Tag: Vienna

  • Hochhaus Herrengasse

    It´s been some time since the Open House Wien weekend but there is still one building left: The Hochhaus Herrengasse! It´s a building I´ve known my whole life and probably dreamt about visiting it for most of the time. I wondered how it looked and how amazing the view must be.

    To be honest seen from Herrengasse it doesn´t look that spectacular and one wouldn´t see the real hight of it. To built a high-rise-buliding which doesn´t look like one may have been a typical austrian compromise. On its highest point there are 16 stories and it´s 52 metres high. Have a look at the mock-up:

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house

    Viennas very first high-rise-building was built in 1930/32 on the former area of the Palais Lichtenstein which had been demolished in 1913. Inside the Palais was the famous “Bösendorfer concert hall”, know for its amazing acoustics. The story goes people were crying and sobbing at last concert on May 2th 1913. Stefan Zweig even wrote about it in his memoirs:

    “Als die letzten Takte Beethovens verklangen, vom Rosé-Quartett herrlicher als jemals gespielt, verließ keiner seinen Platz. Wir lärmten und applaudierten, einige Frauen schluchzten vor Erregung, niemand wollte es wahrhaben, dass es ein Abschied war. Man verlöschte im Saal die Lichter, um uns zu verjagen. Keiner von den vier- oder fünfhundert der Fanatiker wich von seinem Platz.” Stefan Zweig “Die Welt von Gestern”

    World War I stopped the plans to built a hotel on this site, it remained a vacant lot until 1930. It not only was the first high-rise-building, it was also a first to design apartments for mostly singles from 20 square metres to 93 square metres.

    It was this urban and modern charm that attracted artists and free spirits to life there, like the actors Oscar Werner, Curd Jürgens, Paula Wessely or the german writer Daniel Kehlmann.

     

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house
    I´d love to life in this tiny apartment filled with lovely vintage furniture and this amazing view!
    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house
    St. Sephens
    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house
    Hofburg
    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house
    Rathaus

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house

    hochhaus, herrengasse, vienna, ohw14, open house

     

    Have a look at all these amazing historic pictures from Hochhaus Herrengasse! From the building site to the apartments!

  • Belvedere Gardens

    Some days ago I enjoyed a little stroll around Belvedere Gardens between the two baroque palaces in the third district. I especially like them in this time of the year and in the wintertime, when they are kind of “stripped” of their baroque boldness.

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria
    The Upper Belvedere seen from the entrance. During the Biedermeier period this pond was transformed into a skating rink in winter.

     

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria

    In 1697 Prince Eugene purchased a sizable plot of land south of the Rennweg, the main road to Hungary. Plans for the Belvedere garden complex were drawn up immediately. He chose Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt as the chief architect for building his summer residence. Construtions for the Lower Belvedere started in 1715 and in 1717 for the upper palace. Until Maria Theresia bought the estate in 1752 it was known as the “Gardenpalais”.

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria

    In 1776 Maria Theresa and her son Joseph II moved the “k.u.k. Gemäldegalerie” (Imperial Picture Gallery) into the Belvedere to make it accessible to the general public. The gallery opend five years later as one of the first public museums of the world. But in 1891 it was transferred again to the newly built “Kunsthistorisches Museum” (Museums of Fine Art).

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria

    While in 1896 Franz Ferdinand remodeled the Upper Belvedere to use it as his residence, the “Modern Galery” opened in the Lower Belvedere in 1903, the first state collection in Austria that was exclusively dedicated to modern art.

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria
    The Lower Belvedere seen from the gardens.

    After the end of the monarchy the palaces were left to the Staatsgalerie and they have remained to be museums until today. The Upper Belvedere houses the “Österreichische Galerie”, the Lower Belvedere and the Orangery have been specially adapted to stage special exhibitions quite recently.

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria

    In 1955 the Upper Belvedere hosted a very special moment for Austria: The signing of the Austrian State Treaty on Mai 15th, which re-established Austria as sovereign state.

    bevedere, gardens, baroque, vienna, autumn, vienna, austria

  • Süsses Mädel

    typography, window, shop, vintage, stadtschrift, neon, sign, audrey hebpurn, sophia grabner

    This shop has been there probably forever – and the sign kind of always makes me smile.

    In front the very sweet girl Sophia!