Belvédère Hotel, Furka Pass

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Belvedere Hotel
Hôtel Belvédère
The Belvédère Hotel in CE.2018.
Map
46°34′36.052″N 8°23′18.240″E / 46.57668111°N 8.38840000°E / 46.57668111; 8.38840000
LocationFurkastrasse 378, 3999, Obergoms, Goms District, Valais, Switzerland
DesignerJosef Seiler
Beginning dateCE.1882
Completion dateCE.1890 and 1903
Dismantled dateCE.2015

The Hotel Belvédère is a historic structure located on the Furka Pass near the Rhône Glacier in Switzerland.

History[edit]

The Furka Pass road was opened between 1866 and 1867, and connects the Valais valley to the Uranaise valley previously cut by the Furkastock. In 1882, Josef Seiler built a lodge located in a hairpin created by the road.[1] The beginnings are difficult for the lodge. It then expanded for the first time in 1890 to become a hotel. The construction of a gable roof with two additional floors gave the hotel its current appearance but the rooms, then without electricity or running water, were still relatively spartan[1].

Hotel Belvédère and the Rhône Glacier in 1905.

In 1903, the building received a second transformation which propelled it into the Belle Époque and its first hours of glory. The hotel then became a luxury place and very popular for its panoramic location over the valley and the Rhône Glacier located, at the time, a few hundred meters from the road. The number of beds in 1907 then rose to 90.[2]

During the first half of the 20th-century, attendance at the Rhône glacier and the hotel continued to increase due to the arrival of the postal bus in 1921 and the opening of two new railway lines: the Furka Oberalp Railway and the Glacier Express in 1930. At that time, the fashion was then to mountain climbing. The walkers then give way to hikers who use the place as a starting point for hikes.

The hotel experienced a new boom after the World War II with the rise of the personal automobile. The hotel then becomes a destination for excursions to admire the Rhône glacier. The place then regularly welcomes prestigious visitors (the Pope John XXIII or Sean Connery).

Although the hotel became cult following its appearance in the James Bond film Goldfinger in 1964,[3] hotel attendance decreased sharply during the second half of the 20th century: with automobile progress, crossing the Alpine passes was easily done in one day, leading tourists to do only one trip. short stop. In addition, the Rhône Glacier had retreated more than a kilometer from the Belvedere, the view of it from the hotel became less spectacular.[4] The hotel closed for the first time in 1980 and was purchased by the State Council of the canton of Valais [fr] with the idea of ​​building a dam there which ultimately never happened.[5] The hotel was then bought in 1988 by the Carlen family who restored the building to its original state and reopened it in 1990. However, the hotel has been closed again since 2015.

Gallery[edit]

Hotel Belvédère in 1983, during its first closure, from 1980 to 1990.
Hotel Belvédère in 2004
Hotel Belvédère and the Muttgletscher in 2007
Hôtel Belvédère in 2009
In 2017, the Belvédère Hotel was closed again (since 2015)
View of the location of the Hotel Belvédère on the Furka Pass (2018)
Hôtel Belvédère in 2019
Hotel Belvédère in 1910
On the right the hotel, in 1919, behind it and on the left the glacier, behind it the mountain
On the right the hotel, in 1919, on the left the glacier, behind it the mountain, on the right the road

Tributes[edit]

  • The hotel is visible in the third episode of the adventures of James Bond Goldfinger, from 1964, directed by Guy Hamilton.
  • The hotel is visible on the cover of the book Accidentally Wes Anderson by Wally Koval.[6]

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

Sources[edit]

  1. ^ a b Daniela Gschweng (14 September 2019). "Hôtel Belvédère : Témoin d'une autre époque (Hôtel Belvédère: Witness to another era)" (in French). Retrieved 2019-09-14.
  2. ^ Kaushik Patowary. "Hotel Belvédère: The Iconic Swiss Hotel on The Edge of The Rhone Glacier". Retrieved November 29, 2018.
  3. ^ "Belvédère Hotel: The abandoned jewel of the Swiss Alps that played a part in "Goldfinger"". the vintage news. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
  4. ^ "New photos vs old: comparisons show dramatic Swiss glacier retreat". Reuters.com. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
  5. ^ "Hotel Belvédère in Gletsch bleibt geschlossen" (in German). Retrieved July 1, 2015.
  6. ^ Esthy Rüdiger. "Why the famous Belvédère hotel at Furka pass may close forever".