Crap Sogn Gion

Crap Sogn Gion
Means of transport and Restaurant/Hotel (built in 1967) on Crap Sogn Gion
Highest point
Elevation2,263 m (7,425 ft)[1]
Prominence<30m
Coordinates46°50′10″N 9°12′55″E / 46.83611°N 9.21528°E / 46.83611; 9.21528
Geography
Crap Sogn Gion is located in Switzerland
Crap Sogn Gion
Crap Sogn Gion
Location in Switzerland
LocationGraubünden, Switzerland
Parent rangeGlarus Alps
Climbing
Easiest routeAerial tramway

Crap Sogn Gion (meaning Saint John's stone in Romansh) is a mountain (2,263 metres (7,425 ft)) and cable car station (2,216 metres (7,270 ft)) located near Flims in the Swiss canton of Graubünden. Regarding the definition used in the Alps by the Swiss Alpine Club it cannot be called a mountain (nor even a peak with a strict definition) but only a location at the end of a ridge descending from the Vorab in the Glarus Alps.

As the location has no distinctive peak nor sudden drops in its gentle sides, it is absolutely not an impressive mountain but even more a very appropriate place to run a skiing resort. Comparing to other skiing resorts in Switzerland the missing neighbouring mountains to the south - which is the location of the giant prehistoric Flims Rockslide – make it even more exposed to the sun even at the sun's lowest orbit in deep winter.

A very small hut of the Ski Club Flims was the first building on Crap Sogn Gion, still standing there although hardly noticed. From 1962 the area was accessible by platter lift, followed 1967 by the then biggest aerial cable car with cabins to hold as much as 125 passengers, which is still in use today along with several modernised chairlifts.

A more recent aerial cable car was built to Crap Masegn, from where another gondola lift leads to the glacier at Vorab, which made the ski resort a safe one in regards of snow even in winters of poor snowfall.

For a walk in summer you may find Crap Sogn Gion on Swisstopo Map 1194, Flims, in the 1:25'000 scale. National Maps of Switzerland are a set of official map series designed, edited and distributed by Swisstopo, the Swiss Federal Office of Topography.

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References

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  1. ^ Retrieved from the Swisstopo topographic maps.
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