Volksgarten, Vienna

{{Short description|Urban park in Vienna, Austria}}

{{Infobox park

| name = Volksgarten

| photo = Wien - Volksgarten (b).JPG

| photo_width = 300

| mapframe= yes

| mapframe-zoom= 13

| id= Q875751

| type = Public park

| location = Innere Stadt, Vienna, Austria

| area = 5 ha

| opened = {{Start_date|df=y|1823}}

| status = Open year-round

| website = {{URL|www.bundesgaerten.at/hofburggaerten/Volksgarten.html}}

}}

The Volksgarten (People's Garden) is a public park in the Innere Stadt, the first district of Vienna, Austria. Opened in 1823, it was Vienna's first public park.

History

In 1809, following France's decisive victory over Austria in the War of the Fifth Coalition, French troops occupying Vienna destroyed a major defensive bastion of the Hofburg, the Burgbastei. Instead of rebuilding it, the area around the Hofburg was redesigned. Court architect Ludwig Gabriel von Remy planned the construction of what is now known as the Heldenplatz, flanked on either side by two parks: the Volksgarten and the Burggarten. Remy collaborated with gardener Franz Antoine the Elder, who was responsible for the horticultural design.{{Cite web |title=Volksgarten |url=https://www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at/Volksgarten |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at |language=de}}

During the park’s construction, architect Pietro Nobile designed the Theseustempel, a recreation of the Temple of Hephaestus in Athens, built specifically to house Theseus Slaying the Centaur, a statue by Antonio Canova. The adjacent Paradeisgartel, located on the fortification wall, was redesigned during the creation of the Volksgarten and later connected to the park by a ramp.

The park was officially opened on 1 May 1823. Two coffee houses, one in the Volksgarten and one in the Paradeisgartel, were constructed, both owned by Peter Corti. The coffee houses attracted many visitors and hosted numerous concerts, including performances by Joseph Lanner and Johann Strauss I.{{Cite web |title=Cortisches Kaffeehaus |url=https://www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at/Cortisches_Kaffeehaus |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at |language=de}}

File:Balthasar Wigand Wien Volksgarten.jpg

The park was expanded during the construction of the Ringstraße. The wall separating it from Heldenplatz was removed, allowing for an outward extension.{{Cite web |title=Volksgarten, Österreichische Bundesgärten |url=https://www.bundesgaerten.at/hofburggaerten/Volksgarten.html |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.bundesgaerten.at}} Between 1883 and 1884, the Volksgarten was further expanded by Franz Antoine the Younger. However, this section was later redesigned by Friedrich Ohmann between 1903 and 1907.{{Cite web |title=200 Jahre Wiener Volksgarten |url=https://magazin.wienmuseum.at/200-jahre-wiener-volksgarten |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=magazin.wienmuseum.at |language=de}}

The Volksgarten was originally intended to be replaced by the Kaiserforum, with a mirrored wing of the Neue Hofburg planned for its location. However, the outbreak of World War I and the subsequent collapse of Austria-Hungary rendered the project obsolete.

Features

= Gardens =

The Volksgarten on the side of the Hofburg is designed as an English-style park with trees in an loose avenue formation, and on the Ringstraßen side as a French Baroque garden with a more architecturally rigid layout.

File:Volksgarten.JPG|English garden and the Theseustempel

File:Vienna by Martin - 13.JPG| Section in front of the Sisi monument

File:Volksgarten Vienna June 2006 300.jpg|French garden on the Ringstraße side

File:Volksgarten - Detail - Aufnahme Orthocopter.JPG|The Baroque garden

File:Volksgarten. Blick auf das Parlament.JPG|Trees opposite the Parliament

= Rose garden =

Between the entrance near the Burgtheater and the Grillparzer Monument is a rose garden featuring over 3,000 rose bushes representing more than 200 varieties. The central area consists of rose beds enclosed by boxwood hedges, containing the majority of the roses. The garden’s perimeter features the largest variety of roses, arranged in successive rows of standard roses followed by climbing roses. Most rose varieties within the garden are labeled.{{Cite web |last=Insider |first=Vienna |date=2015-06-25 |title=Rose scented Volksgarten |url=https://viennainsider.com/rose-scented-volksgarten/ |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=Vienna Insider |language=en-US}}

File:Wien Volksgarten Rathausturm Rosenblüte.jpg|Roses in the south

File:Vienna by Martin - 17.JPG|By the Ringstraße

File:Rosa Exploit.jpg|Exploit

File:Rosa Schwanensee.jpg|Schwanensee

File:Bécs 652 (8135545929).jpg|Biotope growth of the Volksgartenfountain

File:Wien 143 (6941673778).jpg|Vases and flowerbeds by the Sisi monument

File:Winterschutz.jpg|Roses under winter protection

= Buildings =

  • Theseustempel: Erected before the opening of the park, the temple is a reconstruction of the Temple of Hephaestus in the Agora of Athens. It was built specifically to house the Theseusgruppe, a marble sculpture by Antonio Canova of Theseus slaying a centaur, originally intended for Napoleon Bonaparte, which was acquired by Emperor Franz I after Napoleon's downfall.{{Cite web |title=Theseusgruppe (Theseus besiegt den Kentauren) |url=https://www.khm.at/objektdb/detail/1132785/ |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.khm.at |language=de}} Its catacombs served as storage for the Kaiser’s antique collection and were open to the public. However, the antiques had to be removed due to dampness. In 1890, the Theseusgruppe was relocated to the Kunsthistorisches Museum.{{Cite web |title=Theseus Temple |url=https://www.khm.at/en/visit/collections/theseus-temple/ |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.khm.at |language=en}} A bronze statue of a young athlete by Joseph Müller was placed in front of the temple in 1921. Renovated in 2010, it now serves the Kunsthistorisches Museum as an exhibition space.{{Cite web |title=Theseustempel |url=https://www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at/Theseustempel |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at |language=de}}
  • Öffentliche Bedürfnisanstalt (public toilet): Built in 1884, it is one of the oldest public toilets in the city.{{Cite web |title=Von früh bis spät im Volksgarten |url=https://www.stadtbekannt.at/spaziergaenge/von-frueh-bis-spaet-im-volksgarten/ |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=STADTBEKANNT |language=de}}
  • Volksgarten disco: The Corti coffeehouse was repurposed as a nightclub in 1974. It had been previously redesigned in a still-preserved 50s style by Oswald Haerdtl.{{Cite web |title=Tanzen im Architekturjuwel |url=https://www.wien.info/de/kunst-kultur/architektur/volksgarten-disco-753028 |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=wien.info |language=de}}

File:Wien 01 Volksgarten l.jpg|Theseustempel

File:Vienna, Wien, Wenen (27178513733).jpg|From the flower garden with the Rathaus in the background

File:201411 Theseustempel Abend.jpg|At dusk

File:Theseustempel Vienna June 2006 301.jpg|Pre-renovation

File:Vienna. Temple of Theseus LCCN91784394.jpg|Theseusgruppe, now in the KHM

File:Wien 01 Volksgarten n.jpg|The public toilet

File:Volksgarten Cortisches Kaffeehaus.jpg|The exterior of the nightclub, formerly a coffee house

= Statues =

  • Grillparzer monument: Erected in 1889 by Carl Kundmann, is a Lasa marble memorial dedicated to the Austrian dramatist Franz Grillparzer. It features depictions of his plays.{{Cite web |title=The Franz Grillparzer monument |url=https://www.visitingvienna.com/sights/grillparzer-monument/ |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.visitingvienna.com}}
  • Sisi memorial: Honours Empress Elisabeth (Sisi) and was unveiled in the presence of Emperor Franz Joseph, her widower. The statue overlooks a pond and a rose garden.
  • Jugendlicher Athlet: A bronze sculpture of a young athlete from 1921, honouring Austria's athletes.{{Cite web |title=Athlet Denkmäler Ringstraße |url=http://www.viennatouristguide.at/Ring/Denkmal_Bild/z_junge.htm |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.viennatouristguide.at}}
  • Raab-Denkmal: Unveiled in 1967, it honors Julius Raab, the Austrian chancellor who played a key role in securing Austria's independence in 1955.{{Cite web |title=Raab Julius Denkmäler Ringstraße |url=http://www.viennatouristguide.at/Ring/Denkmal_Bild/z_raab.htm |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.viennatouristguide.at}}
  • Memorial for the Victims of Nazi Military Justice: An X-shaped monument dedicated to Austrian deserters and conscientious objectors who were executed by the Nazis.{{Cite web |title=Memorial for the Victims of Nazi Military Justice / Public Art Vienna |url=https://www.koer.or.at/en/projects/memorial-for-the-victims-of-nazi-military-justice-competition/ |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.koer.or.at}}

File:Grillparzer monument - Vienna.jpg|Franz Grillparzer

File:Monument to Empress Elisabeth, Volksgarten Vienna, September 2016 -2.jpg|Empress Elisabeth (Sisi)

File:Kaiserin-Elisabeth-Denkmal, Volksgarten Wien 2008 e.jpg|Sisi monument in detail

File:Wien - Volksgarten, Jugendlicher Athlet.JPG|Young athlete in front of the temple

File:Wien-Innere Stadt - Julius Raab-Denkmal.jpg|Julius Raab

File:Wien - Denkmal für Deserteure.JPG|Memorial for the Victims of Nazi Military Justice

= Fountains =

  • Volksgarten-Brunnen: Built in 1866, designed by Anton Dominik Fernkorn.
  • Triton- und Nymphenbrunnen: Erected in 1880 by Viktor Oskar Tilgner, featuring Triton with a nymph, as well as a putto and a dolphin.{{Cite web |title=Triton-und Nymphen-Brunnen |url=https://www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at/Triton-und_Nymphen-Brunnen |access-date=2025-03-09 |website=www.geschichtewiki.wien.gv.at |language=de}}

File:Wien - Volksgartenbrunnen.JPG|Volksgarten fountain

File:Wien 01 Volksgarten a.jpg|Triton and Nymph fountain

File:Triton- und Nymphen-Brunnen Volksgarten Wien 2010 d.jpg|Closeup

References

{{Reflist}}