Chemnitz hut
Chemnitz hut | ||
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The hut on the Nevesjoch (2419 m) |
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location | Nevesjoch, above the Neves reservoir; South Tyrol , Italy ; Valley location: Lappach | |
Mountain range | Zillertal Alps | |
Geographical location: | 46 ° 57 '25.6 " N , 11 ° 48' 31.6" E | |
Altitude | 2419 m slm | |
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owner | Autonomous Province of Bolzano - South Tyrol | |
Built | original building in 1880, new building in 1895 | |
Construction type | hut | |
Usual opening times | Mid June to mid October | |
accommodation | 37 beds, 8 camps | |
Winter room | available | |
Web link | Chemnitz hut | |
Hut directory | ÖAV DAV |
The Chemnitz cabin ( Italian Rifugio Giovanni Porro ) - also Nevesjochhütte - is a 2419 m slm highly preferred refuge in the southern Zillertal Alps . It is located on the Nevesjoch above the Neves reservoir in South Tyrol ( Italy ).
Surname
The naming is inconsistent. The hut is also called Neveserjochhütte , according to the Alpine Club map 1: 25,000 also Nöfeserjochhütte . The same applies to the glacier , which is entered on the Alpine Club map as Nöfesferner , the reservoir and other field names .
Approach
The ascent to the Nevesjochhütte is made either from Lappach , a fraction of the municipality of Mühlwald in the Mühlwalder Valley , via the Neves reservoir ( 1856 m ) and the Obere Nevesalm ( 2134 m ) in about three hours, or from Weißenbach , a fraction of the municipality of Ahrntal in Weißenbachtal , over the Gögenalmen in the same time.
history
The hut was built in 1880 by the Taufers section of the German and Austrian Alpine Club (DuÖAV), which had to cede the shelter to the Chemnitz section in 1894 for financial reasons . A year later, a new building was erected next to the old hut, which from then on was called the Chemnitzer Hütte .
After Austria had to surrender South Tyrol to Italy after the First World War, the hut was expropriated in 1919 and assigned to the refuge commission of the Club Alpino Italiano (CAI) in 1921 . The Chemnitzer Hütte was finally taken over by the Milan Section in 1926 and expanded and renovated several times. During the Second World War and from 1965 to 1973 the hut was not managed.
Together with 24 other shelters expropriated by the state, the Chemnitzer Hütte became the property of the Autonomous Province of Bozen - South Tyrol in 1999; At the end of 2010, the license for their management by the CAI expired. Since 2015, the state of South Tyrol has been supported in the management of the hut (assignment to tenants, supervision of management, renovation measures) by a joint commission, in which the AVS and CAI are represented in addition to the public sector .
Transitions
The following transitions are possible from the shelter:
- To the Schwarzensteinhütte ( Rifugio Vittorio Veneto ) via the Stabeler Weg .
- To the Berliner Hütte ( 2042 m ) via the Eastern Möselerscharte ( 3420 m ).
- To the Edelrauthütte ( Rifugio Passo Ponte di Ghiaccio ) ( 2545 m ) via the Neveser Höhenweg .
Summit (selection)
- Großer Möseler ( 3478 m )
- Turnerkamp ( 3418 m )
- Schaflahnernock ( 2703 m )
Literature and map
- Heinrich Klier , Walter Klier : Alpine Club Guide Zillertal Alps . Munich 1996, ISBN 3-7633-1269-2
- Casa Editrice Tabacco, Carta topografica 1: 25.000, sheet 036, Campo Tures / Sand in Taufers
- Alpine Club Map 1: 25,000, sheet 35/1, Zillertal Alps, western sheet (The hut is on this map in the lower right corner.)
Web links
- Official website
- Chemnitzer Hütte in the historical Alpine archive of the Alpine clubs in Germany, Austria and South Tyrol (temporarily offline)
Individual evidence
- ^ Hanspaul Menara : South Tyrolean refuges . 2nd Edition. Athesia, Bozen 1983, ISBN 88-7014-017-2 , p. 153-154 .
- ↑ Transition of the refuges: basis laid for leadership body. Autonomous Province of Bolzano - South Tyrol, press releases, October 2, 2009, accessed on January 30, 2012 .
- ↑ refuges. Autonomous Province of Bolzano - South Tyrol, Asset Management Department, accessed on January 30, 2012 .
- ^ Refuge: Agreement signed between Land, CAI and AVS. Autonomous Province of Bolzano - South Tyrol, press releases, July 8, 2015, accessed on July 8, 2015 .