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Lords of the Ringstrasse: 150 years of Vienna's grand boulevard

Vienna’s Ring road, 150 this year, is rich in history and art, finds Beverley D’Silva

June 20, 2015 08:25
17062015 18 01 NUVO Magazine Spring 2015 40715 copy

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

3 min read

Last month Vienna hosted the Life Ball, an Aids benefit and Europe's biggest charity event. The streets around City Hall were rammed with revellers, dressed as fantasy creatures, angels and fairies daubed in gold (this year's theme) like Klimt paintings. The festivities, crazy music and transgender catwalk shows went on beyond the early hours. There were posters everywhere of Conchita Wurst, the bearded pop-star drag queen who last year won the Eurovision Song Contest for Austria, and so the event was hosted in Vienna this year.

Given all that, you might think the city had lost its sense of decorum. But that's before you consider the Ringstrasse - a confection of classical buildings and stunning palaces circling Vienna's historic centre. The Ring, as it's affectionately known, is one of Europe's grandest, poshest, and most picturesque boulevards, and this year it is celebrating its 150th anniversary.

To mark the occasion, the city is holding exhibitions, shows and parties at various Ring locations.
The Ring's origins date back to 1857, when Emperor Franz Joseph I ordered the dismantling of Vienna's city walls, built to protect it from its enemies. And while the Habsburg Empire was disappearing, Vienna was emerging as a cosmopolitan city, on a par with London, Paris and Berlin.

By 1865, the first monumental buildings of the Ring had gone up. Fifty years later, Vienna's most ambitious building project was complete: three miles long, 200 feet wide and horseshoe shaped, it begins and ends at the Danube canal.