AUSTRIA  |  Zell am See & Kaprun, Austria Travel Guide
Saturday, November 30, 2024
images
1 Of 5

Zell am See

Lakeside promenade in Old Town Zell am See, Austria (cc)
 

Zell am See

First occupied by early Roman settlers, Zell am See was officially founded in 743 and christened Cella in Bisontio. The town grew up as a stop along the trade route from Italy to Germany – the route now followed by the Grossglockner Hochalpenstrasse through the Höhe Tauern National Park. Zell’s population exported salt to the south and then returning with Italian wine from the north via the perilous transalpine route. In 1875, the railway came to town – gloriously entering along the banks of the lake, and toting tourism into the region.

The town of Zell am See wedges between the western shore of the Zellersee, or Lake Zell, and the eastern foothills of Schmittenhöhe. The busy B311 now burrows through a tunnel west of town, so Zell’s main north-south road, the Brücker Bundesstrasse, is a bit less hectic. Schillerstrasse and Schmittenstrasse run from the center of town up the Schmitten Valley to the west. Action here centers on the Stadtplatz and the pleasant pedestrian town center, a web of alleys clustered between the main road and the train tracks along the lakeshore. The train station anchors the southern edge of town; the Stadtpark and sport center anchor the northern edge.

Three main cableways access the mountains west of Zell; each departs from a base along Schmittenstrasse. Nearest the town center, the Zellerbergbahn gondola tugs up in two stages to the Hirschkögel. The Schmittenhöhebahn and the Sonnenalmbahn depart from neighboring bases two km farther up the valley; the Schmittenhöhebahn climbing to the 1,968-m Schmittenhöhe peak, the Sonnenalmbahn climbing up the opposite hillside to the 1,850-m Sonnenkögel peak.

Last updated November 16, 2010
Posted in   Austria  |  Zell am See & Kaprun
No votes yet
Explore the Destination
Amenities and Resources
Trending Themes:

Guides to Popular Ski Resorts

  • Ischgl is a small mountain village turned hip ski resort, with massive appeal among the party-hearty young crowds. It is... Read More

  • Andorra la Vella is its own little world, and not just because it’s a 290-square-mile independent principality (a fifth the... Read More

  • Bariloche (officially San Carlos de Bariloche) is the place to be seen. It is to Argentina what Aspen is to the... Read More

  • Aspen is America's most famous ski resort. And that's an understatement. For, as a ski complex, Aspen is unsurpassed. Its... Read More

  • Zermatt is a small but glamorous mountain resort town, with a population of approximately 5,700. It is one of Switzerland's... Read More

  • St. Moritz is a glitzy, alpine resort town in the celebrated Engadin Valley of Switzerland, with huge notoriety as the... Read More

  • Lake Tahoe is the premier lake resort of America, and the largest alpine lake in all of North America. It is an absolutely... Read More

  • St. Anton, Sankt Anton am Arlberg in German, is Austria's premier ski-bum resort! It's actually a small village cum... Read More

  • Kitzbühel, a small, Tyrolian resort town in the Kitzbüheler Alps, comes with international renown and huge snob appeal, and... Read More

 

Copyright © 2010-2013 Indian Chief Travel Guides. Images tagged as (cc) are licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA license.