The Vienna State Opera — Wiener Staatsoper in German — stands as one of the most important opera institutions on earth. Inaugurated on May 25, 1869, with a performance of Mozart's Don Giovanni, the building was designed by architects August Sicard von Sicardsburg and Eduard van der Nüll as a showpiece of Emperor Franz Joseph I's ambitious Ringstrasse redevelopment of Vienna. Constructed in a richly ornamented Neo-Renaissance style, the facade features a loggia of five arched portals, equestrian statues representing heroic and lyric poetry, and bronze figures of the opera's patron muses. Tragically, van der Nüll did not live to see the completed building — he died by suicide months before the opening, reportedly devastated by public criticism of the design, which some Viennese mockingly called a "sunken chest" for sitting slightly below street level after the road was raised during construction.
The opera house suffered its most catastrophic moment on March 12, 1945, when Allied bombing raids during the final months of World War II gutted the interior, destroying the auditorium, the stage machinery, and much of the original décor. Only the grand foyer, the main staircase, and the tea salon survived largely intact. The reconstruction effort became a symbol of Austrian national renewal: on November 5, 1955 — just days after Austria regained full sovereignty with the signing of the State Treaty — the rebuilt house reopened with a performance of Beethoven's Fidelio conducted by Karl Böhm. That reopening was broadcast live on radio to an estimated one million Austrians, many of whom gathered in the streets outside to listen.
Today the Wiener Staatsoper maintains one of the most demanding schedules of any opera house in the world, presenting roughly 300 performances across opera and ballet each season in a true repertory system — meaning different productions rotate nightly with minimal rehearsal, requiring a permanent ensemble of extraordinary depth and versatility. The house has been led by legendary directors including Gustav Mahler (1897–1907), who modernized production standards dramatically, and more recently by conductors such as Claudio Abbado, Lorin Maazel, and Franz Welser-Möst. Every January, the building is transformed into the venue for the Vienna Opera Ball (Opernball), one of the most prestigious social events in Europe, when the stalls seats are removed and replaced by a vast ballroom floor.
Visitors who attend a performance step into a restored auditorium of deep red and gold, seating approximately 1,709 patrons across stalls, balconies, and 567 standing-room places — the latter famously affordable and fiercely sought after by devoted opera-goers who queue hours in advance. For those not attending a performance, guided tours of the interior are offered daily and cover the imperial foyer with its ceiling frescoes, the Schwind Foyer with murals depicting scenes from Mozart's The Magic Flute, and the grand marble staircase. The opera is located at Opernring 2, directly above the Karlsplatz/Oper U-Bahn station, and is best visited on foot along the Ringstrasse to appreciate its architectural relationship with the wider boulevard.