
The Albertina not only has the largest and most valuable graphical collections in the world, with works such as Dürer’s “Hare” and Klimt's studies of women. Read more.
See Gustav Klimt's legendary painting "The Kiss" as well as major works by Schiele and Kokoschka for yourself. You’ll be delighted by the magnificent ba-roque palace complex and its extensive gardens. Read more.
Vienna’s exciting art complex near the Imperial Palace offers not only renowned museums, a lively array of restaurants, cafés and bars make this museum district even more attractive. Read more.
Here, the history of Vienna is documented, starting with the first settlements on the Danube right up to the present time. Read more.
Colorful areas, irregular forms, many grown over with lush green plants: this is how painter Friedensreich Hundertwasser (1928 - 2000) encouraged new impulses – and not only to Vienna’s architecture. Read more.
Take yourself on a musical journey in Vienna's singular Museum of Sound and observe the great composers or look at the musical future of computer music. Read more.
The various departments of the House of the Sea present tropical fresh water and salt water fish as well as fish from the Mediterranean and Austrian lakes. Read more.
Hip, urbane, modern: Visitors to the MuseumsQuartier enjoy Café Leopold and celebrate right into the night. Read more.
Café Drechsler on the Naschmarkt is open 23 hours a day - five days a week. Clubbers as well as market stallholders appreciate that fact. Read more.
A glass pavilion with room for art and a restaurant with a chic urban atmosphere presently stands were a museum was once temporarily housed in a container. Read more.
The dinner club at the Vienna State Opera offers sophisticated cuisine and live jazz music in a futuristic ambience. Read more.
The Badeschiff on the Danube Canal is now also a new attraction for lovers of good cuisine. Read more.
The new venue “Motto am Fluss” lies right on the Danube Canal at Schwedenplatz like a racy speedboat. Host Bernd Schlacher has created an extensive gastronomic landscape here on two levels. Read more.
The bar with a view of the city is the perfect summer location. The seats on the terrace are highly prized, while the ambience inside is that of a circus. Read more.
A sophisticated bar for people-watching and chilling out, just as popular now as it was then. Read more.
Located on the top floor of the Steffl department store, the Sky Bar offers an excellent panorama over the old center of the city, St. Charles Church, the Giant Ferris Wheel, & many other attractions Read more.
A former sauna in Vienna’s Prater has rapidly developed into one of the city’s most prominent clubs. Techno and Electro are the mainstays of this stylish and original location. Read more.
The Flex is one of the most modern clubs in Europe. Whether you’re looking for guitars or rich beats, you’ll find what you’re after here. Read more.
Located directly on Praterstern, the Fluc has been the main driving force behind the renaissance of nightlife in Vienna’s second district. Read more.
The new club for electronic music brings a breath of fresh air to the Danube Canal. Read more.
The Badeschiff is moored on the Danube Canal and entices you on board with a highly varied program. Read more.
The founding club on Vienna’s Gürtel is primarily devoted to British guitar music and football broadcasts – both live, where possible. Well established DJ evenings complete the program. Read more.
A small musical travel agency that connects to the historical role of Vienna as a world metropolis and centre of a multi-ethnic state: the Ost Klub. Read more.
The Arena in Vienna Erberg is a fixed point in Vienna’s event scene and a site of subcultural history. Punk bands, trendy pop groups, music legends and Drum’n’Bass DJs appear here, one after the other Read more.
Bathing, boating, cycling, skating, beach volleyball – or treating yourself to a picnic as a rest from sightseeing: A visit to the Danube Island promises fun, action & relaxation for the entire family Read more.
The Prater covers six million square meters. Although it is located only three linear kilometers from St. Stephen's Cathedral, nature is thriving in this area. Read more.
If you are looking for the ideal place for a souvenir photo, then Vienna's Stadtpark is the spot - at the foot of the golden Johann Strauß memorial, one of the world's most photographed monuments. Read more.
This famous stage offers a different program every day, with over 50 operas and ballet works on around 300 days per season and once a year the famous "Opernball" Read more.
The concert hall contains the world-famous Golden Hall, in which the Wiener Philharmoniker celebrate the New Year's Concert every year. Read more.
Its musical scope is not limited to the classical repertoire but ranges from the Middle Ages to the most progressive sounds of the present time. Read more.
One of the most important musical venues in Vienna, on September 5 they will show "Elisabeth" again. Read more.
Ever since 1776, when Emperor Joseph II founded the Court and National Theater, the institution has held a leading position in the dramatic arts of the German-speaking countries. Read more.
The Volkstheater opened in 1889 as a “civic counterpart” to the present-day Burgtheater. Nowadays, the repertoire includes Austrian as well as German and international classics, comedies or musicals. Read more.
120 market stands and restaurants are offering culinary delights ranging from Viennese to Indian, from Vietnamese to Italian. The Naschmarkt has developed into a meeting point for young and old. Read more.
A little further from the city centre, it is with it's more than 170 market stalls Vienna’s largest street market. Read more.
The Central Cemetery, with an area of about 495 acres, was opened in 1874. Many graves of famous people can be seen there, eg Beethoven, Johann Strauss / & II, Brahms, Bruno Kreisky, Arnold Schönberg Read more.
A new building by star architect Jean Nouvel has opened its doors at the Danube Canal. Inside is the Stilwerk design center, with around 30 shops, as well as two restaurants and a hotel. Read more.
826 feet high, with two express elevators taking you to the rotating restaurant for a splendid view (at 564 feet) within 45 seconds. Read more.
You may want to visit this landmark of Vienna in the footsteps of the immortal movie “The Third Man” or simply enjoy the view of the city from almost 200 feet up. Read more.
A magnificent religious building with a large cupola: St. Charles' Church, the last work of the eminent baroque architect Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach. Read more.
St. Stephen's Cathedral, the heart of Vienna and Austria's most eminent Gothic edifice, houses a wealth of art treasures. Read more.