Vienna Beltway
History
The Gürtel was laid out from 1873 at the site of the former Linienwall fortification, built under Emperor Leopold I at the beginning of the 18th century to protect his residence from kuruc invasions in the course of Rákóczi's War for Independence. After World War I, the road became the construction site for several public housing estates (Gemeindebauten) in the era of Red Vienna. As in most parts of Austria-Hungary, vehicles formerly moved on the left, like in Britain, until after the Anschluss in 1938. According to German regulations, traffic in Vienna was redirected to pass on the right as elsewhere on the Continent. Plans developed in the 1960s and 70s to rebuild the Gürtel as a city motorway have never been carried out. The road, like the adjacent residential areas, is however strongly affected by the high traffic volume.
Layout
The Gürtel is not to be confused with B 221 Wiener Gürtel Straße which includes other streets like Schlachthausgasse, starts at the Donaukanal and ends at the Gürtelbrücke, again at Donaukanal.
In the south it starts in the Landstraße district, at the junction with A23 Südosttangente and runs westward toward the Central Station, where the Vienna Pre-metro has been built under surface. There the Wiedner Gürtel and Margaretengürtel mark the border of Wieden and Margareten with the southern Favoriten suburb. The Gürtel then turns north, running along the eastern rim of the Meidling suburb, crossing the Wienfluss and the Wienzeile road, separating the inner city districts of Mariahilf and Neubau in the east from Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus with the Westbahnhof. The road continues as the border of Josefstadt and Alsergrund with the outer Hernals and Währing districts, passing the General Hospital (Allgemeines Krankenhaus, AKH) and the Volksoper. It ends relatively unspectecular in Döbling district at a Gemeindebau from the 1920s called Professor-Jodl-Hof
From the Wienzeile to the northern end, the dual carriageway is accompanied by the historic Stadtbahn viaduct designed by Otto Wagner, today operated by the U6 U-Bahn line.
Further reading
- Madeleine Petrovic: Der Wiener Gürtel. Wiederentdeckung einer lebendigen Prachtstraße (Verlag Christian Brandstätter: Wien, 1998) (ISBN 3854477236).
48°11′57″N 16°20′19″E / 48.1991666667°N 16.3386944444°E
References
- ^ "Austria - Vienna - Inside The Gurtel - Josefstadt". Where to Go, What to See. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
External links
Media related to Gürtel, Vienna at Wikimedia Commons