Richseen Private Journeys · Central Europe

Austrian Grand Prix: F1 in the Alpine Summer

Formula 1 & Alpine Culture — Red Bull Ring · Hallstatt · Salzburg · Prague · Karlovy Vary
13 Days · 12 Nights
From USD 15,000+ per person
"The Red Bull Ring — the most scenic circuit on the F1 calendar, in the Styrian hills above Zeltweg, with the Alps as the permanent backdrop."
The Journey

Alpine Speed
and Culture

The Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring is the most scenically positioned Formula 1 circuit on the calendar — a 4.318-kilometre track in the Styrian hills above Zeltweg, where the Austrian Alps provide the backdrop that no other permanent circuit can replicate. Originally built as the Österreichring in 1969 and redesigned by Hermann Tilke after Red Bull's acquisition in 2011, the circuit combines long high-speed sections with steep elevation changes and a grandstand-to-grandstand atmosphere that the compact circuit makes uniquely intimate: at 4.318 kilometres, it is the second-shortest circuit on the calendar, which means that the cars pass any given grandstand position more frequently than on any other permanent track. The Austrian crowd — partisan, informed, and fuelled by the Red Bull hospitality operation that the circuit's owner makes available to an unusually broad base of spectators — is among the most enthusiastic on the European calendar.

The Austrian Grand Prix takes place annually at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg bei Zeltweg, typically in late June or early July — the peak of the Styrian summer, when the surrounding hills are green and the evening light on the Alps produces the photographic conditions that make this the most-Instagrammed circuit in Formula 1. The race has historically featured some of the most dramatic wheel-to-wheel racing of the European season, with the circuit's long straights and heavy-braking corners providing overtaking opportunities that the Alpine scenery frames in conditions of extraordinary visual quality.

This thirteen-day itinerary combines the complete race weekend with the most compelling destinations in Austria and the Czech Republic: Vienna with its two imperial palaces; Graz, Austria's second city, with its UNESCO old town and Schlossberg; the Rogner Bad Blumau Spa Hotel, Friedensreich Hundertwasser's most complete architectural statement outside Vienna; the Hallstatt skywalk and the Königssee lake walk; Salzburg's Mozartplatz; and Prague's Old Town — the most intact medieval city centre in Central Europe — with an extension to Karlovy Vary, the spa town that has been treating European aristocracy since 1370.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Austria and Bohemia

The most scenic circuit on the F1 calendar — and then Hallstatt, Salzburg, and Prague to remind you what Europe was before modernity arrived.

01
Red Bull Ring — the Alps Above Every Grandstand
At 4.318 kilometres, the shortest permanent circuit on the F1 calendar — where the compact layout means the cars pass any given grandstand position more frequently than anywhere else, and where the Austrian Alps are visible from every seat. The most scenically positioned race in European motorsport, in the hills above Zeltweg where the original Österreichring opened in 1969.
02
Hallstatt Sky Walk — Austria's Most Photographed View
The UNESCO World Heritage lakeside village of 778 residents, clinging to the cliff face above the Hallstätter See — and the sky walk platform 360 metres above it, providing the panoramic view that inspired a full-scale replica to be built in China. Most itself in the early morning, before the tourist boats cross from the car park at Lahn.
03
Rogner Bad Blumau — Hundertwasser's Thermal Architecture
Friedensreich Hundertwasser's most complete architectural statement outside Vienna — a thermal spa hotel in the Styrian countryside where every surface curves, every window is unique, and the roofs are covered in grass. The natural thermal spring at 36°C, the onion-domed towers, and the complete absence of the straight line that Hundertwasser called "the devil's tool".
04
Salzburg — Mozart's City at the Foot of the Alps
The UNESCO World Heritage baroque city where Mozart was born in 1756, the Hohensalzburg Fortress above, and the Mirabelle Palace gardens below — in the particular setting of an alpine river valley that has been producing musical genius and architectural ambition in roughly equal measure since Archbishop Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau decided in 1587 that Salzburg should be the Rome of the Alps.
05
Prague — Charles Bridge at First Light
The 516-metre Gothic bridge of 1357, with 30 Baroque statues and the Castle Hill behind — in the hour before the tourist foot traffic converts it from a monument into a corridor. Prague's Old Town is the most architecturally intact medieval city centre in Central Europe; the hour before nine is the most honest version of it available to the visitor.
06
Karlovy Vary — European Aristocracy's Thermal Retreat Since 1370
The spa town founded by Emperor Charles IV in 1370, where thirteen thermal springs and the colonnaded Mlýnská kolonáda have been treating the ailments of European monarchs, composers, and writers for six and a half centuries. The Vřídlo geyser at 73°C; the Grand Hotel Pupp; and the Becherovka factory where the herbal digestif has been produced since 1807.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🏁
Red Bull Ring — The Most Scenic F1 Circuit
The Red Bull Ring at 4.318 kilometres in the Styrian hills — the shortest and most scenic permanent circuit on the calendar, where the Austrian Alps form a backdrop visible from every grandstand position and the compact layout means the cars pass any given point more frequently than on any other track. Originally the Österreichring of 1969; rebuilt by Red Bull and Hermann Tilke in 2011; home to some of the most dramatic racing of the European summer.
02🏘️
Hallstatt — The World's Most Photographed Village
Hallstatt in the Salzkammergut — a UNESCO World Heritage village of 800 people on the western shore of the Hallstätter See, where the lakeside buildings rise directly from the water and the salt mine above the village has been operating for 7,000 years. The Hallstatt Skywalk at 350 metres above the lake — the panoramic viewing platform that explains why Hallstatt is the most photographed village in the world, or at least the most photographed village that is not a fabrication.
03🏰
Prague — The Golden City Intact
Prague's Old Town — the most complete medieval city centre in Central Europe, where the Charles Bridge, the Old Town Square, the Astronomical Clock, and the Prague Castle complex create a UNESCO World Heritage ensemble that has survived wars, occupations, and four decades of communism without fundamental damage. The most architecturally continuous European capital east of Vienna, in the most convenient location for access from Salzburg or Vienna by road or rail.
04🛁
Rogner Bad Blumau — Hundertwasser's Living Architecture
The Rogner Bad Blumau Spa Hotel — Friedensreich Hundertwasser's most complete architectural statement outside Vienna, built in 1997 as a thermal spa resort in the Styrian countryside. The onion-dome rooftops, curved walls, uneven floors, grass-covered terraces, and the thermal pools that operate year-round from the natural spring beneath the complex: an architectural environment that is simultaneously functional as a luxury spa and a sustained meditation on the relationship between human habitation and the natural landscape.
05🚣
Königssee — The Upper Lake Alpine Walk
The Königssee in the Berchtesgaden National Park — the German alpine lake accessible only by electric boat, where the St. Bartholomew's pilgrimage church on the western shore has been receiving visitors since the twelfth century. The boat echo demonstration at the Echowand cliff; the upper lake (Obersee) accessible by a 30-minute walk from St. Bartholomew's; and the Röthbach Waterfall — at 470 metres, the tallest waterfall in Germany — visible from the Obersee shore.
06💊
Karlovy Vary — Europe's Most Elegant Spa Town
Karlovy Vary (Carlsbad) — the Czech spa town founded in 1370 by Emperor Charles IV, whose thirteen thermal springs have been treating European aristocracy, artists, and the politically inconvenient since the fourteenth century. The colonnaded Mlýnská kolonáda; the Grand Hotel Pupp; and the hot spring that flows at 73°C from the Vřídlo geyser in the centre of the spa quarter: the most intact example of a Central European aristocratic resort culture that the twentieth century's disruptions left remarkably undisturbed.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Austrian Grand Prix takes place annually at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg bei Zeltweg, typically in late June or early July. The race weekend spans three consecutive days: free practice, qualifying, and the race. This places the Austrian Grand Prix at the peak of the Central European summer — when the Styrian hills are at their greenest and the alpine light provides the visual conditions that make this the most photographed circuit in Formula 1.

Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Race dates and hotel allocations are confirmed upon ticket issuance for the relevant season. The programme described reflects the standard Austrian Grand Prix weekend format.

Day 1
Vienna Arrival
Arrive at Vienna International Airport and transfer to the hotel in the Innere Stadt. Vienna in the early evening: the Ringstrasse for the perspective on Habsburg urban planning at its most ambitious — the Opera House, the Parliament, the Rathaus, and the Kunsthistorisches Museum in sequence along the boulevard that Franz Joseph I commissioned in 1857 as the physical expression of imperial confidence. The Naschmarkt for dinner: the 1.5-kilometre open market that has been the centre of Viennese outdoor life since the sixteenth century.
Vienna Hotel (Sacher or equivalent)
Day 2
Vienna → Graz → Rogner Bad Blumau Spa Hotel
Morning drive south to Graz — Austria's second city, UNESCO World Heritage since 1999, with the Schlossberg clock tower above the old town and the Kunsthaus Graz (the "friendly alien" contemporary art museum designed by Peter Cook) providing the most dramatic single architectural contrast in any Austrian city. The Hauptplatz and the Painted House facade; the Landeszeughaus (the largest existing historic arsenal in the world, with 32,000 weapons from the fifteenth through eighteenth centuries). Drive east to the Rogner Bad Blumau — Hundertwasser's thermal spa hotel in the Styrian countryside.
Rogner Bad Blumau Spa Hotel
Day 3
Bad Blumau → Red Bull Ring — F1 Practice
Morning in the Rogner Bad Blumau thermal pools — the natural spring that flows at the temperature Hundertwasser designed the entire complex around. Drive north-west through the Styrian hills to the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg bei Zeltweg. F1 Free Practice sessions in the afternoon: the first opportunity to hear the current generation of Formula 1 cars at full power on one of the most acoustically satisfying circuits on the calendar — the short lap means the sound is continuous, rather than appearing in bursts between silent periods as on longer tracks.
Red Bull Ring — Practice
Day 4
Red Bull Ring — F1 Qualifying
Full day at the Red Bull Ring — the circuit in the Styrian hills at 660 metres above sea level, with the Dachstein glacier visible on clear days from the upper grandstands. Morning: the circuit's fan zone and paddock club access; the Red Bull branded hospitality that is more extensively developed here than at any other circuit. Qualifying in the afternoon: the session that determines the starting grid for a race that has historically included some of the most dramatic overtaking sequences of the European season, particularly at Turn 3 and the final chicane complex.
Red Bull Ring — Qualifying
Day 5
F1 Race — Austrian Grand Prix
Race day at the Red Bull Ring — the Austrian Grand Prix, 71 laps of the 4.318-kilometre Spielberg circuit, with the Alps visible above the grandstands and the Red Bull hospitality experience operating at full capacity around the circuit. The compact track layout means the race's tactical complexity is compressed: safety car periods, tyre windows, and pit stop sequences play out at a pace that demands constant attention and rewards the spectator who understands what they are watching. The most scenically positioned Formula 1 race in Europe.
Red Bull Ring — Race Day
Days 6–7
Hallstatt Skywalk · Königssee · Salzburg
Day 6: Hallstatt — the UNESCO World Heritage village on the Hallstätter See, where the Skywalk at 350 metres provides the aerial perspective that explains the village's photographic fame. The salt mine above the village — 7,000 years of continuous operation, the oldest in the world, accessible by mine train. The Königssee: electric boat to St. Bartholomew's pilgrimage church, the echo demonstration at the Echowand cliff, and the 30-minute walk to the Obersee with the Röthbach Waterfall at its head. Day 7: Salzburg — Mozart's birthplace, the Hohensalzburg fortress, and the Mirabell Gardens.
Salzburg
Days 8–9
Salzburg → Ceský Krumlov → Prague
Drive north from Salzburg into the Czech Republic. Ceský Krumlov — the UNESCO World Heritage town on the Vltava bend in southern Bohemia, where the Schwarzenberg castle above the loop of the river creates the most complete medieval urban ensemble in the Czech Republic outside Prague itself. Continue north to Prague — arrival in the Old Town, with the Charles Bridge and the Astronomical Clock visible from the hotel. Evening walk across the bridge at dusk: the most reliable single experience in Central European tourism, and justified by the view.
Prague
Days 10–11
Prague — Castle District · Old Town · Jewish Quarter
Day 10: Prague Castle — the largest castle complex in the world by area, with St Vitus Cathedral, the Old Royal Palace, and the Golden Lane within its walls. The Malá Strana district below the castle, with its baroque palaces and the Kafka connection. Day 11: the Old Town Square — the Astronomical Clock that has been marking the hour with its apostle procession since 1410; the Church of Our Lady before Týn; and the Jewish Quarter with the Old Jewish Cemetery and the six synagogues that represent the most complete surviving medieval Jewish community in Central Europe.
Prague
Days 12–13
Karlovy Vary · Prague Departure
Day 12: Karlovy Vary — one and a half hours from Prague by coach, the spa town founded by Emperor Charles IV in 1370, where thirteen thermal springs and the colonnaded Mlýnská kolonáda provide the architecture that has been hosting European aristocracy since the fourteenth century. The Vřídlo geyser at 73°C; the Grand Hotel Pupp; and the Becherovka liqueur factory, where the herbal digestif that has been produced in Karlovy Vary since 1807 is made. Day 13: final morning in Prague, then private transfer to Václav Havel Airport for onward journey.
Prague Václav Havel Airport
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Styria, Austria
Bad Blumau — 1 Night
Rogner Bad Blumau (Hundertwasser Design)
Styria, Austria
Friedensreich Hundertwasser's thermal spa hotel — onion domes, curved walls, grass-covered rooftops, and the thermal pools fed by natural springs beneath the Styrian countryside. The most architecturally distinctive hotel stay in Austria, combining genuine luxury spa facilities with the sustained visual philosophy of the artist who built it. A direct prelude to the Red Bull Ring — twenty minutes to the west.
Spielberg bei Zeltweg, Styria
Race Weekend — 3 Nights
Red Bull Ring Area Hotel
Spielberg bei Zeltweg, Styria, Austria
Race weekend accommodation in the Spielberg area — positioned for practical access to the circuit and the Styrian landscape surrounding it. The Red Bull Ring's compact size means that the circuit is accessible from most Zeltweg-area accommodation without the traffic management that larger circuits require; the grandstand experience is complemented by the hills and alpine backdrop that frame every session.
Old Town, Prague, Czech Republic
Prague — 4 Nights
Four Seasons Prague (or equivalent)
Old Town, Prague, Czech Republic
The Four Seasons Prague on the Vltava — the most considered address in the Old Town, positioned between the Charles Bridge and the Old Town Square with views across the river to Prague Castle. The most architecturally attentive location in a city whose architectural heritage requires an attentive location, with the Mala Strana and the castle district accessible on foot across the bridge.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🏁
Formula 1
Red Bull Ring — The Alps as Backdrop
The Red Bull Ring from the grandstand — 4.318 kilometres of the most scenically positioned permanent circuit in Formula 1, where the Styrian hills and the Austrian Alps form a backdrop that no other track possesses. The compact layout means the sound is continuous rather than episodic; the Red Bull hospitality operation provides the most extensively developed fan experience of any circuit on the calendar; and the racing — historically featuring more overtaking than almost any other European venue — provides the action that the scenery deserves.
🏘️
Landscape
Hallstatt Skywalk — 350 Metres Above the Lake
The Hallstatt Skywalk — the viewing platform at 350 metres above the Hallstätter See, from which the village below resolves into the composition that has appeared on more travel photographs than any other village in the world: the lakeside buildings, the church spire, the surrounding peaks. The platform itself is a 10-minute walk from the top of the funicular; the view explains, without any additional commentary, why Hallstatt has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997.
🚣
Alpine
Königssee — Electric Boat to the Obersee
The Königssee electric boat — the only motorised vessel permitted on the lake, operating in silence through the cliff-walled glacial fjord to St. Bartholomew's church and the Röthbach Waterfall beyond. The Echowand demonstration, where the boatman plays a trumpet toward the cliff and the mountain returns it cleanly: the most reliably theatrical moment in any Alpine lake excursion, which is a category with genuine competition.
🏛️
Heritage
Prague Astronomical Clock — 1410 to the Present
The Prague Orloj — the astronomical clock on the south wall of the Old Town Hall, installed in 1410 and functioning continuously (with interruptions for repair) since the fifteenth century. The hourly apostle procession; the astronomical dial that shows the positions of the sun and moon simultaneously; and the calendar dial beneath it that displays the current day of the year in a system intelligible to anyone who takes fifteen minutes to understand it. The most mechanically complex public clock in the world that still operates at its original location.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

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Every detail — from your first morning in the Styrian hills to your final evening above the Vltava — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

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