Vienna In 1855, the Creditanstalt was temporarily established at Renngasse 1 on Vienna's
Freyung square. In 1858, it purchased and demolished a number of houses on square in central Vienna and replaced them with a new building designed by architect Franz Fröhlich, with allegorical sculptures by
Hans Gasser representing
Navigation,
Railways,
Commerce,
Industry,
Agriculture, and
Mining. The building, numbered am Hof 6, was completed in 1860 and was kept in use by Creditanstalt until the 1934 merger. It was subsequently purchased by the , a subsidiary of the
Oesterreichische Nationalbank, and in 1940 by the . Am Hof 6 was damaged by allied bombing on and subsequently demolished. A new building was erected in its place in the early 1950s for electricity utility
Verbundgesellschaft, designed by architect . Between 1915 and 1921 the Creditanstalt had its head office expanded northwestward across street, on a land plot bordering the Freyung that it had purchased in 1914 from
Niederösterreichische Escompte-Gesellschaft, which itself was moving from there to its new headquarters on 2. The opulent neoclassical extension, linked to the former seat by a bridge over Tiefer Graben, became the bank's main headquarters. It was designed by architects and ; the same team had previously created the new head offices of Creditanstalt's competitors the
Wiener Bankverein (on ) and the
Niederösterreichische Escompte-Gesellschaft itself ( 2), both nearby locations. Following the 1934 merger, the building was purchased in 1937 by , an insurance company. By 1980 it was the property of the
Länderbank which used it for its , successively renamed (1991–2002), (2002–2008), and since 2008 again . In 2010, it was acquired by financier
René Benko, who repurposed its northwestern wing which became the seat of the
Austrian Constitutional Court in 2012, whereas the art forum has remained on the southeastern side. In 1934, the Creditanstalt-Bankverein established its head office in the former seat of Wiener Bankverein at Schottentor. It remained there through the multiple mergers and restructurings until the late 2000s. File:Renngasse 1 Vienna b.JPG|The Creditanstalt's first head office on Renngasse 1 Creditanstalt (Am Hof 6, Vienna), ca. 1900 (1).jpg|Head office building erected 1860, am Hof 6, photographed ca. 1900 File:Wien-Innere Stadt - Verfassungsgerichtshof und Kunstforum.jpg|The 1910s extension in 2014, with the Austrian Constitutional Court on the left and Bank Austria Art Forum on the right File:Creditanstalt (Freyung 8), Vienna, 2019.jpg|Monogram of the Creditanstalt ("CAfHuG" for ) on the 1910s extension File:Creditanstalt Vienna Oct. 2006 004.jpg|Former
Wiener Bankverein seat at Schottentor, head office of Creditanstalt-Bankverein from 1934
Other locations In 1894–1896, the Creditanstalt erected a new building for its branch in
Prague, designed by architect with sculptures by
Antonín Popp. In 1907-1909 the Creditanstalt erected a monumental branch building in
Trieste, on what later became . File:Maria-Theresien-Straße 36 (IMG 1861).jpg|Branch building in
Innsbruck, Maria-Theresien-Straße 36, in 2019 File:Na příkopě 850 (Prague).jpg|Former branch office in
Prague, Na příkopě 8 ==See also==