Sometime around 1680, Peter Strudel together with his brother
Paul Strudel came to Vienna from
Cles,
Trentino. He settled in the northern suburb where he opened his
Strudlhof painting school in 1688, one of the first art colleges in Central Europe. Modelled on the
Accademia di San Luca or the
Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture in Paris, it was the precursor of the present-day Vienna
Academy of Fine Arts. After Strudel's death, however, teaching activities ceased and the
Strudlhof was demolished. The present-day
Palais Strudlhof, used as a hotel and conference centre, was erected in the late 18th century. The adjacent street was named Strudlhofgasse in 1907. Shortly afterwards, the Vienna city administration under Mayor
Karl Lueger resolved upon the construction of a staircase at the end of the street, in order to create a facilitated access to the lower
Lichtental terrain level beyond. The designs were supplied by the architect Theodor Johann Jaeger (1874–1943), an employee at the municipal planning office. Built from luminescent
Mannersdorf limestone, it today rates as an
Art Nouveau (
Jugendstil) masterpiece, resembling the
Stadtbahn architecture by
Otto Wagner. The stairs were ceremonially opened on 29 November 1910 and since have been restored several times. == Structure ==