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It is St Moritz's only ‘ski-in’ and ‘ski-out’ hotel. [1] Conde Nast Traveller described it as "completely isolated" in the mountains. [14] The Trutz Chalet restaurant is at 7,200 feet above sea level, and can be reached by a ski lift. [15] The resort has a private ski lift, with Suvretta as the sole "ski-in/ski-out hotel" in St. Moritz.
St. Moritz (/ ˌ s æ n m ə ˈ r ɪ t s / SAN mə-RITS, US also / ˌ s eɪ n t-/ SAYNT-, UK also / s ən t ˈ m ɒr ɪ t s / sənt MORR-its; German, in full: Sankt Moritz [zaŋkt moˈrɪts, ˈmoːrɪts] locally; Romansh: San Murezzan [sam muˈʁetsən] ⓘ; Italian: San Maurizio; [a] French: Saint-Moritz) is a high Alpine resort town in the Engadine in Switzerland, at an elevation of about ...
While St. Moritz is fairly small, a guided village walking tour arranged by the St. Moritz tourism office is an excellent way to get your bearings, gather recommendations, and learn more about the ...
Champfèr (Romansh pronunciation: [tɕɐmpˈfɛːr] ⓘ) is a village in the Upper Engadin valley of the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland. The Western part of the village belongs to the municipality of Silvaplana and part of the village belongs to the municipality of St. Moritz. The two halves of the town are separated by the creek Ova da ...
Badrutt's Palace Hotel colloquially Badrutt's Palace (officially Badrutt's Palace Hotel AG [1]) is a luxury hotel and resort in St. Moritz, Switzerland.Opened in 1896, the hotel has 112 rooms and 43 suites as well as 8 restaurants, 2 bars, a shopping center and spa area.
Anton Sebastian Bon (1854-1915) was a Swiss hotelier who built the Suvretta House in St Moritz from 1911 to 1912, [1] together with the British Member of Parliament (MP), Charles Sydney Goldman. [2] He was born in Bad Ragaz, St. Gallen, Switzerland
Piz Nair (3,056 metres (10,026 ft)) is a mountain of the Albula Alps in Switzerland, overlooking St. Moritz in the canton of Graubünden.The peak is easily accessible from the village with a funicular and a cable car; the upper station unloads 30 metres (100 ft) below the summit.
The large former farm house which is now known as the Talvo, (Romansh language in the idiom Putèr: barn), was built in 1658. From 1880 until 1887 it was the local schoolhouse for the seven pupils of the village and their teacher, Mr Luzi Battaglia. Afterwards the house was in the possession of the Walther family until 1949.