Hundertwasserhaus
Friedensreich Hundertwasser's 1985 apartment building looks like a fairy tale dropped into Vienna's third district.
About Hundertwasserhaus
Friedensreich Hundertwasser's 1985 apartment building looks like a fairy tale dropped into Vienna's third district. The colorful facade ripples with irregular windows, gold onion domes, and over 250 trees growing directly from balconies and rooftops. Inside, the floors intentionally undulate because Hundertwasser believed flat surfaces were against human nature, though you can't access the residential interiors.
You'll spend most of your time circling the building's perimeter, craning your neck at the whimsical details. The irregular ceramic tiles create a mosaic effect, and no two windows are identical in size or placement. Groups of tourists constantly gather at the corner of Kegelgasse and Löwengasse for photos, while residents occasionally peer down from their tree-lined balconies. The surrounding streets feel ordinary by comparison, making the building's explosion of color even more striking.
Most guides oversell this as a lengthy visit, but 20 minutes covers everything unless you're an architecture fanatic. The building is genuinely photogenic but purely exterior viewing gets repetitive quickly. Skip the overpriced Hundertwasser Village shopping center two blocks away, it's a tourist trap with inflated prices. Instead, walk five minutes to Kunst Haus Wien museum (€12 adults) where you can experience Hundertwasser's interior design philosophy properly.
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