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Vienna's new Freud Museum

As the overhauled Sigmund Freud museum prepares to reopen, our writer is one of the first to step inside his former home and practice

August 27, 2020 10:14
Wartezimmer (Waiting room) (Photo: Hertha Hurnaus/Sigmund Freud Privatstiftung)
3 min read

You no longer need an appointment to enter Sigmund Freud’s therapy rooms. Walking through the same historic doorway to the Viennese apartment block at Berggasse 19, you climb the stairs to his practice just as his patients did 100 years ago. 

For 47 years, the father of psychoanalysis lived and worked what is now the Sigmund Freud Museum, until he and his family were forced to flee in 1938. 

There has been a small exhibit at the site since 1971, but a major refurbishment means all his private rooms are now publicly accessible for the first time, once the museum opens on August 29.

After buying a ticket in the newly-designed foyer, visitors enter the rooms that formed Freud’s original practice on the upper ground floor — a collection of conceptual art now stands in the place where he wrote The Interpretation of Dreams.