St. Marx

55Chill

St. Marx in Vienna's 3rd district is where the Naschmarkt spillover meets the Gasometer quarter — 33 restaurants, 9 coffee spots anchored by das Wohnzimmer, and Schweizergarten within walking distance. Remote-friendly. Social Glue at 59 — friendly but not intimate.

Score Breakdown

Dining
55
Walkability
60
Daily Essentials
50
Recreation
85
Family
0
Services
83

About this Neighborhood

St. Marx sits in Vienna's Erdberg-Gasometer corridor, a district that absorbed postindustrial infrastructure and turned it into residential density without losing its blue-collar credibility. Thirty-three restaurants reflect a neighborhood that eats well without performing about it: Hitomi for Japanese, Paolo for Italian, Landstein for something more Austrian. Nine coffee spots include das Wohnzimmer — the name translates to 'the living room,' which is accurate — and Black Jack and Cafe Public, which function as the neighborhood's alternative social infrastructure. Fourteen grocery spots is the highest ratio in this geographic cluster, suggesting residents who cook at home more than they go out. Schweizergarten is the neighborhood's exhale point: a park with enough square footage to feel like a genuine escape. Social Glue at 59 is honest about Vienna's social register — the city runs on pleasant formality, not warmth. Remote-friendly because the cafe culture is structurally built for long-stay work sessions.

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