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Ecke Kegelgasse/Löwengasse des Hundertwasserhauses im 3. Wiener Gemeindebezirk Landstraße.Die Wohnhausanlage der Gemeinde Wien mit 50 Wohneinheiten wurde als Ö…
Vienna, Austria Worth it with caveats

Hundertwasserhaus

A fun, free, five-minute photo stop, no more and no less. The architecture is a genuine change of pace, but since you can only see it from outside, do not build a big plan around it. Pair it with the Kunst Haus Wien if you want something you can actually walk into and linger over.

Photo: C.Stadler/Bwag (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

This is a riot of a 1980s apartment block: wavy floors, mismatched windows, splashes of color, and trees growing out of the facade. It is a quick photo stop and nothing more, because people actually live here and you can only look at it from the street. Plan about 20 to 30 minutes, and combine it with the nearby Kunst Haus Wien museum if you want something you can go inside.

Is Hundertwasserhaus worth it?Worth it with caveats

Worth it for

  • Fans of quirky, colorful architecture and good photos
  • Anyone wanting a break from Vienna's imperial sights
  • Visitors already pairing it with the Kunst Haus Wien

You can skip if

  • You expect to go inside or tour the building
  • You are tight on time and only want the central headline sights
Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Hundertwasserhaus

We weighed recent Vienna traveler opinion on the Hundertwasserhaus against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • You can only see it from outsideReported by many

    Set expectations: this is a private residential building, so you cannot go in, and the whole visit is a photo of the colourful facade from the street, about five minutes. People who trek out expecting to tour it leave disappointed. The little Hundertwasser Village opposite is just a souvenir shop.

  • For the real thing, go to KunstHausWienReported by several

    If Hundertwasser's work grabs you, the KunstHausWien museum a short walk away is where you actually step inside one of his buildings and see four floors of his art. Otherwise treat the house as a quick free stop folded into a walk through the district, not a destination in itself.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

It's free

No ticket needed for Hundertwasserhaus

The Hundertwasserhaus is a free five-minute photo stop: a private residential building, so you cannot go inside, but the wobbly colourful facade from the street is the whole point. Fold it into a walk through the district rather than making a special trip. If the wobbly walls and rooftop gardens intrigue you, the KunstHausWien museum a short walk away is where you can actually go inside a Hundertwasser building and see his paintings.

A walking tour pairing Hundertwasser with the wider third-district architecture adds context, but the house itself needs no ticket and no guide to see.

Which ticket should you buy?

Treat the house as a free quick stop and put your time and money into the Kunst Haus Wien a couple of blocks away, which is the indoor Hundertwasser experience worth paying for. Shoot from the Kegelgasse corner and keep your voice down, since real residents live behind those windows.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
No ticket needed (exterior) Free street-level viewing and photos of the building Everyone, since the house is a free outdoor stop
Kunst Haus Wien admission Entry to the nearby Hundertwasser-designed museum and its exhibitions Visitors who want an indoor, in-depth Hundertwasser experience
Kegelgasse 36-38, 1030 Vienna, Austria View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What it is

The Hundertwasserhaus is public housing designed by artist Friedensreich Hundertwasser and built in the mid-1980s. He hated straight lines and uniform grids, so the building has undulating floors, no two windows quite alike, ceramic columns, gold onion domes, and live trees planted into the structure. It was his protest against the boxy architecture he saw as soulless.

It is genuinely fun to look at and very photogenic, a complete change of pace from Vienna's imperial stone. But understand what it is: a residential building, not a museum, so the interest is entirely the exterior.

Photo by Nick Night on Unsplash

How to visit

You view it from the street, full stop. Residents live inside, so there is no entry, and you should keep noise down and not block the doorways. The best angles are from the corner of Kegelgasse and Lowengasse, where you can take in the colored facade and the trees. The little square has benches and a fountain, so it is an easy place to pause.

Directly opposite is the Hundertwasser Village, a small former tire shop converted into a souvenir-and-cafe space in the same style. It is touristy and you can wander in for free, with a quirky (paid) toilet that people photograph as a joke.

Pairing it with something more

Because the house itself is a five-minute stop, it is worth pairing with the Kunst Haus Wien a couple of blocks away. That is a proper museum, also designed by Hundertwasser, with a permanent display of his work and rotating photography shows, and you can actually go inside and spend real time.

Do the house, glance at the Village, then walk to the Kunst Haus Wien if you want substance. Together they make a satisfying half-day in this corner of the 3rd district.

Hundertwasserhaus: FAQs

No. It is a lived-in apartment building, so there is no public access to the interior. You admire and photograph it from the street only, and you should be respectful of the residents.

About 20 to 30 minutes is plenty for the house and a glance at the Village across the road. It is a photo stop, not an attraction you spend hours at.

Yes. The Kunst Haus Wien, a couple of blocks away, is a museum Hundertwasser also designed, with his work and photography exhibitions inside. That is where to go if you want more than a facade.

A small shop-and-cafe complex across the street, built in the same colorful style. It is free to enter, fairly touristy, and good for souvenirs and a quick look. The novelty toilet inside is a running photo joke.

Tram 1 to Hetzgasse drops you about a two-minute walk away. By U-Bahn, Landstrasse (U3, U4) is the nearest station, followed by a short walk or a tram connection.

Only if you like quirky architecture or want a break from imperial Vienna. It is a short detour from the center, and pairing it with the Kunst Haus Wien makes the trip more worthwhile.

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