Kufstein

Kufstein is city in the Austrian state of Tyrol, with a population of ca. 18,000 inhabitants, making it the second largest city in Tyrol after its capital Innsbruck. Most travellers visiting the Austrian Alps pass through Kufstein either by train, coach or car as it is the first city south of the German border at the end of the Inn Valley.

Understand

Get in

By train

Kufstein can easily be reached by train, with the 🌍 Kufstein railway station. being a local railway hub. The station is served by local, InterCity, ICE and Railjet trains.

By plane

🌍 Kufstein-Langkampfen Airport, Kufsteiner Str. 42, A-6336 Langkampfen (ca. 3 km to the south west of the city centre), +43 5372 63833. This airfield accommodates gliders, motorized gliders, ultralight and single engine airplanes up to 2,000 kg.

By bike

The Inn Valley cycle path passes through Kufstein, leading from the upstream Tyrolean valleys down to the Danube where it connects to the Danube cycle path.

Get around

Kufstein is fairly small, and all tourist attractions can easily be reached by foot.

See

Armour on display in the Fortress
Artillery pieces defening the Kufstein Fortress, with Alpine mountains in the background
  • 🌍 Kufstein Fortress (Festing Kufstein), Festung 2 (Festungsbahn, funicular railway), +43 5372 66525. 9:00-17:00 daily. The main landmark of Kufstein, its 13th century fortress sits on a hill overlooking the city 507 m above sea level. In its early history it was controlled by the Bavarians, first under Bavarian Duke Ludwig and the bishop of Regensburg, from 1415 onward by Duke of Bavaria Louis VII. The strategic importance of the fortress made it a frequent battleground throughout history between Bavarian and Tyrolean armies. Ironically, Kufstein transitioned peacefully from Bavaria to Tyrol when the son of Bavarian emperor Ludwig gifted the city to his newly wedded wife Margarete, Duchess of Tyrol, in 1342. The peace didn't last long however, and in 1363 the Bavarians attacked the city and took control of the fortress from the Tyroleans. Control switched back to Tyrol after emperor Maximilian I besieged the city in 1504, and expanded the fortress with the addition of the massive round tower constructed between 1518 and 1522. The increased defensive capabilities of the fortress successfully held back the Bavarians until 1703, an occupation that lasted little over a century until the Austro-Hungarian Empire finally regained control in 1814. It then served as prison for Hungarian political prisoners. Since modern times the fortress houses the City Museum of Kufstein, and is frequently used for concerts and other cultural events.

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