Welcome to Vienna – a public transport guide

In two weeks Vienna will welcome more than 2200 WordPressers and according to our stats, 2000 of you are not Austrian! So in this post, we’ll try to give you some useful tips about getting around the town.

General information

Vienna is the capital of Austria, the main language spoken is (Austrian) German: “Wien” [vi:n] is the German name for Vienna. The local currency is the Euro. We have recently grown to almost 2 million inhabitants (Austria: 8.7mio) and rank top in the World’s most liveable cities. This is in part because Vienna is considered a very safe city (don’t push it, though), with good and affordable restaurants, and has an excellent public transport system.

Getting to Vienna

Airport

Vienna International Airport (IATA: VIE) is located about 16 km southeast of the city center.

From the airport to Vienna

Vienna Tourism has a good overview page but here is a quick list of the most useful options:

ÖBB

Take the regional train S7 (operator ÖBB) for 4.40 Euros (buy two single tickets at the machine, located directly on the platform – one to the city border plus one to any destination within Vienna). Make sure to validate the tickets before boarding the train! The train runs twice every hour at :18 and :48. At Wien Mitte – Landstraße station, 24 minutes later, change to the orange U3 (destination Ottakring) to get off at the venue at station Volkstheater.

City Airport Train (CAT)

The City Airport Train is more expensive but a bit quicker. It also runs twice every hour at :06 and :36 and will take you in 16 minutes non-stop for 11 Euros (17 return; buy at a machine upfront) to Wien Mitte – Landstraße station. Then buy a ticket (see below) and change to the orange subway U3 (destination Ottakring) to get off at the venue at station Volkstheater.

Wien_Mitte_CAT

 

TAXI

A Taxi will cost you between 28 and 50 Euros and takes about 25 minutes. It can be cheaper to book it in advance.

UBER

Uber operates in Vienna and offers both UberX and Black Car services.

Train into Vienna

You will most likely travel with the ÖBB and arrive at the new central station, Hauptbahnhof Wien. Buy a ticket (see below) and take the tram line D (destination Nußdorf) and get off near the venue at stop Dr.-Karl-Renner-Ring (adjacent to Volkstheater).

Bus into Vienna

Most international buses stop at the Vienna International Busterminal (VIB) at Erdberg. Buy a ticket (see below) and take the orange subway U3 (destination Ottakring) to get off at the venue at station Volkstheater.

 

Getting around Vienna

Public Transport

The three main types of public transport in Vienna (the name of the operating transport company is Wiener Linien) are subway (“U-Bahn”), tram (“Straßenbahn”, colloquial “Bim”) and bus. They mostly run very often, with intervals of up to 5 minutes. One ticket is valid for all types of transport.

Last trains and busses leave around 1am, though there is a separate night bus network; subways run all night on Fri-Sat and Sat-Sun.

Be aware that for political reasons public transport routing is not included in Google maps, so consider to download the official app qando (Android alternative: Öffi). Web version Journey planner.

2015 metro maoTickets

You can buy tickets online (you will have to create an account, though) or at the multilingual ticket machines (at all subway stations). Single tickets are also available in trams and buses with a surcharge for 2.30 EUR (children: 1.20 EUR). They are valid for one ride including transfers.

On ticket machines, the area of Vienna is sometimes also called “Zone 100”, so apart from the airport, you’ll always be travelling within that zone.

  • One-way: 2.20 EUR (unlimited changes, also available as 4-strip version for 8.80 EUR)
  • 24hr/48hr/72hr ticket: 7.60 / 13.30 / 16.50 EUR
  • Vienna weekly ticket (careful: only valid from Monday to Monday 9am): 16,20 EUR
  • 8-day-ticket Vienna: 38.40 EUR (8 independent strips, invalidate one per person, valid all day until 1am), can be used as a 4-day ticket for 2 people always travelling together.
  • Trivia: a yearly ticket is only 365 Euros.

Children up to the age of 6 travel for free. Children up to fifteen years of age ride free on Sundays, holidays and during the Vienna school holidays.

 

Bike around Vienna

2e05227494dad1b0650ecf8b85f733e5Vienna is also great to get around by bike! There are a lot of biking lanes and tracks and a convenient system to rent bikes: At 120 Citybike stations all around town, you can rent a bike (almost) for free, and ride from one station to the other. At the stations’ terminals, you can find out where other stations are and the number of available bikes or empty bike boxes.

Registration: Online at www.citybikewien.at (website optimized for mobile use!) or at a Citybike Terminal with a credit card (Master Card, Visa, JCB) or a Maestro Card (debit card) issued by an Austrian bank. One-time registration fee: 1 Euro.

Rental charges: The rental starts with the removal of a Citybike from the bike box and ends when the Citybike is returned to a bike box. Caution: Wait until the green lights come on, which signals the end of the rental. Per rental, the first hour is free, 2nd hour 1 Euro, 3rd hour 2 Euros, for every further hour 4 Euros.

Warning: If the bike is not returned after 5 days, a flat rate of 600 Euros is charged.

If you want to use a journey planner for biking around Vienna, we recommend the website AnachB or their app .

Whether it’s by bike, foot or tram – have fun exploring Vienna!

Meet the third group of #WCEU speakers!

There are less than 9 weeks left to WordCamp Europe and we’re excited to welcome our next group of WordCamp Speakers – Gábor Hojtsy, Lesley Molecke, Anna Ladoshkina, Pascal Birchler, Morten Rand-Hendriksen and Maurizio Pelizzone.

Gábor HojtsyGábor_Hojtsy(2)

The #WCEU team is extremely happy to welcome Gábor Hojtsy, one of the lead Drupal developers, to the WordCamp Europe 2016 stage.

Gábor is an open source enthusiast and contributor, most active as a Drupal developer, working with and on the open source project itself at Acquia. He was the release maintainer for Drupal 6, the initiator and lead of localize.drupal.org, Drupal’s software localization site and lead to the Drupal 8 Multilingual Initiative.

He started off contributing to Open Source in 2000 when he became an active contributor to the PHP Documentation team and became the lead to that team and the lead to the PHP.net website team for years. He is the technical editor of the first Hungarian PHP developer book, he’s led courses on web technologies and co-organized various PHP and generic web development conferences in Hungary.

He started working with and on Drupal in 2003, and became devoted to the multilingual functionality and sometimes the lack thereof. He is an active contributor ever since and has co-organizer of DrupalCon Szeged 2008 and Drupal Dev Days 2014.

He’s a father of an amazing boy, loves reading non-fiction and is very passionate about singing, music and amateur acting, especially when these three are all combined.

Lesley Molecke

Lesley Molecke

Lesley Molecke

Lesley is the co-founder of boutique WordPress agency, Cornershop Creative, which focuses on helping nonprofit and small business customers set and meet their goals online. She’s been working on the web since she was in high school and ran her own small web design shop before she could drive.

Prior to founding Cornershop Creative, she managed enterprise-level CMS rollouts for both the City of Albuquerque and the Albuquerque Public Schools (one of the largest districts in the US) in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Lesley and her co-founders have turned a pipe dream of a business into a reality that employs 10 remote employees and helps more than 100 nonprofit customers each year.

Pascal Birchler

Pascal Birchler

Pascal Birchler

Pascal is a 22-year-old student and web developer from Switzerland. He contributes to WordPress whether it is by organising local events, or through direct core contributions.

His passion is to help other people, whether it’s by cooking, building awesome websites, or by blogging. He’s been working with WordPress for years and he’s involved with both the German-speaking and the international community.

Pascal received commit access to WordPress core after leading the embeds feature plugin included in WordPress 4.4.

He had a great time at WordCamp Europe 2015 and is coming back in 2016 to share his experience about contributing to WordPress with others and inspire people to do the same.

Anna Ladoshkina

Anna Ladoshkina

Anna Ladoshkina

Anna has been developing websites on WordPress for NGOs in Russia since 2006 as a freelancer.

Apart from that, Anna is working with te-st.ru team (that’s open educational project for NGOs) to promote web-technologies and WordPress in particular for NGOs in Russia. Her team creates events and educational materials to help Russian charities become more efficient on the web.

Anna is a self-educated specialist and used to adopt new techniques and tools on her own.

Anna will share her experience on how to start using modern tools when you are developing websites (not themes of plugins), how to manage such projects and how they are different.

Morten Rand-Hendriksen

Morten Rand Hendriksen

Morten Rand Hendriksen

Morten Rand-Hendriksen is a senior staff author at Lynda.com, a LinkedIn Company, with 60+ courses published.

When not creating training materials for Lynda.com, Morten teaches Instructional Design at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, co-organizes the Vancouver WordPress Meetup Group, and contributes to WordPress core and community projects.

In his spare time, he reads sci-fi and philosophy, tries to find time to play guitar, and wears out his dance shoes on the ballroom floor.

Maurizio Pelizzone

Maurizio Pelizzone

Maurizio Pelizzone

Maurizio Pelizzone is a WordPress Developer from Italy. He discovered WordPress ten years ago and since then he’s used if for a wide range of personal and professional projects.

Today his web agency archives a lot of beautiful WordPress sites, made in collaboration with many freelancers, designers and communication agencies.

His free time is dedicated to his wife and son, he loves taking shots with his reflex camera and playing board games with his friends.

Don’t want to miss any #WCEU news? Subscribe for updates and follow #WCEU onTwitter and Facebook to keep up with all event announcements and to share the love!

Say hello to our next group of #WCEU speakers!

Hello, everyone and we hope you’re having an awesome Tuesday! Please join us in welcoming the next group of WordCamp Europe speakers: Siobhan McKeown, Tomaz Zaman, K.Adam White, Peter Wilson, Erica Varlese, Pam Kocke and Eric Lewis!

Siobhan McKeown

Siobhan McKeown

Siobhan McKeown

Siobhan is a writer, editor, event organiser, WordPress contributor, public speaker, and free software advocate. She recently completed a book about the history of the WordPress project, which is available on the WordPress github account.

Siobhan is a WordPress contributor, having contributed to nearly every release since 3.0 and was previously active in the documentation project. She’s organised numerous WordCamps, including #WCEU twice so she knows how hard the team is working right now!

She’s worked remotely for more than five years now and her current project is a book about remote work, which she’s writing for Repeater Books.

Tomaz Zaman

Tomaz Zaman

Tomaz Zaman

Born and raised in central Slovenia. After having moved to the most remote part of the country with his family, he had to look online for work and found a couple of issues that online outsourcing services have and decided to build my own. Having 0 experience with WordPress at the time was quite a challenge, but luckily the community was warm and welcoming and the business is growing ever since because there’s a need for a matchmaking service like ours.

When he’s not managing the team of currently 12 people, he likes to write JavaScript. Off work, he’s a husband, a father of 4 kids and a passionate Skydiver.

Peter Wilson

Peter Wilson

Peter Wilson

Peter Wilson is a web-developer with twenty years experience, a CSS junkie, a developer at Human Made Australia and a regular contributor to WordPress core.

Peter has worked in both client services and on enterprise applications. Peter’s portfolio includes working on sites for some of Australia’s largest listed companies and highest profile performers.

Peter writes at peterwilson.cc and tweets as @pwcc.

 

Pam Kocke & Erica Varlese

Erica Varlese & Pam Kocke

Erica Varlese & Pam Kocke

New Orleans resident Pam Kocke works for Automattic, spending her days engineering happiness for WordPress.com users and hiring more Happiness Engineers. She started blogging over a dozen years ago while training for her first marathon.

In her free time, she enjoys photographing and blogging about her identical triplet sons Linus, Oliver, and Miles. She is the organizer of the New Orleans WordPress Meetup, and enjoys traveling to other places to speak about WordPress. Pam blogs at pyjammy.com.

Erica Varlese works at Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com, where she divides up her days between helping WordPress.com users and hiring new folks into the Automattic family.

When she’s not glued to her laptop, she likes to practice photography, fawn over her dog, and espouse the various wonders of New Jersey. Erica blogs at ericavarlese.com

K.Adam White

K.Adam White

K.Adam White

K. Adam White is a JavaScript engineer at Bocoup, an Open Web technology company in Boston, Massachusetts, where he writes web applications, contributes to open-source projects, and evangelizes for the web as an open platform for technology and collaboration.

A traveler, artist and enthusiast photographer, K. Adam is the author of a JavaScript client for the WordPress REST API.

 

Eric Lewis

Eric Lewis

Eric Lewis

Eric is a web developer at The New York Times, and lives in Manhattan. He believes in and support open source communities. He was a guest committer to WordPress for the 4.5 release cycle. He makes neon signs in his spare time.

Don’t want to miss any #WCEU news? Subscribe for updates and follow #WCEU on Twitter and Facebook to keep up with all event announcements and to share the love!

Get your ticket for WordCamp Europe 2016 | #wceu

The WordCamp Europe 2016 organising team is happy to announce that ticket sales for #WCEU 2016 are now open!

Don’t miss out on Europe’s largest WordCamp featuring high-quality content on development, design, UX, community, marketing, performance, trends, Open Source, business development, all in the context of WordPress.

Continue reading Get your ticket for WordCamp Europe 2016 | #wceu

Hello world & welcome to Vienna!

WordCamp Europe 2016 is a go and this year we have the absolute pleasure to be hosted in one of Europe’s most magnificent capitals. Start making travel plans because WCEU 2016 will be unforgettable and you shouldn’t miss it.

You’re in for three days of the best of WordPress – speakers from all over the world to share their knowledge and know-how, networking and social events, contributing back to the project, adventures and fun in the beautiful city of Vienna.

Continue reading Hello world & welcome to Vienna!