Venue & Hospitality
Conference Dates:
Hotel Services & Amenities
- Audio/Visual Equipment Rental.
- Business Center.
- Business Phone Service.
- Complimentary Printing Service.
- Express Mail.
- Fax.
- Meeting Rooms.
- Office Rental.
- Photo Copying Service.
- Secretarial Service.
- Telex.
- Typewriter.
- Video Conference.
- Video Messaging.
- Video Phone.
- ATM.
- Baggage Storage.
Transportation
Route Map
About City
Vienna Wean is the national capital, largest city, and one of Austria's nine states. Vienna is Austria's most populous city, with approximately two million residents (2.9 million within the metropolitan area, accounting for nearly one-third of the country's population), as well as its cultural, economic, and political centre. It is the sixth-largest city proper in the European Union by population and the largest of all Danube River cities.
Vienna was the world's largest German-speaking city until the early twentieth century, and it had two million inhabitants before the Austro-Hungarian Empire split in World War I. It is now the second-largest German-speaking city in the world, after Berlin. Many major international organisations, including the United Nations, OPEC, and the OSCE, are headquartered in Vienna. The city is located in eastern Austria, near the borders of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary. These regions collaborate in the European Centralope border region. Vienna, along with nearby Bratislava, forms a metropolitan region of 3 million people. The city centre was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001.
Heritage in jeopardy. Furthermore, Vienna is known as the "City of Music" because of its musical legacy, as it was home to many famous classical musicians such as Beethoven and Mozart. Vienna is also known as the "City of Dreams" because it was the birthplace of Sigmund Freud, the world's first psychoanalyst. Vienna's ancestors were Celtic and Roman settlements that evolved into a Medieval and Baroque city. It is well known for being a pivotal European music centre from the age of Viennese Classicism to the early part of the twentieth century. Vienna's historic centre is rich in architectural ensembles, including Baroque palaces and gardens, as well as the late-nineteenth-century Ringstraße, which is lined with grand buildings, monuments, and parks.
Vienna is renowned for having a good standard of living. The city was placed first (in a tie with Vancouver and San Francisco) among the most livable cities in the world by the Economist Intelligence Unit in a 2005 assessment of 127 global cities. Vienna was rated below Melbourne from 2011 to 2015. Vienna was placed second out of the top 25 cities in the world to "build a base within" in Monocle's 2015 "Quality of Life Survey." Vienna was placed fourth out of the top 25 cities in the world to "build a base within" in Monocle's 2012 "Quality of Life Survey" (up from sixth in 2011 and eighth in 2010).
In 2012–2013, Vienna was ranked as the world's most prosperous city by UN-Habitat. In 2007 and 2008, the city was voted first in the world for its innovation culture, and in 2014, it was ranked sixth globally (out of 256 cities) in the Innovation Cities Index, which looked at 162 factors in three categories: culture, infrastructure, and markets. Urban planners frequently utilise Vienna as a case study, and Vienna frequently holds conferences on urban planning. Vienna was the most popular location for international congresses and conventions between 2005 and 2010. Every year, more than 6.8 million people visit.