Arranged in the furthest west of the nation, only 50 miles from the Polish fringe, Lviv was known as Lemburg when it was a piece of the Austro-Hungarian Empire from 1772 to WW1. That is reflected in its interesting cobbled boulevards, multiplication of holy places and engineering reminiscent of those other Hapsburg urban areas like Vienna and Budapest. Obviously it additionally has cable cars, trolley transports and cafés. In reality they say that the principal bistro in Vienna was opened by a Ukrainian from Lviv in 1686.