Kurpark Oberlaa

Kurpark Oberlaa is located adjacent to Oberlaa in Vienna’s tenth district, on the southeast slope of the Laaer Berg.As national historic sites, route networks, artificial soil formations, and horticultural monuments are all protected.

Kurpark Oberlaa is a peaceful haven that draws guests with its stunning surroundings, impressive architecture, and healing amenities. This delightful park, spanning about 860,000 square meters, is well-liked by both residents and visitors due to its well designed features and harmoniously blended natural beauty.

Visitors may experience a location where time appears to stop still and tranquillity penetrates the environment by strolling around Kurpark Oberlaa. The vivid flower arrangements strategically placed among the thoughtfully planned gardens, the calming sound of trickling brooks, and the overall quiet and rejuvenating ambiance all contribute to this.

The Kurhaus, an architectural wonder that sits in the center of the park, is one of its most famous attractions. Its massive façade radiates a timeless grandeur with its beautiful columns and fine masonry. To encourage wellbeing and relaxation, the Kurhaus offers its visitors a range of therapeutic services, such as healing massages and revitalizing thermal baths.

Kurpark Oberlaa offers a wide range of leisure activities for guests of all ages and interests. As they stroll along the winding walks, nature enthusiasts are surrounded by a symphony of hues and fragrances. Enough room is available on the expansive park grounds for outdoor activities like tennis and volleyball, as well as traditional Austrian sports like Mölkky.

If visitors are in the mood for some delectable meals, the park is home to a number of quaint cafés and restaurants where they may savor regional cuisine in a lovely environment. Savoring a dish of recently baked pastries or a fragrant cup of Viennese coffee, these gastronomic options provide a delightful break from the park’s serene environs.

Kurpark Oberlaa is well known for its festivals and cultural events, which, together with the park’s year-round natural and recreational elements, give it vitality and energy. The park’s event schedule is jam-packed with interesting events that highlight the region’s rich cultural legacy, such as outdoor plays, concerts, art exhibitions, and traditional folk festivals.

The Kurpark Oberlaa has incredible seasonal variations. The park is made brighter and cozier by vibrant flowers and a springtime color splash. In the summer, visitors love gathering in groups and spreading out their blankets to take advantage of the cool shade cast by the old trees and the cool wind. When leaves fall from the trees and cover the park in golden colors, autumn provides a visually stunning scene. Visitors are drawn to an unmatched winter wonderland by the park’s calm beauty, which has an unearthly character when it is totally blanketed in snow for the whole winter.

Kurpark Oberlaa is an intriguing place that deftly blends natural beauty, recreational pleasures, and therapeutic delights with cross-cultural relationships. With its immaculate grounds, spectacular architecture, and enough amenities, it’s the ideal retreat for anybody looking to escape the everyday grind.

History

The Vienna City Council decided to hold another international garden show after the great success of the “Vienna International Garden Show 1964” (WIG 64) in the Donaupark in Vienna’s 22nd district.The old brick sector on the southeast slope of the Laaer Berg—once the location of epic silent film productions—was completed with the acquisition of horticultural fields and vineyards.It was the perfect place to carry out the project, which included turning a large area of greenery.Since 1969, the Oberlaa sulfur springs have been home to a spa.In 1969, Frankfurt garden architect Erich Hanke was permitted to choose the winner of an international competition to form working groups of landscape architects from several countries.The best drafts from every project were combined throughout planning and execution.

Like its predecessor in Danube Park, the “Vienna International Garden Show 1974” (WIG 74) attracted 2.6 million attendees and was a great success.On the other hand, some media coverage was quite critical.Renowned architects like Roland Rainer and Gustav Peichl would have preferred a completely green city center, but Rainer failed to provide a simple soccer field.An neighboring amusement park was losing money from the beginning, and a monorail that ran through the park proved to be a terrible investment that had to be withdrawn after a few years.Like the Danube Park, the remaining park furnishings also seemed to have a short lifespan.Among other things, this had an effect on the “Utopian Garden.”

By the end of 1974, the garden show area had finally been transformed into a well-liked public park.Vienna did not, however, organize any more international garden exhibitions, and in the years that followed, the emphasis shifted from the labor-intensive (and costly) show green to more organic design, as seen in the Wienerberg recreation area.

Park areas 

The Kurpark Oberlaa is organized into themed zones to provide guests with a variety of relaxing options.

On a “allergy information mile,” display boards affixed to the separate plants display the varied pollen flight timings, dispersion zones, and other botanical information.

This fountain garden is really the previous “German Nations Garden,” which was reactivated in 2001/2002 and is furnished with several ancient fountains, a stream, herb beds, and benches.

The floral labyrinth, which has an 18-meter circumference, was built in 2004.It was inspired by the one at Hellbrunn Palace, although it just has one route and no decision-making alternatives.Similar attractions in Vienna include a maze in the garden of Schönbrunn Palace and a butterfly labyrinth in the Florarium.

In the 1920s, the Sascha Filmindustrie film company shot well-known silent films in the city, including the epic picture Sodom and Gomorrah and The Slave Queen.Every year in the summer, these productions are staged in an open-air cinema at the Kurpark.

The Japanese national contribution to the WIG 1974 was Takasaki Park. It was built according to the architect Kunsaku Nakame’s ideas.Many of the National contributions were destroyed after the WIG, but the city of Takasaki fought for its restoration, and it was renovated in the 1990s under the guidance of architect Ikeda Tadashi.

The WIG also saw the construction of a love garden, complete with romantic seats, swings, and arbors.In 2001, all of the original metal was removed, and the garden was replanted with solely white-flowering summer flowers, perennials, roses, and shrubs.Many wedding parties have their photographs taken here.

A skate park of 1800 m2 was erected near the children’s playground, beach volleyball court, and enormous swing.This region was once known as the “Moon Playground” during the WIG 1974 and the years that followed.

The perennial garden was built for the WIG in 1974 and renovated in 2000.There are now over 11,500 perennials from 90 distinct genera available.

The expansive playground includes opportunities to run a sand digger, drive a children’s automobile, roll in a net, drive over sloping bridges, and slide oneself.It debuted in 2001 as the first barrier-free playground, allowing impaired children to play alongside their peers.

The petting zoo on 2000 m2 is home to goats, lambs, geese, chickens, peacocks, and countless pigeons in the dovecote.Small children may also touch and pet the animals due to the low barrier.

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