St. Stephen’s Basilica

Location

Budapest
Hungary
47° 30' 3.204" N, 19° 3' 14.3604" E
HU
General info: 

Hungarians are very proud of their history. Their country exists more than one millennium and their first king takes a special place in Hungarian history. King Stephen (or Istvan, in Hungarian) is the most praised historical figure among Hungarians.

To celebrate a thousand years of the existence of their country, the Hungarians built around two magnificent buildings at the beginning of the previous century. One was the Hungarian Parliament Building – a secular pride of Hungary, while the other was the Roman Catholic basilica, named in the honor of the father of the Hungarian nation, Saint Stephen. Out of respect to these two national pride buildings, no other building in Budapest is allowed to be taller.

Getting there: 

Take the subway (M3) to Arany János street.

Costs: 

There's no cost to enter the church, but there is a nominal fee of HUF 500 to go up to the observation deck.

Interesting places nearby

Whether you ski, snowboard, walk or toboggan - at the Galsterbergalm every visitor will be given a warm welcome and will have a great time in a beautiful winterland.

The ski area Galtür - Silvretta (Silvapark) in Galtür, the highest elevated place at the end of the Paznauntal on 1600 m offers well-groomed pistes and a stunning view.

Where the dream becomes reality ... And reality becomes a dream ..., welcome to the ski and snow paradise Gargellen.

Imagine that you are standing on the mountain top, 2000 metres above the hustle and bustle of everyday life.

A small village of less than 1000 inhabitants but with above-average facilities, including an indoor tennis hall. The local ski area is lift -linked to Königsleiten and is part of the 450km Super Zillertal Valley pass.

The Adamello Ski area is a land spanning Valle Camonica (Lombardy) and Val di Sole (Trentino) with a skiing carousel made up of 100 km of ski runs which are all linked one to the other.