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Zermatt

Zermatt  is a municipality in the district of Visp in the German-speaking section of the canton of Valais in Switzerland. It has a year-round population of about 5,800 and is classified as a town by the Swiss Federal Statistical Office (FSO). It lies at the upper end of Mattertal at an elevation of 1,620 m, at the foot of Switzerland's highest peaks. It lies about 10 km from the over 3,292 m high Theodul Pass bordering Italy. Zermatt is the southernmost commune of the German Sprachraum.

Zermatt is famed as a mountaineering and ski resort of the Swiss Alps. Until the mid-19th century, it was predominantly an agricultural community; the first and tragic ascent of the Matterhorn in 1865 was followed by a rush on the mountains surrounding the village, leading to the construction of many tourist facilities. Much of the local economy is based on tourism, with about half of the jobs in town in hotels or restaurants and just under half of all apartments are vacation apartments. Just over one-third of the permanent population was born in the town, while another third moved to Zermatt from outside Switzerland.

 

View over Zermatt from my room in Alpine Hotel Perren

St. Mauritius Pfarrkirche catholic church. Construction of the church began in 1913, but WW1 disrupted it's progress. The church was finally completed in the 1930's. It replaced a 16th-century structure.

Grand Hotel Zermatterhoffer, built in 1879

The Gronengrat train heading up the mountain. Hotel Zermama is in the background

Some older buildings still remain

 

 

The railway station

The train to Tasch

The ubiquitous "Jumbolino" electric taxi. You have more chance of getting run over by an electric taxi or
a speeding mountain bike in Zermatt than you do falling off the mountain!

Celebrating National Day - 1st August
(Photo: Maura Brown)