Munich section of the German Alpine Club
Munich section of the German Alpine Club (DAV) e. V. (DAV Munich) |
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founding | May 9, 1869 |
Seat | Munich , Germany |
purpose | Promotion of mountaineering and alpine sports; Preservation of the beauty and naturalness of the mountains |
Chair | Günther Manstorfer |
Members | about 178,000 |
Website | www.alpenverein-muenchen-oberland.de |
The Munich section of the German Alpine Club (DAV) e. V. is the largest and oldest section of the German Alpine Club (DAV). The Munich- based section, founded in 1869 , has around 178,000 members and is also one of the sports clubs in the world with the largest number of members and, after FC Bayern Munich, the second largest club in Munich.
Basics
The section was founded in Munich on May 9, 1869, making it the oldest of the German Alpine Club. On July 28, 1999, a close cooperation with the Oberland section was decided and gradually implemented. This includes, among other things, the possibility of mutual free membership in the respective other section ( plus membership ), a joint event program, a joint website and a joint members' magazine.
In the Schuster Sporthaus at Marienplatz and in the section's own climbing hall in Gilching , the section operates two service points where members are offered, among other things, alpine advice, an alpine library and rental equipment. The section administration is located at the Rindermarkt . Furthermore, 22 huts and several climbing facilities are maintained, including the DAV climbing and bouldering center Munich-South in Thalkirchen together with 23 other sections . In 2016, the association made around 9 million euros in sales. The member magazine alpinwelt appears four times a year . Together with the Oberland section, the section offers a training and touring program with around 2500 courses and tours per year, and once a year there is a children and youth program for 6 to 16 year olds and the Mountains & More program for 17 to 27 years old -year-old out.
Huts
The Munich section operates nine managed and 13 unmanaged huts , together with the Oberland section 18 managed and 26 self-catering huts .
Managed huts
- Albert Link Hut , 1053 m above sea level NN south of the Spitzingsee
- Heinrich Schwaiger House , 2802 m above sea level A. Glockner Group
- Höllentalangerhütte , 1387 m Wetterstein Mountains
- Knorrhütte , 2051 m Wetterstein Mountains
- Munich house , 2959 m near the summit of the Zugspitze (Wetterstein Mountains)
- Reintalangerhütte , 1410 m Wetterstein Mountains
- Schönfeldhütte , 1506 m Mangfall Mountains
- Taschachhaus , 2432 m above sea level A. Ötztal Alps
- Watzmannhaus , 1930 m Berchtesgaden Alps
Self-catering cabins
- Alplhaus , 1506 m above sea level A. ⊙ ( Mieminger Mountains )
- DAV house Spitzingsee, 1124 m ⊙ ( Bavarian Prealps )
- Dr.-Erich-Berger-Hütte, 1340 m above sea level A. ⊙ ( Kitzbühel Alps )
- Gumpertsbergerhütte, 994 m ⊙ ( Chiemgau Alps )
- DAV House Hammer, 750 m ⊙ (Bavarian Prealps)
- Hut Hammer, 750 m ⊙ (Bavarian Prealps)
- Kampenwandhütte, 1510 m ⊙ (Chiemgau Alps)
- Probstalmhütte, 1365 m ⊙ (Bavarian Prealps)
- Rieplalm, 1370 m above sea level A. ⊙ ( Wildschönau )
- Sonnleitnerhütte, 1532 m above sea level A. ⊙ (Kitzbühel Alps)
- Trögelhütte , 1429 m ⊙ (Wetterstein Mountains)
- Waxensteinhütte, 1384 m ⊙ (Wetterstein Mountains)
- Winklmooshütte , 1160 m ⊙ (Chiemgau Alps)
The Probstalm is closed for a general renovation until further notice.
Bivouac boxes
- Jubiläumsgrathütte , 2684 m ⊙ on the Jubiläumsgrat (Wetterstein Mountains)
Former hut
- Ludwig-Aschenbrenner-Hütte from 1960 to 1990 was sold to the Kaufering section , which renamed the hut Gufferthütte
literature
- Festschriften of the Munich section: digital copies
- Annual reports of the Munich section: digital copies
Web links
- Section Munich
- Section writings of the Munich section (digital copies of the DAV library)
- Section Munich in the historical Alpine archive of the Alpine associations in Germany, Austria and South Tyrol (temporarily offline)
- Statutes of the Munich Section
Individual evidence
- ↑ A look back. Retrieved March 21, 2020 .
- ↑ a b Section Munich of the German Alpine Club e. V. Accessed March 21, 2020 .
- ^ A b Section Munich , German Alpine Club, alpenverein.de
- ↑ 10 years Munich & Oberland (PDF; 3.3 MB) in the alpinwelt 1/2010; Retrieved August 17, 2010
- ↑ Annual report 2016 (PDF); Retrieved April 15, 2018
- ↑ Huts in the Munich & Oberland sections ; Retrieved June 1, 2012
- ↑ Fire protection measures at self-catering huts, alpenverein-muenchen-oberland.de, accessed on August 28, 2019