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EUR 134 - 198 Hotel Alphof
Located in the picturesque village of Alpbach, Hotel Alphof features a large spa area with an indoor pool. Each room has a furnished balcony, a seatin… MoreEUR 80 - 236 Hotel Alpbacherhof
Refurbished in 2010, the Alpbacherhof offers a quiet and sunny location in the heart of the beautiful Alpbach Valley, as well as impressive panoramic … MoreEUR 44 - 145 Haus Sonnwend
Located in the centre of Alpbach, Haus Sonnwend offers new and modern rooms and apartments with balcony and mountain views. Wi-Fi access and parking a… MoreEUR 78 - 129 Hotel Zur Post
Located in the centre of Alpbach, Hotel Zur Post features a Tyrolean restaurant, a spa area, and an outdoor pool (in summer). Free private parking is … MoreEUR 71 - 228 Romantikhotel Böglerhof
Located in the centre of Alpbach, Romantikhotel Böglerhof offers traditionally wooden furnished rooms. It provides free Wi-Fi, a fully equipped welln… MoreEUR 88 - 143 Wiedersbergerhorn
Nestled in the heart of Alpbach skiing area, declared Europe’s best small skiing area in 2004, this traditional 4-star hotel is the ideal starting p… MoreEUR 47 - 150 Wörglerhof
A 10-minute walk from the cable car, this traditional farmhouse offers panoramic mountain views and an outdoor sauna hut. Each apartment has a balcony… MoreEUR 36 - 64 Haus Rosenheim
Haus Rosenheim enjoys a quiet and sunny location close to the centre of Alpbach. The traditionally furnished, wooden rooms feature balconies with deck… MoreEUR 39 - 143 Gasthaus Jakober
The traditional guesthouse and restaurant Gasthaus Jakober enjoys a quiet location in the centre of Alpbach, directly opposite the church. It offers a… MoreEUR 50 - 130 Appartements Stoffen & Zuhaus
A 10-minute walk from the centre of Alpbach, the fully equipped Appartements Stoffen & Zuhaus occupy a charming Tyrolean-style building featuring a sp… MoreEUR 49 - 84 Alpbachblick
The Hotel Alpbachblick, located near the town centre of Alpbach, is the perfect starting point for either hiking tours in summer or skiing and snowboa… MoreEUR 38 - 120 Bergwald
Offering panoramic views over the valley, the Bergwald enjoys a very quiet location above the village of Alpbach, right at the edge of the forest. Fre… MoreEUR 138 - 400 Das Hotel Galtenberg
The family-run Hotel Galtenberg is located in Inneralpbach, only 100 metres from the next ski lift. It offers a large spa area, free child care and fr… MoreEUR 38 - 165 Gästehaus Schneider
This newly built guesthouse is located directly at the village square of Alpbach, offering views of the village and the surrounding mountains. Wi-Fi a… MoreEUR 40 - 170 Gästehaus Larch
Only a 10-minute walk away from the centre of Alpbach, Gästehaus Larch offers rooms and apartments with free Wi-Fi and balconies with panoramic mount… MoreEUR 80 - 180 Aktivwellnessappartements Margit & Moaeben
These spacious, Alpine-style apartments with mountain views for up to 10 people are located in the centre of Alpbach. Each has a south-facing balcony … More | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alpbach is a village in Western Austria in the state of Tyrol (state)|Tyrol. Its geographical location is , at 975 m above sea level. Alpbach had a population of 2,549 in 2003.
The earliest written record of the name Alpbach comes from 1150, although human settlement is known to have begun there before and around the year 1000, and a bronze axe found at Steinburger Joch (the pass leading to the Ziller Valley) in 1860 suggests that the route was already in use in the Hallstatt period.
Christianity was first brought to the region in the 7th and 8th centuries by Irish and Scottish monks, and the patron saint of the parish church is in fact St. Oswald, a former King of Northumbria.
At the beginning of the 15th century, deposits of copper and silver were discovered on Gratlspitz and Schatzberg and in the Luegergraben. At the time, the Fugger merchant family from Augsburg had control over mining operations in Schwaz and Kitzbühel, and they extended their activities to include the Alpbach valley. The Böglerhof housed the Fugger offices and was also seat of the Mining Court. In those days, Alpbach already had two inns, the Böglerhof and the Jakober Inn, where the men of the village would go to drink spirits, such as schnapps. By the middle of the 19th century, productivity at the mines had declined to the stage where they had to be closed.
Vorder-Unterburg Farm, which was built in 1636-1638 by local carpenters and was lived in until 1952, stands at the edge of the forest above the little church in Inneralpbach. Today the building is a mountain farming museum, and the exhibits include the old parlour, chapel, a combined kitchen and smokehouse, and over 800 artifacts of daily life and work.
The road leading up the valley to Alpbach was not built until 1926, and the isolated location of the village led to the development of a distinctive style of architecture and furnishings, and also enabled the local folk traditions to be preserved for much longer than in most of the valleys of the Tyrol.
Tourists first began arriving in Alpbach at the beginning of the 20th century, and by 1938 the village had accommodation for 110 visitors. In the mean time, the figure had increased to 2500 and Alpbach now attracts some 22000 visitors in summer and about the same in winter for an annual total of 300000 nights. Tourism is the main source of income for today's 2300 local residents, but there are still 105 working farms in Alpbach, the same number as a hundred years ago.
Since 1945, Alpbach has been the venue for the Alpbach European Forum, an annual two-week conference of leading figures from the worlds of science, business, the arts and politics. The Forum and the participation of so many people who have shaped the thinking of their times has given Alpbach the nickname, "The Village Of Thinkers."
The first conference hall in Alpbach was built in the mid-1950s and named after the Austrian poetess Paula von Preradovic, who wrote the words for the Austrian national anthem. The plenary hall was named after the physicist and Nobel Prize-winner Erwin Schrödinger. He lies buried in the Alpbach cemetery.
In 1999, the new Alpbach Congress Centre was opened, together with the 55th European Forum. With its combination of exciting architecture and a minimum environmental footprint, the main architectural feature is a spiral shaped gallery with floor-to-ceiling glazing for a unique view of the spectacular mountain backdrop.
At the suggestion of Alfons Moser, Mayor of Alpbach from 1945 to 1979, the Council issued a local planning law in 1953, which made the traditional style of architecture in Alpbach mandatory for all new buildings.
Over the years, Alpbach has collected many awards and distinctions. In 1975, the Austrian Public Health Institute certified that Alpbach had the cleanest and purest air in all of Austria. It was voted "Austria's Most Beautiful Village" in 1983 by a television contest organised by Austrian Television. In June 1985, the Council of Europe in Strasbourg conferred upon Alpbach the right to fly the European flag in recognition of the community's services to European Unity. In 1993, Alpbach won "The Most Beautiful Floral Village in Europe" award.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Alpbach". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.