May 30, 2007

(Last) Weekend's Wanderings

This post has been a long time in the making because I was having a lot of trouble uploading the photos, and what's a post without photos? Sorry for the wait, but hopefully it'll be worth it. One quick thing I thought I'd mention; you can click on any of the photos to see a larger version.

As I mentioned so long ago, on Saturday I went to the Life Ball a huge AIDs fundraiser. To escape my pungent room(mate) I decided to eat lunch on the way down. I grabbed a sandwich and ate on a bench in the Museums Quarter in front of one of the (Art?) Museums. It's really cool because there's another one facing it like a mirror image, perfectly identical.After I finished, I waited for my friends in front of the Parliament Buildings, and, at Megan's request, took more photos of the architecture. The photo below shows the mosaics which run around the top 20ft or so of the entrance.
The next two photos are pictures of the giant fountain out front, I should take photos with people in them so you can understand how huge these things are. The cherubs below would be over 6 feet tall, and they're small in comparison to the other people on the fountain in the picture below.
There are four bronze statues out front that I'm sure symbolize something, but to me they look like guys punching horses... Anyone have any ideas?
This is a FAXI, that's a short form of Fahrrad taxi (meaning bike taxi in German), just walked by it and thought it looked cool.
Here's the only decent picture of the Life Ball stage that I got. I eventually worked my way right up to the red carpet, but all my pictures auto-focused on random things like the head of the bald guy in front of me, as opposed the people dressed in the crazy costumes. The first two hours of the event is just a red-carpet procession so everyone who bought the less expensive (still about $120 CAD) "Style" tickets can show off their crazy costumes. The theme this year was "Once Upon a Time" and the costumes ranged from elaborate renaissance ball gowns to people dressed as Tinkerbell wearing thongs, wings, and body-paint. I wish I could find some decent pictures online, but no luck. The highlight of the evening was the last 15min of the procession when all the celebrities entered. People went crazy for what was apparently the creme of the crop of Central European celebrities and politicians. The only people I recognized were the President of Austria and Sharon Stone.
When the procession was finished, there was an hour long concert, but as I was way at the back, and everything was in German, I decided to head home. On the way back I passed the Hofburg and decided to get you guys a night picture. This is one of those things that you really have to see in person, very impressive at night, and no tourists!
On Sunday I decided to take the U-Bahn back to Schönbrunn, the Summer Palace where I went to the classical music concert last Thursday. When you're looking at these pictures keep in mind that this was built as the private summer residence for the Austrian Royal family, and was never intended to be open to the public. This was someone's backyard.

If you enter (for free) and walk to the right, you enter through the rose gardens and come upon the Palm House, which is a Victorian greenhouse filled with tropical plants. There was an entrance fee, so I saved that tour for another day.
The riveted iron structure reminded me of the Eiffel Tower. It was the perfect mix of architectural design and Victorian structural engineering.Behind the Palm House was the Japanese Garden. It's odd to think that when this garden was planned, Japan was still the secretive Orient, making this even more impressive.
The different gardens are connected by these wide paths with giant hedges on either side to separate them, and focus your gaze. At the end of this path you can see the Palace. To give you an idea of how giant this place is, when I took this picture I was already about 1/2 way down the path, and behind me was an entire (formerly private) zoo.
The backs of the 70 foot hedge walls were even more interesting than the fronts. Most of them were only a few feet thick, resulting in giant perfectly flat trees with a thick un-interrupted wall of leaves on only one side. I guess with enough money and a hundred years of pruning you can do pretty much anything.
This is the main fountain which you see from the Palace, and is again larger and more detailed than you could ever imagine.You can walk up behind the fountain and look through back towards the Palace.
I know every other picture on here is closeups of marble fountains, but they amaze me. The woman in this photo was around 25ft tall, but looked more life-like than some people I've met.
On top of the hill behind the fountain there is the "Gloriette", to gain a sense of its size, you can see people leaning on the railing. From the front of the Gloriette you can see the Palace, the majority of the gardens and a large portion of the city, from the back you can see nothing but the acres of Royal hunting grounds which have been maintained despite the fact that this is in the middle of the outer city.
I walked down from the Gloriette snapped another photo of the lower gardens and ventured to the left gardens.This is the pigeon roost which I found at the center of a little maze of hedges. There aren't any birds because it's being renovated, but I thought it looked really cool.
Apparently all nineteenth century Palaces worth living in had fake Roman ruins. I sat here on a bench, ate my lunch, and finished Treasure Island.Around the corner from the ruins was this giant fountain topped with a obelisk resting on the backs of four golden turtles. One interesting note, the hieroglyphs on the front as pre-Rosetta Stone and therefore completely meaningless.
In all, I wandered around this "back-yard" for over 5 hours, leaving the Labyrinth, Zoo, Citrus House, Desert House, and Palm House for another day. You can also pay admission to tour the interior of the Palace and the Carriage House or go see a play (live actor or marionette) in one of the multiple theatres on the grounds.

A new Canadian IAETSE intern arrived in Vienna Sunday night. As all grocery stores were closed on Sunday, and on Monday (another holiday), I gave him a tour of the city and we ate out for every meal ($$$). We found a great inexpensive Italian restaurant run by Viennese Turks, they had the Wedding Singer dubbed over in German playing on the TV, except all the songs (the best part) were still in English.

This week at work I actually got to do something, so it went by quickly. One of my tasks over the next year will be to perform all of the argon atmosphere glove-box work for our experiments. It was a bit frustrating at first, but has become very interesting and fun. I'm not allowed to take photos inside the labs, but this is a picture of a similar glove box from Google. When you start working, you turn on the vacuum pump and push your hands in. On the side you can see the cylindrical entrance/exit air lock. Before anything goes in you have to seal both ends, pull a vacuum for 2min then re-pressurize with argon gas and then repeat twice more. This is to prevent the water or oxygen content from rising over ~3 parts per million (~0.0003%) and ruining everything stored inside. The oxygen and water controls are so strict that you can't even bring oven-dried paper into the box because it holds too much air and moisture.
Hopefully this post was detailed enough to make-up for the long wait. Please remember to add a quick comment, it's nice to know who's following my adventures.

May 26, 2007

Austrian Doors and Movies

One odd thing I've noticed is that Austrian inside doors are designed differently. Outside doors fit into the door frame like any normal Canadian door, but all the inside doors have a lip all the way around the edge, except at the bottom. Here's a picture of my office door:
This extra lip makes doors more difficult to close because the latch is so skinny and the door must be pushed shut, but must serve some kind of purpose.

Yesterday I went to the Haydn English cinema again, this time to see Pirates of the Caribbean 3. This time I was in the big theatre with really comfortable seats. Half-way through the movie the lights came up and the curtain closed. There was an intermission! No one else seemed the least bit surprised, and they all ran to the lobby. When I got to the lobby everyone was smoking like there was no tomorrow and buying more snacks and drinks (including plastic cups of beer). 10min later a bell rang, everyone went back to their seats and the movie resumed.

Concerts

Last Saturday during my tour around the city I came upon a ticket booth for a Mozart concert and thought 'when in Vienna'. The concert was the Vienna Philharmonic orchestra and the Vienna Boy's Choir performing Mozart's Krönungsmesse in Stephansdom, where it was performed for the first time. It was really good. As my seat was only 25 Euros, I wasn't able to watch directly due to sight lines in the Cathedral, so they have 40" LCD screens on the sides of the pillars. It was really odd to see LCD screens installed in the 800 year old cathedral. I took some pictures, but they all turned out blurry.

On Thursday I went with a bunch of people from work to a free classical music concert in the Palace Schönbrunn. First of all, the palace is amazing, here's a picture of the front.
When you walked through the ground floor doors at the center of the palace you come out the other side and see this:
Here's the back side of the Palace:
We walked up very close to the front, so this was our view of the stage. Thankfully they had speakers and giant screens everywhere so we really had a better view than Bill Clinton and Sharon Stone.All my pictures from the concert were blurry, so here's some from the official website:

Never would I have imagined that 140,000 people would stand silently for 2 hours listening to classical music. As I think I said in my last post, the concert this year was Russian themed so they played a lot of Tchaikovsky, most of which was recognizable.

After the concert was over I'd say at least 100,000 of the people headed towards the U-Bahn. Surprisingly it went extremely smoothly, and although we were crammed in pretty tight, I never had to wait for anything.

Yesterday I took the morning off to finish my paperwork, so now it's all done and I'm very relieved.

I think today we're going to watch the red carpet at the 'Life Ball' which is an AIDs fundraiser where people dress up in elaborate costumes in an attempt to win the title of "Queen of the Ball".

Oh, I almost forgot, I took a picture of my office.

May 24, 2007

Comments?

For some reason you can't comment on my last post. If you wante to comment on my picures, feel free to do so here (if you can).

Just got back from a classical music concert at Schönbrunn Palace. The Vienna Philharmonic played 2 hours of Russian classical music in the palace gardens. Admission was free and it was like a rock concert with about 60,000 people, fireworks, and celebrity guests like the President and Prime Minister of Austria as well as Bill Clinton and Sharon Stone. More info and maybe some pictures later (this weekend coming up is another long weekend, thank you Austria!).

May 20, 2007

Picture Tour of Vienna

It took me a long time to upload these photos, so the descriptions are just quick details. Hopefully I'll come back later and add more info, but if you have any questions, please comment and I'll add as much detail as I know (or Wikipedia can tell me) on the subject.

On Saturday I wandered around the city taking pictures. My first destination was Hundertwasser Haus. It was designed by the same person who designed the incinerator I showed you last week. It was really cool, an apartment building hidden in trees.

After I left Hundertwasser Haus, I took the Subway to the main city centre, Stephansdom.
The next few pictures are of a 500 year old stone pulpit. It was the most intricate piece of stone carving I have ever seen.

The outside of the cathedral is being cleaned and renovated, as it has absorbed about 800 years of dirt and smoke into its porous limestone.




After walking around the cathedral, I walked down the Fußgangerzone (pedestrian zone) to the Hofburg Palace.
Along the way I passed the fanciest looking H&M in existence.
Right across from this crazy marble and gold carved column.
The 'side entrance' of the Hofburg Palace is surrounded by fountains and statues, all carved out of white marble.








Across from the Palace is a city squareI walked along the street and found these ladies holding up a doorway. Just looking at them was inspiring. They must have been at least 3m high (the normal-sized right door is open so people can enter). How someone can carve statues like that out of solid stone and make them have such attitude is nothing short of amazing.
Around the back of the palace I found the Spanish riding school where the Lipizzan Stallions are (and always have been) trained.
Around another corner I found a small door to the National Library. For 3 Euros you could tour the State Hall. It was the most beautiful room I have ever seen. It reminded me of the library from Beauty and the Beast, but it was real, and better. There were fifty 2 story bookshelves filled with ancient leather-bound books, with secret doorways, dozens of marble statues, and an elaborately hand-painted ceiling. On display were gifts to the emperors and empresses dating back hundreds of years. If you're ever in Vienna, the State Hall of the National Library should be your first destination. You won't regret it. I took a ton of photos, but the no-flash stipulation rendered most of them too fuzzy.
Outside the Library I found this little courtyard deep within the Hofburg Palace.I went through a small archway and came upon the front of the palace. Pictures can't capture the detail and overpowering presence of this building.
The front of the palace looks onto a large lawn and the Ringstraße (you can see city hall in the distance)
I decided to take a rest. So I sat down here on the lawn and read a few chapters of Treasure Island.
Between the Ringstraße and the large lawn is the People's Garden (Volksgarten). It was another amazing sight. The park must have contained thousands of rose bushes, comprised of hundreds of varieties, all in bloom. The pathways were lined with folding chairs packed with people of all ages out enjoying the nice day.
Across the Ringstraße from the Volksgarten is the Parliament buildings, designed in the style of ancient Greece to highlight their democratic nature.
Beside the Parliament Building is the Rathaus (city hall).
Directly in front of city hall was a large celebration for the 80th anniversary of the Austrian equivalent of Red-Cross. At one of the tents I got my first Wiener Schnitzel. It was delicious.
In true stereotypical Austrian fashion, my meal of Wiener Schnitzel was accompanied by a genuine Polka-Bank. They were great, and really funny, hauling people up to dance with them.Directly across the street from the Rathaus is the Burgtheatre.
In another large park on the Rathaus side of the Ringstraße I sat down and read some more.
From there I decided to check out Albert-Schwiezer Haus, the place where I'll be living as of Canada Day. On the way I passed the Votivkirche (Votive Church) which is under renovation.
Hopefully you enjoyed those pictures. If you'd like to see more of something specific, talk to me online or comment on this post. If I have more pictures of something you're interested in, (I took about 150 in total) I'll add them.

The city is amazing, but I still miss all of you like crazy. Keep in touch and keep me updated.