Opens at January 1-December 31 Saturday 9:00-16:00
Recommended sightseeing time:1-2 hour
Address:
Valdštejnské nám. 4, 118 00 Praha 1-Malá Strana, CzechiaMap
Phone+420 257 075 707
What travelers say:
It feels like the European palaces are similar, a palace with a large green lawn and flowers and trees cut into various shapes. It feels better to go in spring and summer, green and green, and winter is a withering phenomenon.
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Waldstein Palace (Wallenstein Palace) Highlights: Must-See Features and Attractions
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Wallenstein Palace is a typical Baroque palace. It was built in the early 1623-1630 years. Later, after the end of the World War, it became owned by the Czechoslovak state, and today it is the seat of the Czech Senate.
Recommendations Near Waldstein Palace (Wallenstein Palace)
Waldstein Palace (Wallenstein Palace) Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
Some reviews may have been translated by Google Translate
It feels like the European palaces are similar, a palace with a large green lawn and flowers and trees cut into various shapes. It feels better to go in spring and summer, green and green, and winter is a withering phenomenon.
From Prague Castle, you will pass by the Warrenstein Palace and go in at will. There are many neatly planned lawns, large enough, many tourists but not crowded at all, it feels very leisurely, like a park to relax. Sit down and bask in the sun and look at the pigeons, very comfortable.
It’s not a popular attraction, but the interior is very special, especially the black scary stone walls in the park, it’s very special, it’s worth carefully finding abstract animals and grimaces on the wall.
It is a palace complex, an early baroque palace building in Prague, the scenery inside is very good, the painting of the palace dome is very artistic and worth enjoying, the garden is also very beautiful, like walking in the painting
Warrenstein's war was so proud that it took seven years to repair the palace, but the emperor was not happy, and every day he opened the window on the castle to see that the palace was more beautiful than his own, so he found a head to solve Warrenstein. The palace was later sold to Warrenstein's nephew, still owned by the Fahrenheit family, until it was nationalized after World War II and became a Senate