Tutzinger Hut

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tutzinger Huette
DAV hut  category  I
View of the Tutzinger hut

View of the Tutzinger hut

location at the foot of the north face of the Benediktenwand ; Bavaria , Germany
Mountain range Bavarian Prealps
Geographical location: 47 ° 39 '27 "  N , 11 ° 27' 44.7"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 39 '27 "  N , 11 ° 27' 44.7"  E
Altitude 1327  m above sea level NN
Tutzinger Hut (Bavaria)
Tutzinger Hut
owner DAV - Tutzing section
Construction type hut
Usual opening times Palm Sunday to mid-November, mid-March to Palm Sunday only on weekends
accommodation 30 beds, 61  camps , 30 emergency camps
Web link tutzinger-huette.de
Hut directory ÖAV DAV

The Tutzinger Hut is a mountain hut of Category I in the Bavarian Alps at the foot of the north wall of the Benediktenwand . It is located at 1327  m above sea level. NN and is maintained by the Tutzing section of the German Alpine Club . The hut is often accommodation for hikers on the Maximiliansweg or the dream path Munich-Venice . It is also used as a base by climbers.

history

In 1907, the Tutzing Alpine Club Section, founded a few years earlier, acquired the former “Remontenstation” of the royal Bavarian army on the Benediktenwand and the Hausstattalm . Shortly afterwards, the conversion and expansion of the building into an Alpine Club hut began. The inauguration took place in June 1908. At that time the hut already had 11 rooms and 3 mattress dormitories. A special feature was the already existing toilet with water flush. Due to the increasing number of visitors, there were also more accidents, some of which were fatal climbing accidents. In order to be able to call for help faster and because of the central location, a telephone connection was set up as early as 1909. In 1917 the hut was moved by an avalanche, but the damage could be repaired. Due to the increasing number of visitors, the hut was expanded several times with additions, so that in 1931 there were already 110 beds.

In order to simplify the transport of goods to the hut, a material ropeway was built in 1965 that connects the hut with a nearby forest path. In 1990 a mechanical-biological sewage treatment plant for water disposal was built as a pilot project . As a renovation would have been too costly, the first hut was demolished in 1999 and replaced by a modern new building, which could only be completed in 2001 due to bad weather conditions. The new hut has 91 beds and a block-type thermal power station . The outbuilding, now known as the Hausstattalm, was also renovated and had a further 37 beds and sanitary rooms.

In March 2009, the Hausstattalm was completely destroyed by avalanches and the hut was slightly damaged. A new building on the Alm, which cost half a million euros and is better equipped than before, was inaugurated in September 2010.

particularities

On a hill not far from the hut there has been a service hut of the Benediktbeurer mountain rescue service since 1967 . This was also torn down in 1999 and replaced by a new building in 2001.

In October 2013 a small chapel was built near the hut .

Accesses

The hut can be reached on foot from Benediktbeuern ( 617  m above sea level ) via the Kohlstattalm, Eibelsfleckalm and a serpentine path in around 2½ hours. The majority of the route (to the valley station of the material cable car) can alternatively be covered by mountain bike (remaining walking time 25 minutes).

Alternative routes with walking times of approx. 4–4½ hours are:

  • from Lenggries via Brauneck , Achselköpfe and Rotohrsattel,
  • from Kochel am See via Holzstube, Kocheler-Alm, Staffel-Alm, mountain rescue hut,
  • from Jachenau via Lainl-Alm, Peterer-Alm and Glaswandscharte.
  • via the Lainbachtal, Söldneralm Benediktbeuern , walking time approx. 2 hours to the hut.

Tours

Mountaineering

The “local mountain” of the Tutzinger Hütte is the Benediktenwand with a height of 1801  m . The ascent takes about 1½ hours; a circular route is possible.

Other peaks in the area:

  • Armpit heads ( 1707  m ),
  • Probstenwand ( 1618  m ),
  • Latschenkopf ( 1712  m ).

The Benediktenwand also serves as a climbing destination with around 20 independent climbing routes ( degrees of difficulty between II and VIII - according to UIAA ).

Crossings

literature

Web links

Commons : Tutzinger Hütte  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. 100 years of the Tutzing DAV section. In: http://www.alt.dav-sektion-tutzing.de/ . DAV Section Tutzing, 2003, accessed on May 18, 2014 .
  2. a b c d Festschrift 100 years of the Tutzing DAV section. In: www.alt.dav-sektion-tutzing.de. Sepp Auer, 2003, accessed May 18, 2014 .
  3. 100 years of the Tutzing DAV section. In: www.dav-sektion-tutzing.de. DAV Section Tutzing, 2003, accessed on May 18, 2014 .
  4. Avalanches spill Tutzinger Hütte. In: Münchner Merkur . March 11, 2009, accessed May 19, 2014 .
  5. Avalanche devastates Tutzinger Hütte. In: evening newspaper . March 19, 2009. Retrieved May 19, 2014 .
  6. Avalanche damage 2009 - local and regional press reports. In: alt.dav-sektion-tutzing.de. 2009, accessed May 19, 2014 .
  7. After the avalanche: Reconstruction of the Hausstattalm begins. In: Münchner Merkur . August 11, 2009, accessed May 19, 2014 .
  8. Hausstatt-Alm under the Benediktenwand inaugurated. In: Münchner Merkur . September 26, 2010, accessed May 19, 2014 .
  9. ↑ A cozy stop under the Benediktenwand. In: Münchner Merkur . September 26, 2010, accessed May 19, 2014 .
  10. ^ Mountain watchmen as builders. In: www.bergwacht-bayern.org. Bergwacht Benediktbeuern , May 2014, accessed on May 19, 2014 .
  11. Chapel next to the Tutzinger Hütte: under the wall, the sky very close. In: Münchner Merkur . April 8, 2014, accessed May 19, 2014 .