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Wednesday, 26 February 2014
Solvay Hut Switzerland
The Solvay Hut positioned right
on the slender north-eastern ridge of Matterhorn, in the Canton of Valais,
Switzerland. Well; at over 13,000 foot above the ground level, it is the
highest mountain hut in the region. The hut was named after his founder Ernest
Solvay (1838-1922), a Belgian chemist and industrialist who donated the famous
hut on the Hörnli Ridge on the Matterhorn as a gratitude for the memorable
hours he spent in the mountains, and from the comprehension that sporadically
sudden thunder storms lead to tragedies. Before his alpine career initiated
after retirement, Ernest Solvay was an inventor and businessman who conceived
the industrial process for sodium carbonate production, from which a world-wide
undertaking resulted.
The emergency refuge is owned by
the Swiss Alpine club, and is envisioned to deliver food and shelter to
mountaineers, climbers, and hikers. At about 1,500 foot below the summit and
two-thirds up the mountain, it offers respite to several Matterhorn climbers
and rewards them with the magnificent view of all the Monte Rosa summits. It is
only meant to be used during emergencies, but climbers do break there to rest
and takes photographs. The Solvay hut, which can accommodate around 10 people,
is not a recent construction. It was in fact built way back in 1915 and took
only five days to complete.
All the building materials were brought up to
Hornli Hut, just 2,500 foot below, with the assistance of animals. A little
temp cable car was used to haul up the materials from there, and it was
reconstructed in 1966 and an emergency radio telephone was fitted in 1976. The
hut offers 10 beds and is equipped with a radiotelephone.
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