Kollwentz

On the south-facing slopes of the Leithagebirge above Großhöflein, Weingut Kollwentz Römerhof has long treated estate bottling as a principle: own vineyards, own grapes, own wine. The place is steeped in time—top sites such as Steinzeiler and Tatschler appear in records as early as 1569/1570, and the family’s documented story at the Römerhof reaches back to 1775.

Vineyards rise from about 170 to over 300 metres, shaped by limestone and crystalline rock and cooled by constant breezes. Parcels like Katterstein, Gloria and Point demand meticulous handwork and strict selection at harvest. In the cellar, the focus is alignment rather than cosmetics: measured extraction, élevage in large oak and barrique, and long maturation to let structure settle. The result is Leithaberg character with depth and tension—precision that feels effortless because it is earned.

Kollwentz

On the south-facing slopes of the Leithagebirge above Großhöflein, Weingut Kollwentz Römerhof has long treated estate bottling as a principle: own vineyards, own grapes, own wine. The place is steeped in time—top sites such as Steinzeiler and Tatschler appear in records as early as 1569/1570, and the family’s documented story at the Römerhof reaches back to 1775.

Vineyards rise from about 170 to over 300 metres, shaped by limestone and crystalline rock and cooled by constant breezes. Parcels like Katterstein, Gloria and Point demand meticulous handwork and strict selection at harvest. In the cellar, the focus is alignment rather than cosmetics: measured extraction, élevage in large oak and barrique, and long maturation to let structure settle. The result is Leithaberg character with depth and tension—precision that feels effortless because it is earned.