Saastal with Saas-Fee and Saas-Grund

The Saastal or the Saas Valley is an alpine valley in the district of Visp, in the eastern part of the Canton of Valais, Switzerland. It is the valley of the river Saaser Vispa. It is separated from the Mattertal to the west by the Mischabel massif. Villages in the valley are, upstream, Eisten, Saas-Balen, Saas-Grund, Saas-Fee and Saas-Almagell. Until 1893, the municipalities of Almagell, Balen, Fee and Grund were a single parish, with the only church in Grund. Mattmarksee is a reservoir built in the 1960s.

The region hosts an extensive winter sports region, comprising the separate ski areas of Saas-Fee, Saas-Grund and Saas-Almagell. As well as individual ski passes a combined pass is available; each of these areas is connected to the other parts of the region by postal bus, rather than dedicated skilifts.

Geography

edit

The Saastal (Saas Valley) is an alpine valley in the district of Visp, in the eastern part of the Canton of Valais, Switzerland. It forms the catchment of the Saaser Vispa, which flows northwards to join the Rhรดne at Visp. The valley is flanked to the west by the Mischabel massif, whose highest summit, the Dom (4,545ย m), is the tallest peak entirely within Swiss territory. Villages in the Saastal, from lowermost to uppermost, are Eisten, Saas-Balen, Saas-Grund, Saas-Fee and Saas-Almagell.[1]

History

edit

Until 1893, the four modern municipalities of Almagell, Balen, Fee and Grund formed a single ecclesiastical parish, with the sole church located in Saas-Grund. Administrative separation into the current four communes only took place when each built its own local church and civil administration.[1]

Infrastructure

edit

In the early 1960s, the Mattmarksee reservoir was constructed high in the valley to serve hydroelectric schemes and regulate seasonal runoff. The dam, completed in 1965, impounds meltwater from the Fee Glacier and supplements winter sports infrastructure by ensuring reliable water supply for snowmaking.[1]

On 30 August 1965 an approximately 2 million-cubic metre ice avalanche broke from the Allalin Glacier and engulfed the Mattmark dam construction site at the head of the Saastal, killing 88 workers. The accident, the worst alpine construction disaster in Swiss history, delayed completion of the hydro-electric project and led to tighter national safety standards for working beneath hanging glaciers.[2]

Tourism and economy

edit

Since the mid-20th century, the Saastal has developed into a major winter sports destination. Three separate ski areasโ€”Saas-Fee, Saas-Grund and Saas-Almagellโ€”offer over 150ย km of pistes, all linked by postal bus rather than inter-resort lifts. A single combined ski pass provides access to all three, while summer tourism focuses on glacier excursions, high-alpine hiking and mountaineering.[1]

The Saastal's landscape is dominated by almost twenty glaciers, but they are shrinking rapidly. Glacier Monitoring Switzerland (GLAMOS) reported that the country lost about 10ย % of its total ice volume during the hot summers of 2022 and 2023 alone, the steepest two-year decline on record. Southern Valais glaciers, including the Fee and Allalin ice bodies above Saas-Fee, recorded some of the greatest thickness losses, and several small cirque glaciers vanished entirely.[3]

Maps

edit
Swisstopo map of the Saastal in the canton of Valais. Its confluence with the Mattertal to its west is visible in the north, as well as the Rhรดne valley. The 4000m peaks of the Weissmies, Lagginhorn, Rimpfischhorn, Allainhorn, Taschhorn, Dom, Lenzspitze and Hobarghorn are visible surrounding the valley.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d Waeber, Aurel (2012). "Mรถglichkeiten und Grenzen der Bewertungspraxis in Gemeindearchiven โ€“ Eine Fallstudie aus dem Saastal (VS)" [Possibilities and limits of appraisal practices in municipal archives: a case study from the Saas Valley (VS)]. Informationswissenschaft: Theorie, Methode und Praxis (in German). 2 (1): 345โ€“362. doi:10.18755/iw.2012.21.
  2. ^ Fenazzi, Sonia (28 August 2015). "The Mattmark disaster: a dramatic page in Swiss history". SWI swissinfo.ch. Retrieved 29 April 2025.
  3. ^ Mantovani, Cecile; Balibouse, Denis (28 September 2023). "Swiss glaciers lose 10% of volume in worst two years on record". Reuters. Retrieved 29 April 2025.

46ยฐ07โ€ฒN 7ยฐ56โ€ฒE๏ปฟ / ๏ปฟ46.117ยฐN 7.933ยฐE๏ปฟ / 46.117; 7.933

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Fluchthorn (Pennine Alps)

The Fluchthorn is a mountain of the Swiss Pennine Alps, located south of Saas-Almagell in the canton of Valais. It lies east of the Strahlhorn. Retrieved

Metro Alpin

Metro Alpin lower station (2004) Overview Status In operation Owner Saastal Bergbahnen AG (since 2016), Saas-Fee Bergbahnen AG (โ€ฅโ€“2016, name change) Locale

Saas-Fee

Saas-Fee (German: [zaหsหˆfeห]) is the main village in the Saastal, or the Saas Valley, and is a municipality in the district of Visp in the canton of Valais

Valais

largest side valleys are (from east to west): the Mattertal (including the Saastal), the Val d'Anniviers, the Val d'Hรฉrens, the Val de Bagnes and the Val

Dom (mountain)

equally high Weisshorn and, on the Saastal side, it faces the Weissmies. The Dom is the highest point of the Saastal and the second highest mountain of

Strahlhorn

of Valais. It lies on the range that separates the Mattertal from the Saastal and is located approximately halfway between the Rimpfischhorn and the

Saas

to: Saas im Prรคttigau, in the Canton of Graubรผnden Saas railway station Saastal or the Saas Valley, in the Canton of Valais Villages in the Saas Valley

Gspon

Valais. The village is situated in the eastern part of the canton in the Saastal valley above Staldenried at a height of 1,899 metres (6,230ย ft). It belongs