
The Hoxton Vienna
When you book The Hoxton Vienna in Vienna, Austria through our Accor Preferred partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Daily complimentary breakfast for 2, per room
- $100 USD credit to be spent on property (conditions defined at check-in)
- Early check-in & late check-out (upon availability)
- Upgrade at time of check-in (upon availability)
Location
The Hoxton arrived in Vienna with the brand's signature approach: design-conscious, socially charged spaces where a well-worn leather armchair holds the same appeal as a carefully plated breakfast. This is hospitality stripped of pomp, rooted instead in warmth, accessibility, and a respect for the rhythms of the neighbourhood. The property sits in Landstraße, the city's third district, a quarter defined by grand Baroque townhouses, embassy-lined streets, and a quietly residential character that feels closer to daily Viennese life than the tourist throng of the Innere Stadt.
Vienna sprawls along the Danube at the eastern edge of the Vienna Woods, a capital city built on layers of empire. The Romans planted their castrum here in the first century; the Habsburgs turned it into a centre of art, music, and political gravity. Today, the city carries that weight gracefully: coffeehouses still serve Melange in porcelain, the Ringstrasse curves past monumental façades, and concert halls program Strauss alongside contemporary composers. The air smells faintly of roasted chestnuts in winter, linden blossom in spring.
Belvedere Palace and its formal gardens lie a short walk south, an 18th-century vision of symmetry and ambition that now houses Gustav Klimt's shimmering canvases. The historic centre, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, begins just one kilometre west. Vienna International Airport connects the city to the world seventeen kilometres southeast; the CAT rail link delivers arrivals to Wien Mitte in sixteen minutes.
Start with Steirereck im Stadtpark, four hundred metres east in the Stadtpark itself. The three-Michelin-starred kitchen occupies a glass-walled pavilion, futuristic and light-filled, where Heinz Reitbauer composes dishes that read like love letters to Austrian terroir: Danube fish, alpine herbs, vegetables from the restaurant's own Pogusch farm. Six hundred metres north, Silvio Nickol Gourmet Restaurant unfolds within the Palais Coburg, a two-starred address where the kitchen layers technique and imagination into tasting menus that justify the cellar's 60,000-bottle wine archive. Book a table at Amador, six kilometres northwest near the Hajszan Neumann estate, where Juan Amador's three-starred cuisine unfolds beneath brick vaults in a winery setting that marries contemporary ambition with pastoral calm.
Rochusmarkt, seven hundred metres northwest, hums with neighbourhood energy: stalls piled with Styrian pumpkin seed oil, smoked trout, and bundles of wild garlic in season. The Naschmarkt, Vienna's sprawling culinary bazaar, lies 1.4 kilometres west, a sensory assault of spice vendors, cheese mongers, and impromptu wine bars. Belvedere's gardens and galleries reward an afternoon; the palace collections span medieval altarpieces to Klimt's The Kiss, hung in rooms where Eugene of Savoy once entertained Europe's crowned heads. Weingut HST, 2.6 kilometres out, pours Wiener Gemischter Satz in a vineyard tasting room overlooking the city's green fringe.
Winter cloaks Vienna in austere beauty. January and February hover just above freezing by day, dipping well below at night, the light sharp and low. Coffeehouses fill with locals seeking warmth, and Christmas markets linger into January, fragrant with Glühwein and roasted almonds.
Spring arrives slowly, then all at once. March thaws into April and May, when the Ringstrasse lindens leaf out and temperatures climb into the high teens. Rain showers through, but the city shakes off its winter reserve. Café tables reappear on cobbled squares, and the Prater's chestnut alleys turn green.
Summer peaks in July, warm but rarely oppressive, evenings stretching long and golden. By September, the heat softens, crowds thin, and the city exhales. Autumn is Vienna's secret season: crisp mornings, ochre light on Baroque façades, and Heurige wine taverns pouring the year's new vintage. October and November reward those who don't mind a jacket.
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