Grossglockner High Alpine Road

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Grossglockner High Alpine Road, altitude 1953 m
Grossglockner High Alpine Road, altitude 1953 m

The Grossglockner High Alpine Road (in German Großglockner Hochalpenstrasse) is a panoramic road in Austria in the state of Salzburg. It connects the state of Salzburg with the state of Carinthia. It is named after the Großglockner, Austria's highest mountain.

Contents

[edit] History

When, in 1924, a group of Austrian experts presented a plan for a road over the Hochtor they were ridiculed in a time when in Austria, Germany, and Italy there were only 154,000 private automobiles, 92,000 motorcycles, and 2.000 kilometers of long-distance asphalt roads. Austria had suffered from the catastrophic economic results of losing the First World War, had shrunk to a seventh of its imperial size, lost its international markets and suffered devastating inflation.

Even the modest design of a three-meter-wide gravel road, with overtaking points, appeared too expensive. The impulse for building a road, which was meant to open up the barren alpine valleys to motorized tourism, was given by the New York stock market slump in 1929. This catastrophe shook an impoverished Austria with terrible force.

Within three years the economic output dropped by a quarter and redundancy reached 26 per cent. The government then revived the Grossglockner project to give work to 3,200 (from an average of 520,000 jobless). The project was extended to a width of six meters to serve the needs of the "excessive international traffic" - which was roundly mocked - in the belief that an annual 120,000 visitors would come. The State advanced the building costs, the users were to pay off this sum with a fee for usage.

Hairpin slightly after the summit.
Hairpin slightly after the summit.

On August 30, 1930, at 9.30am, the first explosives roared in Ferleiten. Four years later the moving force of the road building, the Salzburg provincial head of government Franz Rehrl, and the technician Franz Wallack, climbed into their Steyr 100 car, and achieved the first alpine crossing in an automobile on a graded road.

A year later, on August 3, 1935, the Grossglockner High Alpine Road was opened and put into full service a day later with an international automobile and motorcycle race.

Including the building of the access roads, the Glockner Road cost Austrian Schilling 910 million (at 1990 rates), around seven million less than estimated.

Planners had reckoned with 120,000 visitors in 1930, but the road's attraction for tourists in 1938 brought 375,000 visitors in 98,000 vehicles. After the Second World War it took until 1952 before the pre-war record was surpassed with 412,000 visitors and 91,000 vehicles. In 1962, 360,000 vehicles and 1.3 million visitors crossed the pass.

The opening of the Felbertauern Road (1967) and the Tauern Motorway (1975) throttled traffic by nearly 15 per cent, but it also permanently changed the character of the Großglockner High Alpine Road: from the only transalpine road over the 158 km-long main alpine crest between Brenner and Katschberg, to an excursion road from a catchment area with a radius of around 130 kilometers.

The Glockner Road also reflects the material advance of the people: in the early years, the motorcycle - as the poor man's car - accounted for up to a quarter of the traffic; 1955 was the highpoint with 47,500 motorcycles (26% of the traffic); in 1968, only 2,071 motorcycles were to be counted. The number of motorcycles on the Grossglockner High Alpine Road then rose in 2003 to over 76,000.

Increasing numbers of visitors made the stage-by-stage modernization of the road necessary after 1953 to a width of 7.5m, to 15m in place of 10m bend radius, and 4,000 parking places instead of 800 and an annual capacity of up to 350,000 vehicles.

[edit] Snow clearing

Snow cleared at the side of the road, in June
Snow cleared at the side of the road, in June

In the years 1936 and 1937, 350 men shovelled 250,000 m³ of snow in an average of seventy days to keep at least one lane on the road free. Since 1953 the five Wallack rotary plows, and twelve GROHAG workers, have been clearing 600,000m³ to 800,000m³ of snow from the road and parking areas in around fourteen days every year in April.

In 1937 the road could only be traversed for 132 days, but in 1963 the road could be traversed for 276 days. The Grossglockner High Alpine Road is normally open from the beginning of May to the end of October.

[edit] Information

[edit] Opening Times 2007

In 2007, the road opened on 28th April
until 15 June: 6am - 8pm
16 June until 15 September: 5am - 9.30pm
16 September until end of October: 6am - 7.30pm
Last admission: 45 min. before night closure

[edit] References

About the Grossglockner Trophy

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 47°05′00″N 12°50′34″E / 47.083333, 12.84278