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VIENNA

Vienna cemetery celebrates 150 years with graveyard concerts

Hundreds of revellers flocked to Vienna's Central Cemetery on Friday to attend a graveyard concert commemorating the famous site's 150th birthday, doing justice to the local expression "Death must be a Viennese".

Vienna cemetery celebrates 150 years with graveyard concerts
Austrian pop song-writer Nino Mandl performs to a crowd of several hundred during his open-air concert at the Vienna Central Cemetery. Photo: Joe Klamar/AFP.

The vast cemetery on the outskirts of the Austrian capital is Europe’s second largest, comprising around 330,000 graves spread out over 2.5 square kilometres (620 acres).

Tens of thousands of tourists as well as locals visit the Central Cemetery each month to stroll along the tree-lined avenues and tombs of many famous figures.

But as night fell Friday, Nino Mandl, a local singer-songwriter known as “Nino from Vienna”, performed the last of three “cemetery sessions” to celebrate the anniversary.

Marianne Kaufmann, a 69-year-old retiree, was among the 750 concert-goers who attended.

The Viennese have a “special relationship” with death, she told AFP, as mourning was not necessarily considered “sad” but could include “laughing and singing” at funerals, since “life must go on”.

Conny Maehlich, 53, said she was excited about experiencing the unique atmosphere, while admitting that it felt “a little bit spooky” to attend a concert in a cemetery.

“Every month, around 30,000 people enter through our main gate alone — and exit it again,” said Renate Niklas, managing director of the Vienna cemeteries.

“They don’t just come to visit their graves, to attend a funeral, but to go for a walk, a run, ride a bike or simply relax,” Niklas said.

The events to mark the 150th anniversary, which included yoga sessions and concerts, were an effort at “bringing life to the cemetery, to honour our deceased once again”, she said.

“For us in Vienna it is an incredibly comforting approach to say that our deceased were not laid to rest in a place where it is dark, sad and cold, but in a place where life happens.”

One of Vienna’s macabre tourist attractions, the Central Cemetery serves as a final resting place for around three million people, outnumbering the city’s living residents by one million.

Notable composers and musicians such as Ludwig van Beethoven, Johann Strauss, Johannes Brahms and Johann Nestroy are laid to rest there.

Some of them arrived after a “layover” in their initial graves before being reinterred at the Central Cemetery after it opened in 1874, in a bid to boost its image.

Vienna’s residents are said to have a peculiar fascination with death, as many in the city still wish to go out with a bang.

Opulent funeral services featuring performances of Mozart’s Requiem, or customised funeral corteges attended by as many mourners as possible, are still regarded as the proper way to end one’s earthly journey.

Austria is largely Catholic, but the cemetery has sections for Protestants, Jews, Muslims and Buddhists.

Between the main entrance and the honorary graves section, allotments for urban gardening can even be booked for people to grow their own fruits and vegetables.

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WEATHER

How the torrential rain forecast this weekend could impact Vienna

Vienna's sewer network and public transport are facing several days of heavy rain. While the city is well-prepared, the continuous downpours could push the system to its limits.

How the torrential rain forecast this weekend could impact Vienna

Vienna is bracing for several days of persistent rain as part of the extreme weather sweeping across Austria. 

While other regions face severe flooding and massive downpours, the Austrian capital is also under pressure. Continuous rainfall is expected to test its sewer system, underground transport, and flood defences. 

How much can Vienna handle before its infrastructure is overwhelmed?

Vienna’s sewer system put to the test

The torrential rains began on Thursday and are expected to continue until Sunday, possibly longer. Josef Gottschall from Wien Kanal has told Die Presse that Vienna’s sewer system is prepared, with all pumps and reservoirs ready to manage the heavy rainfall. 

READ ALSO: Floods and avalanches: Austria set for weekend of extreme weather

The system is designed to handle major rain events, but the report added that the forecasted 150 to 200 litres per square metre of rain will stretch the city’s capabilities.

While the city’s advanced sewer management system uses hydrodynamic models and real-time weather data from 35 stations to control water flow, Gottschall warns that no sewer network is built to handle extreme floods. “Even if money were no object,” he says, the scale of potential flooding in Vienna could surpass what the infrastructure is designed to manage.

In addition to the sewer system, the city’s underground rail network is under close surveillance. Wiener Linien is monitoring the situation and is ready to react quickly if flooding occurs, the company has said. Measures like sandbags and dam beams could be deployed at subway stations, while buses may be rerouted if necessary.

Although flooding in the underground system is not currently expected, prolonged rainfall could still cause issues in low-lying areas of the city.

Security on the Danube River

While not expected to overflow into the city, Vienna’s famed Danube River has prompted authorities to impose a “swim ban” on the Neue Donau (New Danube). Built-in the 1970s to protect the city from catastrophic flooding, the New Danube has often proven its worth by averting major disasters for Vienna.

The New Danube channel was constructed to divert excess water away from the main river, preventing floods in the city. When water levels rise in the central Danube, gates are released to allow water into the channel. 

READ MORE: ​​How the New Danube protects Vienna from catastrophic floods

Will Vienna see flooding?

While Vienna is unlikely to face the same level of flooding as other regions of Austria, the continuous rain poses a significant challenge. 

The city’s advanced flood protection and sewer systems are designed to handle heavy rainfall, but experts warn that if the forecasts are accurate, some flooding in the underground rail system and lower districts may be unavoidable.

READ NEXT: Do I need to empty my ‘Keller’ in Austria if torrential rain is forecast?

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