New Thuringian Hut
New Thuringian Hut DAV Hut Category I |
||
---|---|---|
New Thuringian Hut |
||
location | Habach Valley ; State of Salzburg , Austria ; Valley location: Bramberg | |
Mountain range | Venediger group | |
Geographical location: | 47 ° 10 '22 " N , 12 ° 22' 59.6" E | |
Altitude | 2212 m above sea level A. | |
|
||
owner | New Thuringian Hut e. V. | |
Construction type | hut | |
Usual opening times | Mid / late June to late September | |
accommodation | 30 beds, 50 camps , 6 emergency camps | |
Web link | Site of the hut | |
Hut directory | ÖAV DAV |
The Neue Thüringer Hütte is an Alpine Club hut owned by the Neue Thüringer Hütte e. V. , a Thuringian section community, which is run in the form of an association . The association has a total of five sections ( Apolda , Jena , Meiningen , Inselberg , Weimar ) of the German Alpine Association .
location
The New Thüringer Hütte is 2,212 m above sea level above the valley of the Habachtales in the Hohe Tauern .
history
The Neue Thüringer Hütte had two previous buildings, both about 1 km south of today's hut.
In 1897/1898 the Habachhütte was built by the Berlin section of the DÖAV . The Habachhütte was destroyed to the ground by a dust avalanche in the winter of 1913/1914 .
After the Weimar section had acquired the property in 1922, the (Old) Thuringian Hut between 1925 and 1926 was about 160 meters northeast of the destroyed Habach Hut from ten Thuringian sections of the DÖAV (Apolda, Hildburghausen , Jena, Meiningen, Pössneck , Rudolstadt , Saalfeld / Saale , Schleiz , Schmalkalden , Weimar), which had come together to form a Gauverband.
Due to the prohibition imposed by the German Alpine Club after the Second World War , which existed in the GDR until the end of it, the original owners could no longer look after the hut for a long time. In 1955 the Jena section was re-established or relocated, with its headquarters in Oberkochen , which managed the hut on a fiduciary basis and renamed itself to the Oberkochen section in 1972 for legal reasons. This managed the hut until 2002.
In April 1968, the Thuringian hut was also destroyed by a dust avalanche, followed by a ground avalanche in 1969.
The construction work for the Neue Thüringer Hütte began in 1971 at an avalanche-proof location about one kilometer away on the Große Weitalm. These were completed in 1972. Since June 12, 2002 the Neue Thüringer Hütte has been owned by the Neue Thüringer Hütte e. V.
Ascent
- From Gasthaus Alpenrose ( Lage ) via the normal route, approx. 3½ hours
- From Gasthaus Alpenrose via Noitroi-Steig, approx. 2½ hours
- From Gasthaus Habachklause ( Bramberg ), approx. 5½ hours
Tours from the New Thuringian Hut
- Larmkogel ( 3017 m ), approx. 2 hours
- Roßlahnerkopf ( 2997 m ), approx. 2 hours
- Schwarzkopf ( 2997 m ), approx. 4 hours
- Hohe Fürleg ( 3243 m ), approx. 5 hours
- Plattiger Habach ( 3214 m ), approx. 3 hours
- Kratzenberg ( 3022 m ), approx. 4 hours
- Schafkopf ( 2922 m )
Transition to other huts
- Via Larmkogelscharte to Neue Fürther Hütte ( 2201 m ), approx. 4 hours
- Via Schwarzkopfscharte to the New Prager Hütte ( 2796 m ), approx. 5½ hours
literature
- The Thuringian Hut in the Habach Valley - Hohe Tauern. In: Jena section of the DAV (ed.): 125 years of the Jena section of the German Alpine Club 1882 - 2007. pp. 63–71.
- The origin of the Thuringian hut on the Habachkees. In: Festschrift for the 50th anniversary of the Jena section of the German and Austrian Alpine Club 1882 - 1932. pp. 9–12 ( PDF, 20 MB ).
- Hut-Standblatt Thüringer Hütte. Gauverband Thuringian Sections, June 1, 1932 ( PDF, 8 MB ).
- Hut land register Habach Hut. Section Berlin ( PDF, 800 kB ).
- Heinz Beck: Stations in the construction of the New Thuringian Hut. In: German Alpine Association Oberkochen Section (Ed.): Oberkochen Section 1882–1982. Pp. 73-80 ( PDF, 25 MB ).
Web links
- History of the Thüringer Hütte
- New Thuringian Hut in the Historical Alpine Archive of the Alpine Clubs in Germany, Austria and South Tyrol (temporarily offline)
- Alte Thüringer Hütte / Habachhütte in the historical Alpine archive of the Alpine clubs in Germany, Austria and South Tyrol (temporarily offline)