Flachau is one of the most famous ski areas in the Salzburger Sportwelt and is located in the heart of Ski amadé. The lively village of Flachau and its districts meander around the spectacular local mountain Grießenkareck (1991 m), which forms the Flachau ski area, also known as the Snow Space Salzburg. Thanks to G-Link, Wagrain and Alpendorf are also easily accessible by cable car. This ski season Snow Space Salzburg is expanding its reach substantially with a new connection to the ski areas Shuttleberg and Ski Paradise Zauchensee.

In Flachau the ski lifts lead directly to the Grießenkareck. There you will find one of the highlights in the Flachau ski area. The Hermann Maier World Cup route is 3 km long and offers a real challenge for experienced ski pilots. The other slopes on the mountain are smoother and forgiving. These are mostly easy to moderate and lead up to 5 km in length over wide alpine pastures and wonderful forest aisles down into the valley.

Flachau proudly boasts it is the home of Hermann Maier, the Herminator, Austria’s World and Olympic Downhill champion, so one has to assume the skiing has much to recommend it. And it does, if you are an intermediate skier, that is. With a large array of wide, cruisey, beautifully groomed runs, most skiers will have a great wonderful time. Expert skiers, too, will find that the area is not without its challenges, not least the 6km run from the Griessenkar ridge.

Thanks to the wealth of easy blue runs, beginners will find themselves with plenty choice when the time comes for them to graduate from the nursery slopes and skiers of all standards will be able to enjoy exploring the area together.

Snow Space Salzburg is known for its immaculately groomed slopes. The hand full of black run pistes are deliberately left untouched so that you can enjoy the powder snow conditions. In addition, the lift system in the ski area is modern, fast and high-capacity. Although, the ski area can be quite busy, especially near Flachau, there is little to no waiting at the lifts. It is quieter towards Wagrain and Alpendorf.

Most likely, the crowds are a thing of the past; in the 2020-2021 ski season, the slopes of Flachau-Wagrain will be connected with those of the Shuttleberg (Flachauwinkl / Kleinarl). The new Panorma Link cable car connects both ski areas. Snow Space Salzburg is taking the next step in connecting the three different valleys with a lift connection to Zauchensee.

The Panorama Link cable car will enable the crossing from the Grießenkar above Wagrain to the Shuttleberg above Flachauwinkl / Kleinarl . The construction of the new cable car has been delayed, partly due to the coronavirus, but the opening in December 2020 seems possible. A 10-seater gondola lift will take passengers from one ski area to another in just 9 minutes. It will be a horizontal connecting lift over 3 kilometers in length. The slopes of Alpendorf, Wagrain, Flachau, Flachauwinkl and Kleinarl will be fully connected with each other from the coming season. Soon more will surely be known about a connection to Zauchensee.

A new connection to Zauchensee will complete the interconnection and create a ski area with more than 200 kilometers of slopes. This lift crosses the Tauern motorway so that you can get on and off the motorway on both sides. At the moment you still have to use the ski bus to get from the Sunshine Shuttle to Highliner 1. If all permits are issued quickly, this new runway should also be open in December 2020.

With the merger of the three ski areas Snow Space Salzburg, the Shuttleberg and Ski Paradise Zauchensee, the newly formed ski area offers you an exciting framework for an unforgettable winter holiday.

Flachawinkl

So what do the other two ski area bring into the mix?

Shuttleberg Flachauwinkl – Kleinarl is an attractive family ski area. In addition to its family-friendly character, this ski area also offers beautiful off-piste possibilities.

Zauchensee is characterised by beautiful sloping descents with limited challenge for the seasoned winter sports enthusiast. Zauchensee does provide many beautiful off-piste possibilities, the real freeriders can indulge themselves here.

Ski map Snow Space Salzburg

Link suggestions

For more information on Snow Space Salzburg, please visit the official website of Snow Space Salzburg

Set high above the Tarentaise valley La Rosière is a traditional style ski resort which enjoys stunning views across the Isere Valley and across to Les Arcs. It has the benefit of being sited on the sunnier yet still snow-sure southern side of the domain. It’s south facing slopes give it the reputation as one of the sunniest resorts in France, while it’s altitude and snow making facilities ensures guaranteed snow cover December till April. La Rosiere is renowed for being a warmly welcoming, family-friendly, good-value alternative to the bigger, brasher, more crowded and more expensive nearby mega-resorts of the Tarentaise. La Rosière is one of the friendliest of the Tarentaise resorts and ideal for families and improving intermediates.

La Rosière ski resort forms the French half of the cross-border Espace San Bernardo ski area, linked with the Italian ski resort of La Thuile. Espace San Bernardo has 160km of pistes at an altitude range of 1850 to 2650m and straddles the Petit Saint-Bernard pass, which means that it benefits from early, high-altitude snowfall.

The ski resort of La Rosière is perched in a high-altitude position on the sunny south-facing northern flank of the upper Tarentaise Valley, looking directly across to the ski resorts of Les Arcs and Villaroger that lie in the Paradiski area on the opposite far side of this famous snowsports-rich valley. The majority of the ski area lies above the tree line, on the wide and open slopes directly above the village, stretching up to the north along the lengthy spine of a ridge that runs down from the border with Italy.

Both La Rosière 1850 and Les Eucherts have safe and easily-accessible ESF ski-school areas, from which novices can progress rapidly. In the secteur Rosière there are accessible novice areas and lots of great blue-graded cruising opportunities. The home area boasts surprisingly long and gentle runs on the French side. The ski slopes are reassuringly-wide, most face south and are served by smooth, modern chair-lifts. So ideal for younger children and for beginners. The nursery slopes in the centre of each part of the resort are great for young children as they are sheltered from the main ski area. Once the basics have been mastered the slopes here are wide and many of the greens and blues offer gentle runs to get you quickly to the next level. Three free lifts means that you don’t need to buy a lift pass until you are ready to head up the mountain. La Rosiere has been building its reputation as a great family resort over the past few years and the easy wide runs and leisure facilities in resort are testament to this.

La Rosière’s skiing is predominantly intermediate terrain. Challenging reds include the Fontaine Freide which drops right down to 1176m between trees to the Ecudets chair. The Red Marmottes run down to the Marcassin chair is also very enjoyable with easy and more challenging parts. Above Les Eucherts village things are more varied, with blue and red runs, most of which drop towards the Combe des Moulins below the 2383m Col de la Traversette.

More experienced intermediates, though, will head off to Italy in search of fresh challenges, new surroundings and often better snow quality. The skiing on the La Thuile side is worth the expedition, as the slopes go lower on to tree lined runs rather than being almost entirely above the treeline as they are at La Rosière. Runs are up to a remarkable 11km long and back. On the La Rosière side there are numerous wide fast cruising runs on the open sunny slopes.

Only beginners should really hesitate to take the trip over to Italy, though to reach La Thuile you will be taking at least a few red runs. For those who like to go all the way from the top to the bottom, try tipping over into Italy at Mont Belvedere & taking the Ponteilles red run (no 18 on the map) then the Nouva (6) right into town. A vertical descent of around 1.2km, often quiet and very beautiful, you start exposed on the mountainside but soon plunge into the trees. Don’t linger in La Thuile too long, you need to make the last lift at 15:00 (do check the time when you get there!) to avoid staying the night or a long taxi ride back.

Experts do have a choice of more than 15 black runs across the circuit and the mountain guides office or ski school will be happy to show you numerous challenging off-piste routes too – so essentially there is in fact plenty here if you’re prepared to look for it. The toughest run is arguably the Franco Berthod piste, more than three kilometers (two miles) long. The resort’s steepest run plunges at an impressive 72%. There’s also plenty of off-piste, to which cross-border heli-skiing brings near-instant access.

Apres ski and nightlife are generally quite low key, with just a handful of bars in the central part of the village plus a couple out in the suburb of Les Eucherts, but there are a couple of fairly lively venues amongst these, La Roz and Petit Danois in particular, plus there’s a popular late-night disco-bar – Moobar – open until 4am.

Getting there

By Air: The nearest airport to La Rosière is Chambery Airport (CMF), which is approximately 90 kilometers away. Other nearby airports include Geneva Airport (GVA), Lyon Saint-Exupéry Airport (LYS), and Turin Airport (TRN).

From any of these airports, you can take a combination of train and bus or a shuttle service to reach La Rosière. The journey time and cost will vary depending on the airport and the mode of transport.

By Train: The nearest railway station to La Rosière is Bourg Saint Maurice, which is approximately 20 kilometers away. From there, you can take a bus or a shuttle service to La Rosière.

Bourg Saint Maurice is on the main train line between Paris and the French Alps, and there are regular trains from Paris and other major French cities. Eurostar’s ski train runs directly to Bourg Saint Maurice from London St Pancras leaving every Friday night and Saturday morning. The Friday evening departure travels through the night arriving in Bourg Saint Maurice at around 10am the next morning. From Bourg there are buses directly to the resort. You can check train schedules and book tickets on the website of the French National Railways, SNCF (https://en.oui.sncf/en/).

By Bus/Shuttle: There are also direct shuttle services from some airports to La Rosière. These services are operated by companies such as Altibus, Ben’s Bus, and Skiidy Gonzales. The journey time and cost will vary depending on the airport and the shuttle service.

Link suggestions

For more information on La Rosière please visit the official website of La Rosière

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