The Lainzer Tor is the largest and most important entrance to the Lainzer Tiergarten. Many visitors start their discovery tours through the nature reserve in the west of Vienna from here. The entrance offers easy access to numerous hiking trails that lead through the picturesque Vienna Woods. Historically significant, the Lainzer Tor is the perfect starting point to enjoy the peace and nature of the Tiergarten.
This is the most important entrance to the Lainzer Tiergarten, so to speak the main gate. Directly at the entrance is the visitor center, where you can get the most important information about the nature reserve. Hiking maps are also available here. In the visitor center you can find your way around using an interactive terrain model or book guided tours. The following options are available: wild herb hike, bat, bird song foray, Johannser Kogel. Guided tours of the Lainzer Tiergarten are also offered for school classes. Just a few meters after the entrance you will find a huge playground with swings, slides, covered sandpit and much more. A real paradise for children! Behind it is the very beautiful Hohenauer pond where you can see some rare ducks. If you look closely, you can also see huge carp in the water. About 20 minutes walk from the entrance you will find the HermesvillaIf you want, you can visit the forest nature trail First, you pass the enclosure of the fallow deer and mouflons (opposite the playground). The path is lined with various information boards, and the typical tree species of the Vienna Woods are explained using the corresponding trees. The trees themselves "report" on their age, their occurrence and their characteristics: leaves, seedlings and fruits of the tree species are presented with the help of detailed drawings.
The “Castle of Dreams”, as Empress Elisabeth once called her villa She received the "Hermesvilla" as a gift from her husband Emperor Franz Joseph. He hoped that this "gift" would enable his travel-loving wife to stay in Vienna more often. Today, various exhibitions are held in the Hermesvilla. On the first floor, you can see how the imperial couple once lived privately. The oversized state bed dates from the time of Maria Theresa. The walls are decorated with impressive murals. Sissi's personal gym can also still be visited. Hermesvilla Special exhibitions also take place. Café-Restaurant Hermesvilla you can enjoy a wonderful meal. On sunny days, a reservation for one of the tables outside is recommended! +43 676 3926140
Under the Lainzer Tiergarten you must not imagine a zoo or a zoo like Schönbrunn or the Tierwelt Herberstein There are no exotic animals here. Instead, wild boars, red deer, fallow deer, roe deer and mouflons live in the wild. Only if you are lucky will you come across a wild boar - on other days you may only see ducks. Nevertheless, the Lainzer Tiergarten is a very popular destination for Viennese and Lower Austrians, as you can take a very relaxed walk and hike in this pristine part of the Vienna Woods.
Over 500,000 visitors come here every year. The area covers a total area of 2,450 hectares - 1,945 hectares of which are forest. The entire area is surrounded by a 22 km long wall. This wall has a funny story to this day: From 1782 to 1787, Emperor Joseph II commissioned master bricklayer Philipp Schlucker to build the wall. Mr Schlucker's price was so low at the time that the Viennese people feared that the master bricklayer would become impoverished; although this fear did not come true, the expression "poor slob" is still common today. You can only get in through 6 gates. Incidentally, cycling is prohibited in the nature reserve (except for children under 6 years of age). Dogs are also not allowed in the Lainzer Tiergarten.
Since 2008, the Lainzer Tiergarten has also been a European protected area. The zoo has a high level of biodiversity and has numerous endangered plant and animal species. A special feature of the zoo is its impressive beech and oak forests. Some of these have therefore been preserved for over 400 years. Around 800 to 1000 wild boars, 80 to 100 red deer, 200 to 250 fallow deer, countless roe deer and around 700 mouflons live in the Lainzer Tiergarten. The bird life of the Lainzer Tiergarten is particularly diverse, with over 94 different species found here. Numerous species of birds of prey live in the zoo, and rare birds such as the white-backed woodpecker, the pygmy and collared flycatcher, as well as the stock dove, the tawny owl and the black woodpecker can also be found. 15 species of reptiles and amphibians live here, such as the yellow-bellied toad, fire salamander, alpine newt, alpine crested newt and European tree frog. There are also 39 different species of grasshopper and countless butterflies in the Lainzer Tiergarten. If you are lucky, you can see one of the 13 species of bat.
As already mentioned, the zoo is particularly popular with hikers, runners, walkers and strollers. For families, there are 6 children's playgrounds, mostly located near the gates. Visitors will find various viewing points, picnic areas, running trails, a viewing tower, the Hermesvilla, the Nikolaikapelle and places to stop for refreshments such as the Rohrhaus (+431 8041323), Hirschgstemm (+43 664 1572585) or the Café-Restaurant Hermesvilla (+43 676 3926140). For visitors, there is a forest nature trail at the Lainzer Gate and a nature trail at the Nikolaitor.