Innsbruck's colorful old town buildings with the snow-covered Nordkette mountains rising directly behind
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Innsbruck

"The city where the mountains come to you."

Innsbruck’s great trick is proximity. The Nordkette mountain range rises directly from the city center — you can step from a medieval alley onto a cable car and be standing at 2,300 meters within twenty minutes, looking down at the Inn Valley with the Altstadt’s colorful facades miniaturized below. No other city in the Alps offers this vertigo-inducing combination of urban culture and mountain wilderness.

The Altstadt is jewel-like: the Golden Roof — a balcony covered in 2,657 gilded copper tiles — was built by Emperor Maximilian I to watch tournaments in the square below. The Hofburg palace and Hofkirche with its oversized bronze mourners speak to centuries of Habsburg power. Maria-Theresien-Strasse runs south with the mountains framed perfectly at its end, a view so deliberate it feels composed. The ski areas of Axamer Lizum and Patscherkofel — both Olympic venues — are thirty minutes from the city center, making Innsbruck the rare place where a serious ski day ends in a serious restaurant.

When to go: December through March for skiing and Christmas markets. June through September for hiking and Alpine wildflowers.