Thursday 10 October 2019

Madrid

Madrid is a 3,266,126 inhabitants city flowed by river Manzanares, being the capital city and most inhabited city of the Community of Madrid and Spain. This city has an imperial and multicultural heritage due to it's time as Habsburg capital city, hosting influenced of both West and East Europe. It's considered a leading European music center and one of the most liveable city in Europe.


How do I arrive to Madrid?

 Madrid is a very big city and the capital city of Spain so there are many way to arrive there from many places:
  • Plane: the most frequent way to arrive to Madrid is by plane is using Madrid-Barajas International Airport, 19 km south east from the city. To go from the airport to the city, there are buses every hour (even in the early hours) and trains (CAT is faster 5-10 minutes faster than average train line but more expensive). Another choice that is sometimes cheaper is flying to the near city of Bratislava (Slovakia), just 60 km from Vienna. To go from Bratislava to Vienna there are buses from the airport (1-2 hours).
  • Train: the main train station is Wien Hauptbahnhof. There are trains to Salzburg (2.5 hours, 40), Linz (1.5 hours, 30), Graz (2.5 hours, 25), Innsbruck (4 hours 15 minutes, 60). Trains from Vienna to Bratislava cost 10 and last 1 hour.
  • Bus: from Vienna Bus Station there are buses to almost all over the country.
  • Car: if you rented a car, it's a 2 hours journey to Graz and Linz, 2 hours 45 minutes to Salzburg and 4 hours 50 minutes to Innsbruck. To other foreigner cities it takes 1 hour to arrive to Bratislava (Slovakia) and 1 hour 40 minutes to reach Brno (Czech Republic).
Once in Vienna, as in many European capital cities, the best ways to move are using public transportation (Madrdi Metro, train and buses), bicycles or walking.

History

 The first settlements in what is now Vienna were the Celts, later Germanic tribes and after it, the Romans, which founded Vindobona as a defensive point in the Danube river. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire it was occupied Avars by Hungarians till the 9th century, when Charlemagne conquered it and added it to the Eastern March, which later grew into the duchy of Austria. During Middle Age Vienna was an important ally of the Pope and it was first inhabited by Babenberg dynasty and later Habsburg dynasty, becoming de fact the capital of the Holy Roman Empire since 1437 (except when it was invaded by Matthias Corvinus of Hungary), having a huge cultural and scientific development. During the 16th and 17th centuries Vienna was threatened twice by an Ottoman invation (Siege of Vienna in 1519 and Battle of Vienna in 1683) and it suffered a plague which reduced a third its population; despite this, Vienna was the center of Baroque-style in Europe. In the Napoleonic wars Austria was defeated by France in Battle of Wagram, becoming its ally till the French defeat in Russia, when the chancellor Klemens von Metternich changed again Austrian Empire's side. When France was defeated, in the Congress of Vienna, the Austrian Empire's territories were preserved. In 1857 the city walls were demolished and, after the loss in the Austro-Prussian War, Austria gave more power to its inner nacionalisms, becoming the Austro-Hungarian Empire. During Franz Joseph I's reign the country had an important development but after Franz Ferdinand (heir presumptive of the Austro-Hungarian throne) assaination in Sarajevo in 1916, WW1 started, which ended with the breakup of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After WW1 Vienna became the capital city of the Republic of German-Austria and then the First Austrian Republic, remaining a high center of culture and modernism and called red Vienna (because the socialdemocrat SPÖ won always there until Dolfuss' dictatorship). In 1938 took place the Anschluss (union with Germany) and became part of Nazi Germany till the end of WW2. After the war, Vienna and Austria were firstly divided like Germany but in 1955 the Austrian State Treaty created the Second Austrian Republic. It's the third UNO's capital (after New York and Geneva) and since 1995 it belongs to the EU.

Madrid's top 10

If you have little or you just don't want to visit all Madrid, here's a list of the 10 places you can't miss in Madrid.
  1. Prado Museum.
  2. Queen Sofia Modern Art Museum.
  3. Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
  4. Retiro Park.
  5. Royal Palace of Madrid.
  6. Puerta de Alcalá.
  7. Templo de Debod.
  8. Enjoy Madrid's nightlife scene.
  9. Hundertwasser House.
  10. St. Charles Borromeo Church.

What can I visit in Madrid?

Vienna is visited by aprox. 7 million people per year because of it's history, culture and buildings. There's a card that allows you to get into some monuments for free and get discounts (Viena Pass). Whether or not buying it, it's up to you; but it's very recommended checking and comparing the places you want to visit and their price and the card's one. Some of the state owned museums are free on Sat afternoons. These are the main sightseeing points:
  • Queen Sofia Art Museum (10-21 Wed-Sat and Mon, 10-14:30 Sun; 5/ free  adults/ retiree, students and people under 18): . There's also a branch of this museum located at the Crystal Palace (10-22 from Apr to Sep; 10-19 Oct and Mar; 10-18 from Nov to Feb; free), in Retiro Park.
  • Jesus de Medinaceli Basilica (): .
    Portrait of Giovanna Tornabuoni
    by Domenico Ghirlandaio
  • Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum (12-16 Mon; 10-19 Tue-Sun; 13/ 9/ free  adults/ retiree and students/ kids): art museum which has the 2nd largest private art collection after the British Royal Collection, Thyssen-Bornemisza family one. It complements perfectly Prado Museum and Queen Sofia Museum, having works from English, Dutch and German schools as well as Impressionists, Expressionists and 20th century paintings. Among them, some of the highlights are Portrait of Giovanna Tornabuoni by Domenico Ghirlandaio, Venus and Cupid holding a mirror by Rubens, View of Vessenots, Auvers by Van Gogh and others by Dürer, Canaletto, Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Renoir, Monet, Degas, Kandinsky, Dalí or Lichtenstein.
  • Naval Museum of Madrid ():
  • Plaza de Oriente: .
    Royal Palace of Madrid

  • Royal Palace of Madrid (10-20 from Apr to Sep; 10-18 from Oct to Mar; 10/ 5/ free adults/ retiree, students and kids under 16/ kids under 5): . On Wed and Thu 18-18:30 it's free for EU citizens.
  • Madrid Cathedral (): . Below it can be found Madrid Cathedral Crypt (10-20), luminous crypt built in Neo-Romanesque style in 1911. It has more than 400 columns and 20 chapels and hosts the remains of the mural of Nuestra Señora de la Flor de Lis, one of the only examples of Romanesque art in the Community of Madrid. 
  • Monastery of Las Descalzas Reales (10-14 and 16-18:30 Tue-Sat; 10-15 Sun; 6/free adults/kids under 5): parks next to Hofburg whose highlights are many statues (like one of Mozart), a Butterfly House and an art nouveau conservatory. .
  • Haus der Musik (10-22; 13/6 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 12/kids under 3): sound and music museum provided with hi-tech interactive and multimedia expositions to explore the music history and composers. It's located in the Palace of Archduke Charles, where Otto Nicolai (founder of the Vienna Philharmonic) lived.
  • Literature Museum (10-18 Tue-Sun; 5/4 /free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): museum about Austrian literature from the 18th century to nowadays, presenting F. Kafka's, J. Nestroy, A. Schnitzler, I. Aichinger or F. Mayröcker's work. It also has a surprising objects room based on literacy characters.
  • Mozarthaus Vienna (10-19; 11/9 /4.50  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): only remaining house where the famous musician Mozart lived. It shows how was the society in the end of the 18th century and some original scores.
  • Kunstforum (10-19 Sat-Thu; 10-21 Fri; 11/6/4  adults/students/kids under 17): museum which has interesting temporary expositions of Modernistic or Contemporary important artists like Frida Kahlo or Balthus.
    Liria Palace
  • Liria Palace (9:45-14 Mon, 9:45-14 and 15:45-18:30 Tue-Sun from Mar to Oct; 9:45-14 Mon, 9:45-14 and 15:45-18:30 Tue-Sun from Nov to Feb; 14/ 12/ free  adults/ retiree, students and kids under 12/ kids under 6 and Mon 9:45 and 10:15): 18th century palace built and owned by the House of Alba, considered the 2nd most important palace in Madrid after the Royal one. The palace has parts of the large collection of this family like Alba bible (1430 illuminated bible), several portraits of Alba duchies and duchenesses made by artists like Goya, plus paitings by other reknown artists (such as Tiziano, El Greco, Renoir or Winterhalter) and furniture from those years. The palace was destroyedd during the Spanish Civil War but shortly afterwards rebuilt. The visit lasts 65 min and it has an audioguide included.
  • Anchor Clock: art nouveau clock built in 1911. At midday there's a "parade" in the clock with the most famous people that have lived in Vienna.
  • Cerralbo Museum (9:30-15 Tue-Sat; 10-15 Sun; 3/ 1.50€/ free  adults/ reduced/ retiree, students and kids): .
  • Casa Gallardo:
  • Parque del Oeste: Here it's located one of the favourite places of locals, Templo de Debod (10-14 Tue-Fri, 10-19 Sat-Sun; free). This ancient Egyptian temple, first built by Adikhalamani (Kushite king of Merë) around 200 BC, was dismantled in Egypt when Aswan Dam was built and gifted to Spain as a sign of gratitude for the help provided by Spain in saving Abu Simbel temples and rebuilt in this park in 1968.
  • St. Antonio de la Florida Chapel (9:30-20): 18th century Neoclassic chapel built by Flilippo Fontana for the Spanish king Charles IV. It's famous for the ceiling and dome frescoes depicting the miracles of St. Anthony of Padua by Francisco de Goya. It's also Goya's final burial place after his remains (but the skulll) were transferred from Bordeaux in 1919.
  • Jewish Museum (10-18 Sun-Fri; 12/8/ free  adults/students/kids under 18): located in Eskeles Palais, this museum shows the history of Jews in Vienna, since their settlement around Judenplatz till nowadays. There are expositions about religious art and the Holocaust. The ticket also allows you the entrance to Judenplatz Museum (10-18 Sun-Thu; 10-14 Fri), a museum which shows the excavated rests of the Vienna medieval synagogue, which was destroyed by the Archduke Albert V.
  • Austrian Resistence Historical Archive (9-17 Mon-Fri; free): located in the Old Town Hall this exposition shows the resistence against the Nazi occupation and its effects.
  • Scotts Church (10-17 Tue-Sat; free): 12th century church and monastery founded by Benedictine monks from Scotia Maior (Ireland). It's façade is from the 19th century and it has an interesting shop and a museum.
  • Hola.
    National Library of Spain

  • National Library of Spain (10-20 Mon-Sab; 10-14 Sun; free): 19th century Neoclassic major public library designed by Francisco Jareño y Alarcón that is considered the largest in Spain and one of the largest in the world. One of its main roles is keeping a copy of every book, map, magazine... since the 18th century, having around 30 million of objects. 
  • National Archaeological Museum (9:30-20 Tue-Sat; 9:30-15 Sun; 3): main museum in Madrid and Spain on archaeology. It's collection is focused on the history of the Iberian peninsula from Pre-history to early modern period. Some of its most spectacular pieces are the Iberian sculptures Lady of Elche and Lady of Baza, the mausoleum of Pozo Moro, pyxis of Zamora, Recceswinth's treasure or the Guanche mummy. It has an important collection on Ancient Greece, mainly consisting of pieces from Magna Graecia. It's located in the same building where the National Library of Spain is.
  • Sigmund Freud Museum (10-18; 12/7.50  adults/students): house where Freud lived during its more prolific years, from 1891 to 1938. It has personal objects and temporary expositions.
  • Josephinum (only guided tours): museum located in a surgeon academy built by Joseph II which has one of the weirdest collections in Vienna: 200 years olds wax midwifery, operation tools and operation paintings.
  • Mary Annunciation Servite Church: 18th century church inspired in the architect Andrea Palladio and which has the tomb of general Ottavio Piccolomini.
  • Liechtenstein Museum (only guided tours): Baroque-style palace with a garden with sculptures and has Hans-Adam II (Prince of Liechtenstein) art gallery, with paintings like Portrait of a Man by Raffaello or Portrait of Clara Serena by Rubens and one of the most precious pieces of furniture in the world, Badminton cabinet.
  • Schubert's Birthplace (10-18 Tue-Sun; 5/4 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): house where F. Schubert since his birth till he was 5 years old. It's very small but has an interesting exposition about his life and work and about his glasses, one of his more peculiar characteristics.
  • Romanticism Museum (9:30-20:30 Tue-Sat and 10-15 Sun from May to Oct; 9:30-18:30 Tue-Sat and 10-15 Sun from Nov to Apr; 3/ 1.50€/ free  adults/ reduced/ retiree, students and kids):
  • Museum of History of Madrid (10-20 Tue-Sun; free): museum placed in the former Royal Hospice of San Fernando, 18th century building with Baroque façade. Inside there's a collection of paintings, maps and objects which show Madrid's history and traditions from 16th century to our time. It has temporary expositions too.
  • Vienna State Opera: a 1869 opera house built in Neo-Renaissance style who belonged to the Emperors till 1920. There are guided tours (7.50/3.50€  adults/kids) which last 40 minutes.
  • Musikverein: a 1870 concert hall, home of the very famous Vienna Philharmonic. 
  • Sorolla Museum (9:30-20 Tue-Sun; 10-15 Sun; 3/1.50€ /free  adults/reduced/retiree, students and kids): .
  • Neue Berg Museum (10-18 Tue-Sun; 10-21 Thu; ticket included in the Art History Museum one): this place, part of the Art History Museum, has 3 museums: The Ephesos Museum (has pieces form the archeological site of Ephesos), the Imperial Armory (exhibits arms and armors) and the Collection of Historic Instruments (shows Renaissance and Baroque instrument).
  • Leopold Museum (10-18 Wed-Mon; 13/9 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 7): museum which was created with Rudolf Leopold collection, made of 19th century and Austrian Modernism works of art. The main works of art are The Self Seers (Death & Man), Mother with two children and Cardinal and Nun by E. Schiele, Death and Life by G. Klimt. There are works of other painters like A. Egger-Lienz, R. Gertsl or O. Kokoschka. There's a combined ticket for Leopold Museum and MUMOK for 20.50 /16  adults/reduced. 
  • MUMOK (Modern Art Museum) (10-19 Tue-Sun; 14-19 Mon; 12/8 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): 20th century art museum focused in Fluxus, an intermedia concept art movement. There are also expositions on other movements like Viennese Actionism, Expressionism and Cubism and the expositions change regulary.
  • Kunsthalle (11-19 Tue-Sun; 8/2/free  adults/students/kids under 19): expositions hall where Contemporary local and international works of art are exposed temporarily, usually made of video, photography and new technology.
  • Secession (10-18 Tue-Sun; 9.50/6 / free  adults/reteree and students/kids under 10): museum created by some Modernist artists like Gustav Klimt, Josef Hoffmann or Kolo Moser. Among its highlights are Beethoven Frieze by G. Klimt and the building's gold cupola, which is known among Viennese like golden cabbage. 

  • Natural History Museum (10-18:30 Tue-Mon; 12/7 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 10): 19th century museum, Art History Museum's sibling, which host an amazing collection with minerals, fossils and meteorite's pieces. It also has the impressing Venus of Willendorf, sculpture from the 30,000 BC. 
  • St. Charles Borromeo Church (9-18 Mon-Sat; 12-19 Sun; 8/4 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 10): 18th century church which is considered the best Barroque-style church in Vienna. It has a lift to its big cupola, enabling watching closer J. M. Rottmayr's frescoes.
  • Vienna Museum (10-18 Tue-Sun; 10/7 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): museum about Vienna's history, from Neolithic to the 20th century. It has, among others, Celtic coins, medieval Fürstenfiguren, Loof's furniture and E. Schiele and G. Klimt's paintings.
  • Stadtbahn Pavilions (10-18 from Apr to Oct): Modernist train pavilions built in 1898 by O. Wagner for the first public transport in Vienna. The best ones are located in Karlplatz.
  • MAK (Museum of Applied Arts) (10-18 Tue-Mon; 12/9 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): museum which is about handicraft and daily objects in different periods, from Renaissance to art deco. There are many weird objects that will draw your attention. Some of its more important objects are Wiggle Chair by F. Gehry or Stoclet Frieze by G. Klimt.
  • Stadtpark: big municipal park which has statues of famous artists, like Schubert or Strauss II, and a 19th century music hall, Kursalon Hübner, with waltz concerts.
  • Vienna Giant Wheel (also known as Riesenrad) (10-21:45; 12/5  adults/kids): this 1897 giant wheel which has appeared in many films like in Orson Welles' The Third Man, James Bond's The living daylights or Before Sunrise by R. Linklater. Its spin lasts 20 minutes so you can have great panoramic views.
  • Prater: central and biggest park in Vienna with many black poplars and chestnuts, a swimming pool, a golf course and many facilities.
  • Madame Tussauds Museum (10-18; 23/19  adults/kids): Viennese version of this worldwide museum has international was sculptures of people like Michael Jackson or Nicole Kidman and Austrian celebrities like Francis Joseph I or Sigmund Freud.
  • Johann Strauß Apartment (10-18 Tue-Sun; 5/4 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): house where J. Strauss lived and compose the famous waltz The Blue Danube. It has musical instruments, furniture and paintings that belonged to him and allows to know more about this famous musician and composer.
  • Danube Tower (10-24; 14.50/9.90 /free  adults/kids under 14 and retiree/kids under 6): tallest building in Vienna with a rotating restaurant and views from all the city and further.
  • Belvedere Palace (22/19 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): this palace is, in fact, divided into two palaces: Upper Belvedere (9-18) and Lower Belvedere (10-18). It's one of the most beautiful Barroque-style palaces in the world, built for Prince Eugene of Savoy. It's rooms are full of paintings by G. Klimt, E. Schiele and O. Kokoschka and its gardens, Belvedere Gardens, are great to have a walk.
  • Belvedere 21 (11-18 Wed-Sun; 8/6 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): museum with 20th and 21st century art and a collection created by the sculptor F. Wotruba. Blickle Kino, a 1950 cinema, and Salon für Kunstbuch, museum's shop (where you can buy works of art) are also part of the facilities of the museum.
  • Museum of Military History (9-17; 7/5  adults/reduced): museum, located in Vienna's Arsenal (built in Neo-byzantine style), whose objects go from the Thirty Year's War to WW2. It has pretty interesting objects like weapons, uniforms, the car where Archduke Franz Ferdinand was murdered (fact which started WW1), Nazi propaganda and Hitler's speeches after Anschluss. Taking pictures or video costs 2€.
  • St. Marx Cemetery (6:30-20): 18th century cemetery where Mozart is buried.
  • Hundertwasser House (10-18 Tue-Mon; 12/5 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 10): this bizarre block of flats built by F. Hundertwasser ha curved lines and colourful walls. In front of it can be found Kalke Village, also designed by Hundertwasser.
  • Imperial Furniture Store-Furniture Museum (10-18 Tue-Sun; 9.50/8.50 /6  adults/retiree and students/kids under 14): 18th century store which hosts one of the most important furniture collections in the world, which belonged to the Habsburg family. Its most popular elements are Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este's Egyptian cabinet, M. Thonet's wood designs and Prince Eugene of Savoy's bedroom.
  • Hayden House (10-18 Tue-Sun; 5/4 /free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): house where the musician J. Hayden used to live 200 years ago. Here you can learn more about his life, his music, and policts and society in the 19th century.
  • Schubert's last residence (10-18 Tue-Sun; 5/4 / free  adults/retiree and students/kids under 19): Schubert's brother house where F. Schubert composed in his final days, like the lied The Sheperd on the Rock. This museum shows how where his last days.
  • Schönbrunn Palace (8-18:30 from Jul to Aug; 8-17 from Nov to Mar; 8-17:30 rest of the year; 17.50/16.20 /11.50  adults/retiree and students/kids under 18): this is the summer palace of the Habsburg, built in Barroque-style and which has 1,441 rooms (only 40 can be visited). The most popular rooms are Franz Joseph I and Sisi's (his wife) ones. The Schönbrunn Gardens are incredible, built in French-style with fountaintes, sculptures and decorative elements (like fake Roman ruins), specially highlighted the Gloriette (kind of triumphal arch). 
  • Wagenburg Museum of Carriages (8-18:30 from Jul to Aug; 8-17 from Nov to Mar; 8-17:30 rest of the year; 8/free  adults/kids under 18): museum with Austrian monarchy carriages, from small ones for kids to Francis Joseph I's one, weighting 4,000 kg and having gold, Venetian glass and cherubs.
  • Hietzing Cemetery (7-sunset): cemetery where distinguished Viennese people, like G. Klimt or O. Wagner, where buried.
  • Klimt Villa (10-18 Tue-Sun; 10/5  adults/students): this former Gustav Klimt's house is a Neobarroque-style house has furniture reproductions on what used to be his house, his erotic sketches and pictures.
  • Museum of the Americas (9:30-15 Tue-Sat; 10-15 Sun; 3/1.50€ /free  adults/reduced/retiree, students and kids): .
  • Beethoven Museum (10-18 Tue-Sun; 7/5 /free adults/students/kids under 19): located in Heiligenstadt (spa town), Beethoven came here to improve his deaf, writing here the Second Symphony, Variations for piano opus 34 and 35 and parts of the three Sonatas for violin opus 30. This museum shows his life and work. 
  • Vienna Forest: this forest is Vienna's green lamb (45 km of wooded hills) has some very nice paths which allow to get in touch with nature. The most popular is the path 4 (7.2 km, 3 hours) which arrives till the Jubiläumswarte and another one is path 1 (11 km) starting and finishing in Nussdorf and reaching Kahlenberg, hill with vineyards.

Which activities can I do in Vienna?

Vienna is the cultural center in Austria and one of the main cultural spots in Europe, specially related to music. There are many important threaters, concert halls and operas like the following ones: Viena State Opera (Staatsopera, used for ballet, operas...), Musikverein (classical music concert hall par excellence), Burgtheater (the main German language theater in the world, with all kinds of plays and genres), Volksoper (second more important opera house in Vienna, specialised in operettas), MuTh (concert hall of the Vienna's Boys Choir, founded in 1498 by Maximilian I) and Vienna's English Theater (oldest and most established English-language theatre in continental Europe, with all kind of plays). But there are many other activities you can do in this city. A different way of enjoying RingIn case some rest is needed, there is a very nice spa, Oberlaa Therme Wien (

Where can I buy in Madrid?

Vienna has many offers for many kinds of buyers, mostly found in the following streets: Kärtner
StraKohlmarkt, Neubau, Mariahilfer Stra, Theobaldgasse , Gumpendorfer Straand Josefstädter Stra. Dorotheum (10-18 Mon-Fri; 9-17 Sat; Dorotheergasse 17), one of the oldest auction houses in the world (founded in 1707), sells paintings, furniture and daily use objects. Naschmarkt is a market where people can buy meat, fruits, vegetables, spices, cheeses... and food as well. Other markets are Karmelitermarkt, Bauernmarkt Yppenplatz and Brunnenmarkt. In one of Nashcmarkt's corners can be found Flohmarkt (), a market full of antiquity and second-hand objects. Steiff () is the place where teddy bears were invented, is a popular toy shop. In case you want to buy wine you can go to 1130Wein (); if you prefer beer, you can choose Beerlovers (). A good place to buy jam is Staud (); for bakery, Blühendes-konfekt ( all kind of food, a nice place is Meinl (Graben 19). Talking about fashion, there are some interesting shops like Dirndlherz (

Where can I eat in Madrid?

The most typical dish in Vienna, and probably in Austria, is the Wiener Schnitzel (thin, breaded, pan-fried veal cutlet). Other typical dishes from Vienna city are Goulash (Hungarian meat stew seasoned), Tafelspitz (boiled beef in broth, served with a mix of minced apples and horseradish), Beuschel (a ragout containing veal lungs and heart), Backhendl (spiced portions of chicken breaded and crispy deep fried), Zwiebelrostbraten (roast beef slices in its sauce with onion), Schinkenfleckerln (ham stew with baked noodles) and Bauerschmaus (cold meat tray). The most popular dessets are Kaiserschmarrn (shredded pancake), Apfelstrudel (apple-filled pastry) and the Marillenknödel (apricot small dumplings) in summer.
For desserts and ice-creams Eis Greissler ( There are nice places to have breakfast or coffee like Cafe Central (ollpension (
There are many places to eat cheap food like Bitzinger Würstelstand () for sausages, Trzesniewski () for sandwiches. There are many choices of foreign food like the Thai Mamamon (Albertgasse 15), the international Blue Mustard (), the French Cafe Français (), the Italians Wetter (Yppenplatz 1), La Tavolozza () or La Salvia (. There are some modern food restaurants like Lingenhel (), Skopik & Lohn (), Said The Butcher To The Cow (). For higher budgets you can try Steirereck (), Plachutta (


 
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