Rifugio Rosetta - "Giovanni Pedrotti"

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Rifugio Rosetta - "Giovanni Pedrotti"
SAT refuge  category  C
Rifugio Rosetta - "Giovanni Pedrotti"
location Altopiano delle Pale; Trentino , Italy ; Valley location:  Primiero San Martino di Castrozza
Mountain range Pale di San Martino
Geographical location: 46 ° 16 '2.7 "  N , 11 ° 50' 20.1"  E Coordinates: 46 ° 16 '2.7 "  N , 11 ° 50' 20.1"  E
Altitude 2581  m slm
Rifugio Rosetta - "Giovanni Pedrotti" (Trentino-South Tyrol)
Rifugio Rosetta - "Giovanni Pedrotti"
builder SAT
owner SAT
Built 1889
Construction type Refuge
Usual opening times from June 20th to September 20th
accommodation 70 beds, 0  camps
Winter room 10 bedsdep1
Web link Rifugio Rosetta

The Rifugio Rosetta - "Giovanni Pedrotti" or just Rifugio Rosetta or Rifugio Giovanni Pedrotti (German Rosettahütte ) is a refuge of the Trentino Alpine Association (SAT) in the Pala group .

Location and surroundings

The Rifugio Rosetta is located on the edge of the high plateau of the Pale di San Martino in the municipality of Primiero San Martino di Castrozza in the province of Trento at 2581  m slm. Just a little further west of the hut are the Passo Rosetta and the Cima Rosetta.

history

The Rosetta Hut was built in 1889, making it one of the oldest mountain huts in the SAT. The increased tourist and mountaineering interest in the Dolomites at the turn of the century meant that the hut was expanded for the first time in 1896. Another project at the nearby Passo Rosetta, to build a much larger and more comfortable house, did not get beyond the planning phase and was abandoned due to the outbreak of the First World War .

Rifugio Rossetta with high plateau and Monte Civetta in the background

During the war the rifugio burned down to the outer walls, so that it had to be rebuilt by the SAT after the war. This second hut only had 12 beds and in order to do justice to the renewed interest in the mountains of the Pale Group, the hut was expanded to around 40 places in 1931. In the Second World War, however, the Rifugio suffered the same fate as in the First World War almost thirty years earlier, as it was burned down by German troops in retaliation.

In 1952 the third building was inaugurated and the name of the refuge was expanded to include the name of the third president of the Trentino Alpine Club SAT, Giovanni Pedrotti. With the inauguration of the Rosetta cable car in 1957, which is only a few minutes' walk away in the direction of Passo Rosetta, the Rifugio Rosetta Giovanni Pedrotti experienced another significant boom.

Between 2010 and 2011 the refuge was extensively modernized so that it can now also be used for ski tourers in winter.

Accesses

  • From the mountain station of the Rosetta cable car, 2600 m on path 701A, 701 (15 minutes)
  • From San Martino di Castrozza , 1466 m on path 701 via Col Verde and Passo della Rosetta (3 hours)
  • From San Martino di Castrozza, 1466 m on path 702 over the Val Roda (3 hours 15 minutes)
  • From Cant de Gal, 1180 m on path 709 (5 hours)
  • From Gares, 1381 m on path 704, 703 over the Val delle Comelle (4 hours)
  • From Gares, 1381 m on path 756 over the Val Bona and the Pale plateau (4 hours 30 minutes)

Neighboring huts and crossings

Mountaineering

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. 3 Dolomiti Trentine Orientali. Corno Nero, Cornacci, Monte Agnello, Latemar, Catinaccio, Sassolungo, Sella, Marmolada, Valacia, Monzoni, Bocche, Pale di San Martino, Cimonega, Le Vette. Euroedit, Trento 2015, ISBN 978-88-941381-0-8 .

Web links

Commons : Rifugio Rosetta - “G. Pedrotti ”  - collection of images, videos and audio files

References and comments

  1. ^ A b Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini - Sezione del CAI - Commissione Sentieri: … per sentieri e luoghi. Sui monti del Trentino. 3 Dolomiti Trentine Orientali. Corno Nero, Cornacci, Monte Agnello, Latemar, Catinaccio, Sassolungo, Sella, Marmolada, Valacia, Monzoni, Bocche, Pale di San Martino, Cimonega, Le Vette. P. 327
  2. On the history of the Rosettahütte in German , accessed on April 4, 2017.
  3. ^ President from 1925 to 1928 Irredentist and botanist .