Ottawa Citizen

Enjoy the good life in Vienna

City with illustriou­s past has great, laid-back vibe

- RICK STEVES

Vienna ranks right at the top of my list of elegant European cities. Once the capital of the mighty Habsburg empire, this imperial city has an enduring grandeur and an easy livability that I admire.

From a sightseein­g point of view, Vienna is the sum of its illustriou­s past, with plenty of palaces to explore. But just as enjoyable is simply experienci­ng the vibe of this great city. People stroll the streets here as if every day were Sunday.

The low-rise city centre is peppered with art nouveau and early modern buildings. Architect Otto Wagner played a big part in shaping the urban landscape, helping to launch the 20th century in Vienna with a quietly revolution­ary building: a bank for people who weren’t rich. His Postal Savings Bank overlooks the street with a marble-sided facade that looks as secure as a safe-deposit box. It’s bolted together with an exciting new material — aluminum — that proclaims the modern age.

Even now, as Wagner intended, form follows function: The building (open to the public) is still a savings bank.

Fine thematic exhibits seem to be popping up around Vienna. There’s a worthwhile little museum dedicated to Wagner at the back of the Postal Savings Bank. The small and modern Jewish Museum documents the history of Vienna’s Jewish community. At the Museum of Military History, the amazing Sarajevo room catalogues the events of June 28, 1914, when Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinat­ed (igniting the First World War) — both the car he rode in and his bloodstain­ed uniform are on display.

The quirky Third Man Museum (Dritte Mann Museum) is dedicated to a film — The Third Man — and the story it tells. This noir thriller is set (and was filmed) in seedy 1949 Vienna — when the city was split, like Berlin, among the victorious Allies. The film (in English) plays regularly at Vienna’s Burg Kino. Third Man enthusiast­s love the museum’s movie artifacts. Just as interestin­g are its topical displays about the murky underbelly of Vienna’s postwar years.

For a lighter side of Vienna, amuse yourself at Prater Park, which has been the city’s playground since the 1780s, when the emperor gave his hunting grounds to the people. For the tourist, the Prater is its sugary-smelling, tired and sprawling amusement park. For locals, the Prater is the vast, adjacent green park with its iconic tree-lined boulevard. The fun fair tempts all comers with its famous 67-metre-tall ferris wheel, roller-coaster, bumper cars and endless eateries.

Especially if you’re travelling with kids, this is a fun, goofy place to share the evening with thousands of Viennese.

Vienna has a long history as Europe’s music capital, and music lovers come to see the houses of the composers who lived and worked here. The residences of Schubert, Brahms, Haydn, Beethoven and Mozart all host museums — but they are mostly small and forgettabl­e. For the best music history experience, I like the Haus der Musik, which honours the great Viennese composers with fine artifacts and fun exhibits.

Try your hand at virtually conducting the Vienna Philharmon­ic — if you mess up, the “musicians” will refuse to play.

Classical music performanc­es are everywhere, booking up to 10,000 seats a night.

The Vienna State Opera alone performs 300 glittering shows a year. Fans of toe-tapping waltzes head to the Kursalon, an elegant hall in the main city park, where Johann Strauss directed concerts 100 years ago. Mozart lovers choose the intimate little Theater an der Wien, designed in 1801 especially for Wolfie’s operas. This gilded high culture can be surprising­ly affordable — a standing-room ticket for the opera is about the same price as a cinema ticket.

For a literal taste of old Vienna, step into one of the venerable cafés clustered on St. Michael’s Square, behind the hulking Hofburg (the Habsburg palace). With crystal chandelier­s and worn red-velvet chairs, these establishm­ents have the charm of times past. The waiters are grouchy old men, but don’t let them discourage you — classic Viennese pastry service is slow.

Admire the delectable specials in the confection­ary case while you wait.

Not all Viennese eating is prim and proper — the city is a hotdog capitol, too. The wiener we know and love is named for the city of Vienna, but the guy who invented it studied in Frankfurt. Out of nostalgia for his school years, he named his fast food for that city — a frankfurte­r. Only in Vienna are wieners called frankfurte­rs. (Got that?)

Whether you’re lingering in a genteel café or enjoying Strauss in a park, Vienna is a class act.

Everything old seems new again in this vibrant city.

 ?? DIETER NAGL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Young couples wait to dance in the Golden Auditorium of the Musikverei­n during the opening of the Philharmon­ic Ball, one of the city’s fanciest balls of the season, performed by the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra.
DIETER NAGL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Young couples wait to dance in the Golden Auditorium of the Musikverei­n during the opening of the Philharmon­ic Ball, one of the city’s fanciest balls of the season, performed by the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra.

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