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The cable cars begin in Stechelberg leaving to Gimmelwald and then onto Mürren. Since its renovation in 2024, it holds the record of the steepest cable car in the world, with a gradient of 159.4%. [4] From Mürren another cable car is taken to Birg, which is the final change before the Schilthorn. This cable airway is the longest and was the ...
1949 New vehicles and rope are installed on the Lauterbrunnen to Grütschalp section. 1965 The new station at Mürren is opened. 1994 The freight loading operations at Grütschalp are rebuilt. 2006 Last operation of the funicular from Lauterbrunnen to Grütschalp was on 23 April and the first operation of the replacement cable car was on 16 ...
However, as Lauterbrunnen's fame grew and with the completion of a road from Interlaken in 1834 and the 1890 Bernese Oberland Railway, more hotels were needed for tourists. As new hotels were built, other tourist infrastructure was also built in the village. Cable cars were built to Mürren in 1891 and to Wengen in 1893.
A series of four cable cars, known as the Luftseilbahn Stechelberg-Mürren-Schilthorn (LSMS), provides transportation from Mürren downhill to Gimmelwald and Stechelberg, and uphill to the summit of the Schilthorn and the revolving restaurant Piz Gloria. The Mürren station for these cable cars is approximately 800 metres (2,600 ft) south-west ...
Capitola, Shadowbrook [11] (1958–), single car incline used to access a unique riverfront restaurant that's been in business since 1947. Fairfax (1913–1929) [ 12 ] [ 13 ] Feather River Canyon , Bucks Creek Powerhouse, single car incline used for inspection of water system, later abandoned.
At the same time the original Interlaken station became Interlaken West. [7] Meanwhile, in 1888, the metre gauge Brünig railway had opened between Brienz, on Lake Brienz, and Alpnachstad, on Lake Lucerne, thus providing a through steamer and rail connection from Interlaken to Lucerne. By 1916 the Brünig railway had reached Interlaken Ost from ...
214.8 m (704.7 ft) Cat Hai – Phu Long cable car, Vietnam. As mass transit: The Roosevelt Island Tramway in New York City was the first aerial tramway in North America used by commuters as a mode of mass transit (See Transportation in New York City). Passengers pay with the same farecard used for the New York City Subway.
The Aerovia cable car system in Guayaquil, Ecuador La télécabine d'Arrondaz in Valfréjus, France Interior of a gondola at Killington Ski Resort, Vermont Classic 1960s 4-seater monocable gondola lift in Emmetten, Switzerland, built by GMD Müller Interior of a gondola lift station, in this case, an intermediate station where gondolas detach ...