Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
The architectural history of the Sudbahnhotels is fascinating to read. Due to their location between glaciers and palm trees, they were exemplary for the founding of numerous health resorts. These include the high-altitude region of Semmering, Toblach (Dobbiaco) in the South Tyrolean Dolomites and the Adriatic spa town of Abbazia (Opatija), all places that are closely interwoven with Austria’s railway history. Austria’s tourism history began with the international crowds of guests from all parts of the Habsburg monarchy who visited the hotels along the new railway line before the First World War. This richly illustrated and opulently furnished book offers the reader not only an architectural and cultural-historical picture of old Austrian health resorts, but also an interesting socio-political overview from the fin de siecle to the present day. The scientific processing of the residence-like Sudbahn hotels presented here was urgently required, since more and more great hotel ensembles from the Belle Epoque are being destroyed worldwide. In order to spare the fairy-tale Sudbahnhotel am Semmering this fate, the author also uses international examples to show various new uses of old grand and palace hotels in order to preserve monuments.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
The architectural history of the Sudbahnhotels is fascinating to read. Due to their location between glaciers and palm trees, they were exemplary for the founding of numerous health resorts. These include the high-altitude region of Semmering, Toblach (Dobbiaco) in the South Tyrolean Dolomites and the Adriatic spa town of Abbazia (Opatija), all places that are closely interwoven with Austria’s railway history. Austria’s tourism history began with the international crowds of guests from all parts of the Habsburg monarchy who visited the hotels along the new railway line before the First World War. This richly illustrated and opulently furnished book offers the reader not only an architectural and cultural-historical picture of old Austrian health resorts, but also an interesting socio-political overview from the fin de siecle to the present day. The scientific processing of the residence-like Sudbahn hotels presented here was urgently required, since more and more great hotel ensembles from the Belle Epoque are being destroyed worldwide. In order to spare the fairy-tale Sudbahnhotel am Semmering this fate, the author also uses international examples to show various new uses of old grand and palace hotels in order to preserve monuments.