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City Hall
You can visit City Hall when you are in Wien.Friedrich
von Schmidt, who had been the architect of the Cathedral
of Cologne, designed and built Vienna´s City Hall, the
most important secular building in the neo-Gothic style
in the city, between 1872 and 1883. The tower measures
321 feet, not including the "Iron Knight of City
Hall" (Eiserner Rathausmann) who measures almost 20
feet to the top of his pennant. This knight on top of the
tower has become one of the symbols of Vienna.
The City Hall is the seat of the mayor and governor of
Vienna ( with Vienna being both a city and a state since
1922, these functions are combined in one person ), of
the City Council and of the Assembly.
It also houses the Municipal and State Libraries and
Archives which hold many key documents of Vienna´s
history and a large collection of local memorabilia.
On both sides of the approach from the Ring ( closed to
motor vehicles ), statues honor personalities who left
their mark on the history of the city.
The Park of City Hall (Rathauspark) is a very
attractively laid-out garden with two fountains and
several interesting monuments, among them the memorial to
the painter F. G. Waldmüller and the statues of two
great composers of waltzes, Johann Strauss Father and
Joseph Lanner. Facing the Burgtheater across the Ring are
monuments to President Theodor Körner (1873-1957) and
Mayor Karl Seitz (1869-1950).
Off the spacious Arkadenhof (Arcade Courtyard) and also
accessible from the back of the complex is the
Stadtinformation (City Information Office), which is not
a tourist information center but a referral office for
citizens and a source of information and statistics, on
the city, its administration, its operations and its
public services. This is also the starting point for
guided tours through City Hall.
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