Wengen–Männlichen aerial cableway

The Wengen–Männlichen aerial cableway (German: Luftseilbahn Wengen-Männlichen) is a cable car linking Wengen with the Männlichen in Switzerland. It is owned and operated by the Luftseilbahn Wengen–Männlichen AG.[1]

Wengen (foreground center, bottom) and Lauterbrunnen (left of center) seen from the upper Männlichen terminus of the cableway.
The cable car in winter
The upper station on the Männlichen.
The lower station in Wengen

History

In 1949, a number of concerned individuals from the resort of Wengen got together and founded a committee to provide a link between the resort and ski and hiking region of the Männlichen. Building began in 1953 and the cableway was opened on 22 July 1954. The estimated CHF 1.59 million building costs were overrun by about 4%.[1]

As built, the cableway had two cabins each of which carried 40 people. These were replaced in 1963 by cabins for 50 persons, at the same time as the valley station was extended. In 1973, the drive motor was replaced. In 1992 and 1993, the cableway, with the exception of the stations, was completely renovated at a cost of around CHF 8.7 million. Two new 80 person cabins were put into service, and journey time was reduced from 6–7 minutes to 4–5 minutes.[1]

During the night of 22/23 February 1999, an avalanche buried the lower station under more than 10 m (33 ft) of debris. As a consequence the cableway was shut for several months, and the canton of Bern decided that operation could not resume from the old location. Instead it was decided to rebuild the station outside the avalanche zone and close to the main street of Wengen. Operation resumed by the end of year.[1]

For 2017 the service generated CHF 3,000,000 of income and a profit of CHF 86,000, with 218,315 passengers in the winter season, and 122,708 in the summer.[2]

In 2018 the cars were replaced. The new cars included a detachable balcony offering an outside ride, named the Royal Ride, available to passengers for a CHF 5 supplement.[3]

Operations

The current cable car was built by Garaventa AG, and has a horizontal length of 1,656.9 m (5,436 ft). The height difference is 947.5 m (3,109 ft) with an average gradient of 70.8% and a maximum gradient of 96.9%. The cars operate at a speed of 10.0 m/s (33 ft/s), which gives a travel time of 5 minutes and a transport capacity of 860 persons per hour.[4]

Connections

It is a 4-minute walk from the top station at Männlichen to the Grindelwald–Männlichen gondola cableway. It is a 3-minute walk from the base station in Wengen to the Wengernalp railway's Wengen station.

gollark: To disincentivize being hit by wither skeletons.
gollark: Worrying.
gollark: Constant vector, not constant factor.
gollark: When there are other servers running, which is the case here, I don't really know what you can do since I don't think you can preempt them.
gollark: So you can then determine where they are and just offset all your returned positions by a constant factor to set their position fix to where you want it to be.

See also

References

  1. "History". GGM/LWM. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  2. "Gewinn im Geschäftsjahr 2017 erwirtschaftet". Jungfrau Zeitung. Switzerland. 17 May 2018. Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  3. "Royal Ride Auf Den Männlichen. Seilbahnfahrt auf dem Balkon". Bellevue NZZ. Switzerland. 24 May 2018. Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  4. "Technical data". GGM/LWM. Retrieved 2013-05-30.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.