Some weeks ago I happened to find
out that the Budapest railjet now arrives to Vienna’s Hauptbahnof instead of
good old Westbahnhof- of course it does make sense to have international trains
go to the central station of a capital city, but I could not help feeling
stabbed in the back by Vienna’s careless authorities. Arriving to Westbahnhof
and idling down Mariahilferstrasse has always been an essential part of the
Vienna experience and now this enjoyment is no more.
Of course, there were signs of
sad demise previously as well, somehow fitting for a city famed for its turn of
the century coffeehouse Weltschmerz. It was nevertheless disheartening to see
exactly one of those ancient staples of idle pleasures mixed with angst go-
some years ago, well, precisely three years ago, at the time when the below
pictures gathering virtual dust in the archives were taken, we were shocked and
appalled to discover that Café Ciro, a smoky little hole catering coffee, beers
and wursts mostly to aged locals had been replaced by a modern nightmare
serving the absolutely undrinkable coffee of a below par Italian brand.
So we had to move camp to Café
Westend- which was, and hopefully still is, a more upmarket version of Ciro-
while one can think that would be an improvement, in a way it isn’t, the whole
charm of Ciro lay in its hopeless shabbiness. Café Westend is however more
suited to grand endeavours such as reading the papers and staring out into the
bustle of Mariahilferstrasse pondering metaphysics, social theory, the general
state of things in the world and the universe and whether to get poached eggs
or omelet.
So now the next Viennese outing
will be about finding a proper coffee house close to the new station- which is
not as easy as it seems. And for those objecting that you can simply travel to
your place of choice- the transfer from train to coffee house must be immediate
and nothing else will do, a metro ride will totally ruin the charm of the whole
enterprise.
Instead of so much unnecessary
suffering, however, maybe it’s better to round up the some Vienna staples which
according to my humble opinion one should not miss when in town.
MuseumsQuartier- of which there
is actually no picture in this series, because even before worldwide Instagram
madness, I spent my time shooting my red shoes with the backdrop of the
mis-shaped yellow plasticky sunbeds on which you can lie for hours, because
they are unexpectedly and ridiculously comfortable. We do sometimes venture to
exhibitions too, but the best part is always the doing nothing masked as people
watching masked as social observations of great import.
Café Demel- leave it to Vienna to
have an absolute tourist trap festering with Asian tourists merrily clicking
away at somber faced pastry chefs that still functions as a proper coffee house
and cake paradise too. And if you get the local specialty unassumingly called
Einspänner, you might not wish to consume sugar for a lifetime or two. I regret
nothing, though.
Stephansplatz- yes, the central
square always filled with people and occasionally some horse carts amiably
gliding through the crowd, the cathedral seemingly always amidst some
complicated refurbishment. And I always get lost too, ending up on a street I
did not expect and almost invariably finding some lavish bookstore which fills
me with equal doses of pleasure and guilt- had my German been better, I could
have read some Viennese crime stories (of which there seem to be aplenty) in
the original, and that would have been such a fine thing to do.
WienerWald- not the actual forest,
but the fast food chain. Yes, you read it well, it’s a fast food chain, though
you would not necessarily associate it with one if you chance upon the restaurant
in Goldschmiedgasse. The food is the best kind of tasty, plentiful and pretty hearty
Central-European fare at completely decent prices. The recently opened outpost
in Budapest does not do justice to its Vienna sister, but at least my heart
beats a little faster with excitement when I see the illuminated green chicken.
Schönbrunn- not the castle itself-
though, for once, we have actually visited the thing and all I can recall are
some imperial trinkets which fill me with the same kind of horror like the
plaster swan gifted to a random Pope upon which I chanced a few days into my
captivity in the Musei Vaticani. (You are right, it was actually only a few
hours, but it felt like days, then years, and finally millennia of papal
tedium). So instead of the castle, I
always choose the garden. It’s big enough to have space to yourself no matter
how many people are visiting it, it’s filled with inquisitive squirrels and I
even found the zoo interesting, though the koala insisted in only presenting its
backside to the public as part of its daily uninterrupted sleeping ritual.
Galerie Westlicht- the Vienna
photo museum nestled in the Schottenfeld district, it hosts carefully curated
exhibitions of a moderate size, which allows you a comfortable visit even
during a day trip. And I always buy innumerable trinkets, which I should maybe
regret, but really, I don’t, because they are genuinely nice items and not just
tacky souvenirs- another favourite hunting ground for such items are the
Museums Quartier shops. I don’t even feel bad about the plastic duck I bought-
what I feel very bad about is that somebody stole it from me.
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