The Capital City of Austria

Vienna is divided into 23 districts. The inner town, the first district, is the most important. It is surrounded by the Ringstrasse. Each section of the Ringstrasse has a different name. The one in the very centre of the city is the Opern Ring, the others are the Schotten, the Karl Lueger, the Dr. Karl Renner, the Burg, the Kaerntner, the Schubert, the Park, and the Stueben Ring. These take in two-thirds of the Old Vienna. The other third is bounded by the Franz Joseph Kai along the Danube Canal.

Other places of interest to the tourist in Vienna are the Kapuziner church in whose crypt lie 144 Habsburgs (12 were emperors and 15 empresses), the House of Parliament and the University of Vienna. Nearby are the Minoriten Church, the Chancellery and the Votive Church. There are also countless art galleries, museums and parks. 50 percent of Vienna is green – not the ecological kind but parkland. Take in, too, a visit to some of the houses where well known composers have lived, like Mozart, Beethoven, Strauss Jr and the house of Sigmund Freud where you can see the very couch where his patients gave him the material to base his theory upon.


The principal shopping streets in Vienna are Karntnerstrasse, Graben, and Kolhmarkt (all near St Stephen’s), and Mariahilferstrasse from near the Ring to beyond the Westbahnhof. Good buys are antiques, Dirndls, Lederhosen, and leather goods of all sorts, petit point, Augarten porcelain, woodcarving, and many other kinds of Austrian craftwork. Sachers will post their famous Sachertorten to any address.

There is always something entertaining to do in and around Vienna. The splendid Schonbrunn Palace a short tram ride from the centre is a breathtaking reminder of Vienna’s past glories. The Prater amusement park between the Danube and the Danube Canal offers light relief. And a trip on a Danube water-bus can provide a refreshing change.