Mariánské Lázně and a Fairy-Tale Castle

Historic Photography Nature

About the trip

9 hMariánské Lázně colonnade & singing fountain showMineral water spring tasting from historic pavilionsChopin's and Goethe's favourite European spa resortForest walking trails through the spa parklandPrivate car, licensed guide, ~3 hour trip from Prague

Mariánské Lázně is one of the great spa towns of Central Europe — a place where the 19th century is preserved in near-perfect condition. Built in the early 1800s around its mineral springs rather than a market or river crossing, it was designed from the outset as a resort for the wealthy, the powerful, and the unwell. The result is a coherent Belle Époque landscape of colonnades, pavilions, and precisely maintained gardens that has barely changed in over a century.

The visitors were extraordinary. Goethe came four times and fell in love at the age of 74. King Edward VII visited so regularly that he effectively introduced the town to the British aristocracy. Chopin, Wagner, Kafka, and Mark Twain all came and left their traces. Mariánské Lázně accumulated its guest list the way it accumulated minerals: with remarkable consistency over many decades.

Castle Kynžvart lies 8 kilometres south in the forest above the town. Remodelled in the Empire style for Prince Klemens von Metternich — the Austrian statesman who engineered the Congress of Vienna and shaped European diplomacy for a generation — it houses one of the most singular Cabinets of Curiosities assembled by any 19th-century European statesman.

The drive from Prague takes approximately 2 hours along the D5 motorway. This is a day for those drawn to the places where Europe’s 19th century went to take the waters — and left its finest architecture standing.

You might also enjoy: Karlovy Vary & Loket Castle, Pilsen, Trebon & Wachau Valley.

Pricing: Car tour — price per kilometre, stops, and waiting time. Vehicle: Hyundai Staria (up to 8 passengers). Mariánské Lázně spring promenade: free entry. Castle Kynžvart guided tour: approx. 180–250 CZK/person depending on circuit; advance booking recommended in summer.

Tips: The free mineral springs on the main colonnaded promenade are available for tasting directly from the drinking cups provided — a circuit of four or five springs takes about 30 minutes and is part of the classic spa town experience. Each spring has a distinct mineral profile and taste. The Singing Fountain performs choreographed water and music displays every odd hour on the half (e.g. 07:00, 09:00, 11:00) — worth timing your promenade walk around. For Kynžvart, the Cabinet of Curiosities is the highlight — allow time to examine the individual objects, many of which have remarkable diplomatic or historical provenance. The castle’s forest park is pleasant for a short walk before the interior tour.

Stops

Mariánské Lázně 3 h

The spa town’s physical layout follows the logic of the springs rather than any commercial or military geography — the main colonnaded promenade runs between the Křížový pramen and the Carolína Spring, with the cast-iron Singing Fountain at its centre and a circuit of Belle Époque hotels, casino buildings, and health pavilions framing the central park. It is one of the most coherent pieces of 19th-century resort architecture surviving anywhere in Europe, and it remains a working spa town rather than a museum — guests still receive treatments, and the springs still flow freely for anyone to taste.

The free springs are available from drinking cups at each colonnade — a tasting circuit of four or five springs takes about 30 minutes and ranges from mildly carbonated to strongly sulphurous. The Russian Orthodox Church on Ruská street (1902) and the forest walking trails that begin immediately at the town’s edge reflect the cosmopolitan clientele and the highland setting that so attracted Goethe. Mariánské Lázně received UNESCO World Heritage nomination as part of the Great Spa Towns of Europe in 2021, alongside Bath, Baden-Baden, and Vichy.

Castle Kynžvart 1 h

Castle Kynžvart was rebuilt in the Empire style between 1820 and 1833 for Prince Klemens von Metternich — the Austrian Foreign Minister who engineered the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the peace settlement that shaped European borders for a generation. The architecture is formal and restrained in the Imperial manner, but the interior is remarkable principally for its Cabinet of Curiosities: a collection of approximately 2,700 unusual objects that Metternich assembled throughout his diplomatic career as Europe’s most well-connected statesman.

The collection spans Egyptian antiquities, Pre-Columbian artefacts, Chinese porcelain, natural history specimens, historical weapons, mechanical curiosities, and diplomatic gifts from across the early 19th-century world — a record not only of Metternich’s personal obsessions but of the networks and relationships that defined his extraordinary career. The castle is administered by the National Heritage Institute and is in excellent condition. The surrounding highland forest park begins immediately at the castle walls and gives Kynžvart a genuinely picturesque isolation — the contrast with the formal grandeur of the interior makes the visit feel unusually complete.

Total distance 336.0 km
Total trip time 8 h 35 min
Price 13 304 Kč

Price per vehicle with driver (max. 8 persons)

Frequently asked questions

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