Café Central

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Café Central in Vienna, main entrance at Herrengasse
Café Central in Vienna, main entrance at Herrengasse
Café Central, interior
Café Central, interior

Café Central is a coffeehouse in Vienna. It is located in the Innere Stadt district at Herrengasse 14 in the former Bank and Stockmarket Building (Bank- und Börsengebäude), today called the Palais Ferstel after its architect Heinrich von Ferstel.

The café was opened in 1860, and in the late nineteenth century it became a key meeting place of the Viennese intellectual scene. Key regulars included Peter Altenberg, Egon Friedell, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Anton Kuh, Adolf Loos, Leo Perutz, and Alfred Polgar. Until 1938 the café was called the "Chess school" (Die Schachhochschule) because of the presence of many chess players.

The Vienna Circle of logical positivists held many meetings before and after World War One.

A well-known story states that an Austrian politician, asked about the possibility of a revolution in Russia, remarked sarcastically: "Who is going to make a revolution? Perhaps that Trotsky from the Café Central?"

The café closed at the end of World War II. In 1975, the Palais Ferstel was renovated and the Central was newly opened, however in a different part of the building. In 1986, it was fully renovated once again.

Today it is both a tourist spot and a popular café marked by its place in literary history.

[edit] References

Marboe, Ernst Wolfgang (Editor): Café Central. Verlag Müller 1989, ISBN 3-900-784-06X

Coordinates: 48°12′37″N, 16°21′55″E

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