The Art Nouveau building at Kohlmarkt 3 is a fine example of late revivalist architecture. Designed by Karl König, one of Vienna’s most defining architects, it is home to the glamorous flagship stores of two global brands today. The surrounding area offers everything you could fancy: history, tradition, luxury, art, culture and coffeehouses.
Kohlmarkt 3 Key facts
- Period building
from 1895 - Built by an architect
of lasting influence on Vienna’s urban landscape. - Maintained in compliance with the listed building consent
and periodically modernised – most recently in 2020 - Luxury retail units
on the ground floor - Historic stairwell
with cleverly integrated passenger lift - 8 prestigious rental units
for residential and office use on the upper levels - 1,983 sqm
total lettable area - Modern excellent specification
- Latest building and safety engineering
Historic location,
posh residence
The exclusive Art Nouveau building at Kohlmarkt 3 displays stunning revivalist forms. It features a three-storey central oriel supported by corbels. Curved balconies on either side of the central oriel windows invest the house with a light and dynamic touch.
The prestigious appearance carries over seamlessly into the interiors: high-end parquetry, exquisite plasterwork, ceilings up to four metres tall. In a word: stunning. Similarly, the technical fit-out leaves virtually nothing to be desired. It represents the technical state of the art, and meets any kind of requirement that you may have for modern residential and work rooms.
Unique ambience in a distinguished setting
Here, in the heart of the 1st district, you can feel the commercial and cultural heartbeat of the Austrian capital. Together with the streets Graben, Tuchlauben and Hoher Markt, Kohlmarkt is part of the very centre of Vienna.
Located in the immediate vicinity is the Mecca of Viennese gourmets: the Julius Meinl delicatessen. The distance to the Goldenes Quartier prime high-street pitch is less than 100 metres. Well-known local institutions are scattered throughout the immediate surroundings, such as the Schwarze Kameel restaurant, the Demel pastry shop, the Schullin jewellery shop, the MANZ’sche publishing and university book store, and the Italian restaurant Fabios. And the Tuchlauben ice cream salon is virtually irresistible to natives of Vienna.
- A 2-minute walk to the “Herrengasse” underground stop, served by line U3, tram line WLB, and bus lines 2A, 3A, 5A, 48A, 57A and 59A
- 4-minute walk to the “Stephansplatz” underground station, served by lines U1 and U3, tram lines 1, D and WLB, as well as bus lines 2A, 48A, 59A, 5A and 77A
- 18-minute commute by public transport to the central railway station
- 25-minute drive by car or 38-minute commute by public transport to the airport
- 15-minute drive to the A4 motorway