Naturhistorisches Museum (Natural History Museum)
Vienna’s natural history museum is a place of contrasts. If you’re looking for an engaging, multimedia trip into the world of science and nature, you’re in for a disappointment. But if you want to step back in time and experience that same world through the eyes of nineteenth century science, then you’re in your element.

The entrance. © Renate Brownlow
The huge staircases, stone archways, carvings, oil paintings, and glorious ceilings offer a majestic setting which the displays are hard put to live up to.
At the bottom of the museum there’s a vivarium and aquarium featuring live animals, birds and fish, including enough of the poisonous and scary sort to keep the kids happy.
The next floor up (the “upper ground floor”) features a large mineral and geological collection, as well as prehistoric and anthropological displays.
The mineral display is very low-key, but the collection is one of the best of its kind. A particular and unusual highlight is a 35cm “bouquet of flowers” made entirely of silk and precious gems.

The museum dome’s ceiling. © Renate Brownlow
“Fanny” or the Venus vom Galgenberg — a small statue of a woman made from amphibolite — is even older, dating back 32,000 years.
This level also features a small, but impressive, collection of reconstructed dinosaur skeletons, including a full-length Diplodocus.
The upper viewing level (first floor) has a shop, cafe and displays of mammals, fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds and invertebrates (insects etc.). Which often means row after row of dead creatures.

Dinosaur! © Renate Brownlow
The collection itself is of immense historical worth, of course, dating back to the expeditions sponsored by various Emperors and including rarities acquired at great expense by the likes of Emperor Franz Stephan, husband of the ruling Empress Maria Theresia. (His portrait hangs on the main staircase.) But your enjoyment of it all depends on how important that is to you.
Mind you, it’s intriguing to see stuffed specimens of famous, extinct species. Like the Dodo, Tasmanian Tiger or Steller’s sea cow.
The cafe is not cheap but the quality is very good and it has a wonderful collection of cakes. And where else can you have your coffee and Sachertorte under the watchful gaze of a giant crab gifted by the Emperor of Japan.
In summary, the museum is in transition. Slowly, but surely, it’s catching up with the demands of a modern tourist attraction, though to be fair much of its work is of a scientific nature, rather than a touristic one.
There’s a space for special exhibitions on the upper ground floor, for example, which always features excellent presentations. Yet there remain plenty of displays which look largely unchanged from the day they were first installed many decades ago. And your enjoyment and understanding of the whole may be tempered by the relative lack of display information in English.
See here for details on opening hours, facilities etc.
Tip: While adults without any particular interest in the collections or the architecture may be ambivalent about a visit, kids love it there. You can easily fill a couple of hours showing them the aquarium, kids area (with stuffed farm animals and microscopes) and displays before rounding the visit off with a drink and snack at the cafe.
Address: Naturhistorisches Museum, Maria Theresien-Platz, 1010 Vienna
Website: http://www.nhm-wien.ac.at/ (includes some information in English)