Rifugio Graffer

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Rifugio Graffer
SAT refuge  category  C
The Rifugio with the snow-covered Cevedale and the Zufallspitze in the background

The Rifugio with the snow-covered Cevedale and the Zufallspitze in the background

location Pian del Grostè; Trentino , Italy ; Valley location:  Tre Ville
Mountain range Brenta Group
Geographical location: 46 ° 13 '10.8 "  N , 10 ° 53' 21.9"  E Coordinates: 46 ° 13 '10.8 "  N , 10 ° 53' 21.9"  E
Altitude 2261  m slm
Rifugio Graffer (Brenta)
Rifugio Graffer
builder Private
owner SAT
Built 1947
Construction type Refuge
Usual opening times Mid-June to mid-September and winter season
accommodation 70 beds, 0  camps
Winter room 2 bedsdep1
Web link Rifugio Graffer

The Rifugio Graffer also Rifugio Graffer al Grostè (German Grafferhütte ) is a refuge of the Trentiner Alpenverein (SAT) in the Brenta Group in Trentino . The hut, which is usually open from mid-June to mid-September and in the winter season, has 70 beds and a winter room with 2 beds.

Location and surroundings

The Rifugio Graffer is west slightly below the Passo Grostè, which forms the border between the northern and central region of the Brenta, at an altitude of 2261  m slm in the immediate vicinity of leads Campo Carlo Magno coming cableway at the cabin over the mountain station is only a 20-minute walk away. The latter is part of the Madonna di Campiglio ski area , which is why the hut is also open during the winter season, as some ski slopes lead directly past the Rifugio. In summer it is the starting point for tours in the central and northern areas of the Brenta, for example for climbing the Cima del Grostè 2901  m slm , the Cima Falkner 2988  m slm or the Pietra Grande 2936  m slm

history

The Grafferhütte was built in 1947 by the Giorgio Graffer cooperative. It is named after the pilot and mountaineer Giorgio Graffer, who came from Trento and died in Albania during World War II . The rifugio, inaugurated in 1948, was then given to the Trentino mountaineering association SAT in 1956 for a symbolic price. The latter had already built the Rifugio Stoppani at the nearby Passo Grostè in 1893, but it burned down in 1940 and was not rebuilt by the SAT.

The building was restored between 1988 and 1989. It was converted so that it can also accommodate smaller training courses and conferences. The reopening took place in 1990.

Accesses

  • From Passo del Grostè (cable car station), 2442 m on path 301 (20 minutes)
  • From Passo Campo Carlo Magno , 1681 m on Fortstraße (2 hours)
  • From Monte Spinale, 2102 m on path 331 (1 hour 30 minutes)
  • From Vallesinella, 1513 m on path 382 (2 hours 20 minutes)

Transitions

  • To Rifugio Tuckett - Quintino Sella , 2272 m on paths 331, 316 (Ferrata Sosat) in 1 hour 30 minutes, on paths 305 and 303 (Via delle Bocchette / Ferrata Benini) in 5 hours
  • To Tovelsee , 1177 m on path 301, 314 4 hours 30 minutes
  • To Andalo , 1040 m on path 301 in 5 hours 30 minutes
  • To the Rifugio Peller , 2022 m on path 336 (Ferrata Claudio Costanzi) in 11-12 hours

literature

  • Achille Gadler, Mario Corradini: Rifugi e bivacchi nel Trentino. Panorama, Trento 2003, ISBN 978-88-87118-40-7 .
  • Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini - Sezione del CAI - Commissione Sentieri: … per sentieri e luoghi. Sui monti del Trentino. 5 Presanella, Adamello, Dolomiti di Brenta. Euroedit, Trento 2017, ISBN 978-88-941381-3-9 .

cards

Web links

Commons : Rifugio Graffer  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini - Sezione del CAI - Commissione Sentieri: … per sentieri e luoghi. Sui monti del Trentino. 5 Presanella, Adamello, Dolomiti di Brenta. Pp. 327-328
  2. Alpine Club Maps of the Eastern Alps. Retrieved October 6, 2019 .
  3. Tobacco hiking maps 1.25.000. Retrieved October 6, 2019 .