Lungomare (The Seaside Promenade)

Lungomare (The Seaside Promenade)

Built in phases, this path stretches from Preluka to Lovran and its total length is approximately 12 kilometers. The initiator of the operation was the Scenic Improvement Society (Abbazianer Verschönerungsverein), and the conductors of the works were Heinrich Gintl, Alfred Manussi and Konrad Rubbia. They were confronted with great land Lungomare (Seaside Promenade) purchasing problems and countless disputes had to be settled through the authority of Jettmar, the county captain. The first, northern phase of the path (Volosko-Slatina) was completed in 1889, when Opatija officially becomes a Health Resort (the stretch from Dražice to the port was finished around 1888), and the southernmost section (that connected Opatija with the promenade in Lovran) only around 1911, thanks to the commitment of physician Julius Hortenau. Planned as an important trump card for health tourism, this path, together with the parallel woodland path in the town’s hinterland (today’s Carmen Sylva Promenade) is a potential of psycho physical recreation that is indeed insufficiently exploited. In addition to this, the Promenade passes by most of the significant structures of Opatija’s history, linking the old sanatoriums of the North Strand, the port, Lido, villas Angiolina and Amalia, hotel Kvarner, St. Jacob’s church and finally the hotels with the villas of the South Strand. One of the highest points above sea level is the Grotta del Diavolo (Teufelsbrunnen) near the residence of the consul of Venezuela. Some features of the seaside promenade have been lost: the bust in honor of Admiral Littrow on the North Strand is gone, the Dr. Masarei footbridge has disappeared – replaced by the reconstructed path in front of hotel Admiral. Again, there are points that have changed only, in appearance, location or through use: Schwerdtner’s relievo of Billroth made in 1907, with the inscription Dem großen Arzt und Förderer des Kurortes (“To a great physician and promoter of the health resort”), was destroyed in World War II, and Dolinar’s new one, with the inscription “An outstanding surgeon and a friend of Opatija,” was erected in 1965 several meters further to the south, on the chapel wall. Rathausky’s bust of Schüler (Rathausky is also the sculptor of the Helios and Selene fountain in front of the Imperial and of the Madonna del Mare, now located in front of St. Jacob’s church) once stood on the seaside promenade in front of hotel Kvarner, and today it stands in the Angiolina Park (ex 1. maja) among the bananas. Finally, there are newly erected symbols, such as the memorial tablet to Pilsudski in the Sv. Jakov Park, not far from the Maiden with a seagull.
1. The bay of Preluk
For centuries this area was dotted with wooden tuna lookouts reached by ladders, while fishing nets were left to dry along the shore like giant spiders' webs. The deserted quarry here once supplied material for the construction of Rijeka's Korzo promenade. Today this bay is a particular favorite among sailors and windsurfers who make full use of the ideal winds that blow here, especially the nightly tramontana in the autumn.

2. Volosko
In the 18th century this tranquil fishing village used to be an important center of shipping (1884 Rijeka-Volosko-Opatija steamship line), shipbuilding and trade, but later it lost out to Rijeka and Opatija.

3. Villa Minach
In the house next to the Amfora restaurant the Hungarian count Gyula Andrássy spent the last days of his life as a political rebel and advocate for the Dual Monarchy. It has been rumored that the empress Elisabeth paid him three unofficial visits here - were the two of them really lovers?

4. House no. 69
Around 1911 this was the diet sanatorium Gámán; the narrow property on the right housed a “buffet restaurant for hot and cold dishes''

5. Littrow monument
The sea cartographer, lyricist, dramatist and captain Heinrich von Littrow spread news about the qualities of the Opatija Riviera in countless publications, created a valuable relief of the Adriatic, was an Austrian Lloyd's seaman, founder of the Opatija Yacht Club & lived in the town until his death. In 2006 the Holleis family donated this plaque to replace the bust destroyed during the war.

6. Villa Ransonnet alias Kremesek
The first owner, biologist baron Eugen Ransonnet-Villez invented a bell for underwater painting, discovered the Blue Cave on the island of Biševo in Dalmatia, and planted bamboo in the park between the villa and the promenade. A later owner, Consul Leo Kremesek, supposedly lost his private parts here in a fight with his maid because although he loved the lady, he did not want to marry her.

7. Hotel Belvedere
This was the location of the children Szego sanatorium. But it is unlikely that the young patients enjoyed the sanatorium's library very much - daily press and novels were forbidden because such reading supposedly encouraged early maturity and unwanted expressions of opinion...

8. Villa Rosalia
This is where the Czech violinist Jan Kubelik used to live, a man whose genius has sometimes been compared to Paganini’s. Kubelik had soundproofed insulation installed in the house so he could play music at the same time with his children.

9. Hotel Miramar alias Villa Neptun
Built between 1890 and 1897 for a certain Mr. Meyne from Burgenland and later owned by the countess Laura Henckel-Donnersmark, this villa gained more and more similarities with Archduke Ferdinand Max's dream palace of Miramar in Trieste. It became a favorite destination of many prominent guests who wanted to stay in a central location yet away from the crowd. Vladimir Nabokov spent a summer of his childhood here, and Ludwig Salvator, Archduke of Tuscany, paid several visits here too.

10. Villa Ambasador
Once the “New Sanatorium Schalk'' was founded here by Franz Schalk from Styria. At a later date the sanatorium was named Lakatós.

11. Monument to Henryk Sienkiewicz
During a cure in Opatija, this Polish writer wrote the short story “Bullfight'' (which was the basis for the roman “Quo Vadis”). He also began his novel “Mr Wolodyjowski'' In 1905 he won the Nobel Prize for literature.


Places of interest in the centre

12. Schiller bust
The bust of Friedrich Schiller was put up to the memory of this Austrian railway expert, pioneer of tourism and general director of the Austrian Southern Railway who played a decisive role in promoting, financing and creating the Austrian Riviera from 1882. Without him, a lot of things in Opatija would be completely different today.

13. Opatija's Lido
I this location reclaimed from the sea it was once planned to build a huge health palace with ballrooms, concert halls, artificial wave pools, cafés and shops, but this mega-project failed due to World War One. Today you find here an Open Air Theatre that hosts numerous film shows, concerts and other cultural events every summer, soon to be rebuilt…

14. Ronjgov bust
Living on the edge of poverty, music teacher and composer (Ivan Matetić Ronjgov dedicated his life to the musical heritage of Istria and Kvarner.


15. Villa Angiolina
Villa Angiolina is “the cradle of Opatija's tourism”. It all a began in 1844 when a merchant from Rijeka, Iginio Scarpa, bought this peninsula in 1844 at a very low price, turned a humble house into a splendid villa, named it after his late wife and began inviting his noted friends to visit him. This resulted in ever more prominent personalities visiting Opatija, like the Austrian empress Maria Anna who paid a visit here in 1860. After that the plot was sold in 1911 to the Health Commission for as much as 2.5 million Guldens. Today the villa hosts newly opened Museum of tourism.

16. Angiolina Park
Since 1885 over 150 species of plants from all over the world have successfully put down roots here: sequoias, lemon trees, Caucasian fir, Spanish box tree, bougainvillea, Japanese bananas and black bamboo. There is a legend that the camellia, since 1974 - the symbol of Opatija, was first smuggled from the Philippines to Europe by a Jesuit monk named Camelus.

17. Villa Amalia
Constructed in 1890 as an annex to the Hotel Quarnero for the “wealthy clientele'', which included the German imperial family and the famous American dancer Isadora Duncan. Duncan was here inspired by the fluttering palm tree to create her own dance movements (you find a sculpture outside the building (work of Opatija's sculptress Tatjana Kostanjevic).
Adolf von Nassau pursued a very special tradition here: since his doctor allowed him only one cigar a day, he would puff away on a “specially designed'' half- meter-long cigar on his daily walk to the music pavilion

18. “Angiolinabad”
The Angiolinabad used to be one of the most popular swimming baths in Opatija. The first swimming tourists used to enter the water fully dressed and would sometimes tie themselves to one of the posts so they wouldn’t drown. Unfortunately, the pretty wooden Jugendstil building does not exist anymore.

19. Hotel Kvarner alias Quarnero
Most likely the oldest hotel on the eastern Adriatic coast was constructed in 1884 as the first luxury destination in Opatija.
Originally it was a lung disease sanatorium for nobility and prominent people, but after the thermal baths were destroyed in a fire, the Crystal Hall was built instead - a magnificent new ballroom and a concert hall.

20. Billroth relief
The internationally renewed surgeon Theodor Billroth praised the advantages of the health resort in letters to his colleagues and dissertations like no one else. On one of his frequent visits to Opatija he died here in 1894. The inscription on the plaque reads: “Great surgeon, friend of Opatija''.

21. Church of St. Jacob
The monastery that was built around 1420 by the Benedictines is the origin of the town to which it gets the name (“Opatija” means “abbey” in Croatian). After being only building on a large piece of land for quite a long time, it was reconstructed so many times that has little left of its original appearance. A tiny niche in the interior hosts a replica of “Pieta” by the famous Croatian sculptor Ivan Meštrović.

22. “Madonna Del Mare''
The original of this gilded replica was originally located where today stands the famous “Girl with the Seagull'', watched over the souls of count Kesselstatt and countess Fries who had drowned in 1891 close to this promontory.

23. Juraj Šporer arts pavilion
Today an exhibition space, it used to be the famous Café Glacier which had fresh cakes delivered by express train from Vienna and Budapest.

24. Hotel Milenij
The historical complex of the hotel had several names in the past:
Hasslinger, Al Mare, Hausner, Park, Jadran and Millennium. The Café Wagner on the ground floor his been very popular ever since it was first opened in 1898. The large terrace offers a splendid sea view.

25. “Then Girl with the Seagull''
In 1956 this new landmark of the town replaced “The Madonna del Mare'' (22) that had been torn down by the sea. The seagulls are very fond of their girl and enjoy perching on her head&arms.

26. Hotel Imperial
Built in 1885 as the second hotel in Opatija, named after the crown princess Stephanie “Hotel Kronprinzessin Stephanie”, this hotel offered all the luxury of the era: healing baths, health treatments and large aquarium. James Joyce appreciated it very much.

27. Hotel Mozart
At the time of its construction, this hotel closely resembled the neighboring Villa Opatija.

29. Hotel Palace
Built from 1906 to1908 in neo-Baroque and Art Nouveau style, this hotel accommodated the heir to the throne Franz Ferdinand and the grand-daughter of the emperor Franz Josef. Josef Grusser built the hotel "Bellevue", and his son built hotel "Palace". The corridor connects Palace with the neighboring Hotel Bellevue (built in 1891).

30. Villa Madonna alias Villa Schalek
Since 2002, this inspiring property full of stories and anecdotes hosts the casino “Admiral Opatija”. There are rumors that (built in 1891) once the Villa was a secret meeting place of the emperor Franz Josef and the actress Katharine Schratt. Stylish rooms preserved their fashionable air up to the present day. The neighboring Hotel Kristal was for a period of time owned by the great Austrian actress Tilla Durieux.

31. Villa Glax
This is place where the Viennese doctor and balneologist Julius Glax used to live, now regarded as the most significant inhabitant of Opatija and father of the health tourism in the area. He was the first director of the Health Commission, devoted to Opatija until his death in 1922.

32. Villa Ariston also known as Villa Haas
Julius Glax's daughter had this villa constructed around 1908. During Opatija's Italian era, the prince Andrea Boncompagni had the villa equipped with a modern ventilation system and central heating.

33. “The devil's well'' or Grotta del diabolo in Punta Kolova.
During storms, dreadful sounds come through this rock cleft right at the point where the promenade is at its highest above sea-level.

34. Villa Münz
This Jugendstil villa, one of the most attractive on the Liburnian coast, was built by the Austrian Architect Ludwig Münz in 1903. (Münz introduced the tram in Opatija).

35. Ičići
As tiny as this holiday resort may appear today, it was an important harbor for loading wood for the village of Veprinac during the middle Ages. Later on the large Jesuit estate and a baroque monastery were built here.

36. Ika
The mid-19th century was the end of Ika as an important shipyard. Instead of shipbuilding, Friedrich Schüller developed the vine production, fruit and vegetables cultivation in order to supply the first two hotels in Opatija.

37. Villa Frappart
The personal style of the Austrian architect Karl Seidl dominates the local architecture. In consideration of local conditions and the available material of the buildings, and with a weakness for romanticism, he created several buildings and oversaw several rebuilding in Opatija and Lovran. The neighboring villas of Santa Maria and Magnolia are also his works. The Frappart is regarded as the most beautiful noble residence on the Opatija Riviera. It was built by Michael Ruault-Frappart in 1900. His father was famous dancer, mimic and choreographer at the Vienna State Opera.

38. Villa Astra alias Guerra
Nicolo Guerra ordered this villa in Venetian Flower Gothic style at a time when hardly one Italian lived on the Austro-Hungarian Riviera, but his wife Camilla was a dancer at the Vienna Opera. Today this villa is an exquisite mini-hotel and a restaurant.

39. Lovran
The port town of Lovran (lauriana = laurel) is one of the oldest settlements on the Opatija Riviera. It dates back to the 7th century and boasts numerous historic villas, parks and an interesting old town. Lovran and hinterland are the venue for great gastronomic events: “Days of cherries” in June, “Marunada”- festival of local sweet chestnuts in the autumn.

More sights:

SLATINA
A beach situated in the centre of Opatija with numerous facilities and a Blue Flag.
Icici beach
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Lovran Beaches
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Medveja Beach
Beautiful pebble beach Medveja occupies 44,000 m2 where everyone can find the perfect place for a holiday, with many restaurants and sports facilities.
Brseč beaches
Between Mošćenička Drage and Brseč are two larger beaches, Uboka and Jelenšćica. Near Brseč is Klančac hamlet, which has one of the most beautiful beaches on the Adriatic. Besides by boat the beaches...
Tomasevac Beach
Tomasevac Beach is located near the hotel "Ambasador" in Opatija. It is one of the most famous swimming areas of Opatija and is especially suitable for children.
Beach Skrbici
Beach along Opatija promenade near the Hotel Miramar. The beach is pebbles and concrete, with landscaped sun deck and staircase into the sea.
Opatija's Twin towns — Sister cities
The first twin town of Opatija, Lovran and Matulji has became Castel San Pietro Terme, in the Italian region of Emilia-Romagna, on 28th of April 1983.
Opatija
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