St. Anton am Arlberg

The Mountain

Despite its fearsome reputation, a quick look at the run stats will reveal a relatively small number of black graded pistes, compared to what you might expect, but that is because much of the steeper terrain has been given the status of ‘off-piste routes’ which are not normally groomed or patrolled (although they are secured for avalanche danger).

It’s also important to be aware that most published statistics, which for 2013-14 extend to 340km of piste served by more than 100 lifts, refer to the entire Arlberg region, which includes St Anton/St Christoph’s linked area; the separate Lech/Zurs area (accessible via a tricky off-piste route with a guide but more realistically for most on the bus); the newly linked Warth/Schrocken (linked by gondola to Lech, not St Anton); and several other smaller areas.

So St Anton’s sector perhaps adds up to a third of that whole Arlberg figure, and when you take out those freeride routes, the kms of piste that are actually groomed and on your doorstep drops from triple to double figures.

Those local slopes are divided into three main areas. Most famous, and arguably the area on which St Anton’s reputation is built, is Valluga, reached by a spectacular modern gondola from the heart of the village. This provides access to bowl skiing and some long reds. The second main area, Kapall-Gampen, can be reached by the Nasserein gondola and offers more intermediate level terrain. Finally the separate Rendl Mountain is easier to reach than it used to be thanks to a newly realigned gondola that departs from a more central part of the village rather than the outskirts as it once did. This is often a good, quieter option when the off-piste terrain is awful and the pistes, particularly in Valluga, are crowded.

Off-Piste

Most of the legend that is St Anton relies on the tiny Valluga 2 cable car which climbs up the slopes to the region’s highest point at 2,811m and opens up some seriously extreme terrain.  So serious in fact that you are not allowed to enter the cable car with skis or board unless accompanied by a qualified guide. Those challenges include the option to ski through the Pazieltal towards Lech, but are only suited to extremely skilled expert skiers who won’t be unnerved by the danger of death if a wrong move is made. However for the rest of us the top of Valluga 1 at Vallokuygagrat (2,650m) provides ample access to lots of steep and deep terrain, it is exposed to some of the most abundant snowfall of any area in Austria and much of the Alps. These are just some of the numerous itinerary routes, open bowls for which perhaps St Anton is most famous, chutes and steep gullies that abound in the sector – although it does have to be powder day for them to be at their most epic of course.

Ski Slopes

Although St Anton is most famous for its off-piste terrain and un-groomed itineraries it’s a little known (and perhaps in the circumstances, slightly ironic) fact that it was here that trails were first groomed to make skiing easier – this was before automated machinery, just a few men with a hand-pulled roller flattening the snow surface back in 1949.

Back in St Anton, some of the gentler terrain is found right next to the village where there’s an excellent children’s ski school area incorporating protected nursery slopes for young learners. More extensive gentle terrain with mostly blue graded runs are located in the Gampen area above.

Intermediates are spoilt for choice, but should certainly take a look at the separate Rendl sector, reached by new gondola from the village centre and home to almost entirely red rated pistes with a maximum steepness of 40 per cent.

There are still tough groomed runs for advanced skiers as well as all the freeride terrain. Mattun and Schindlergrat are infamous bump runs for example.

The Arlberg Pass includes the neighbouring ski slopes of Lech Zurs (reached by bus from St Anton) which has a tamer reputation than St Anton. The pass has also been extended further for winter 2013-14 with a new gondola connection from Lech to a third sector, Warth Schrocken, offering another 64km of piste all on the one pass, now covering a giant 340km of groomed runs, one of the world’s five biggest ski regions.

Park/Pipe

St Anton’s main terrain park is located on the resort’s Rendl mountain which has had something of a renaissance in recent seasons with a new lift, its base station closer to the resort centre and linked to the rest of the ski area, making it far more accessible and more of a core part of the St Anton scene.

The Stanton Park is home to a plethora of kickers, ramps, pipes, boxes and rails and keeps getting larger each season. It now has three main lines, a Pro-line, medium line and jib-line so there’s something for all ability levels. The park has also been designed for easy access and fast laps thanks to its location next to two lifts.

The Park is also located next to Rendl Beach which features a terrace, bars and restaurant with the aim of creating a chilled, party atmosphere; helped by occasional events including snow volleyball tournaments and freestyle contests such as the compete in the O’Neill Kirschbaum Battle (http://www.kirschbaum.cc) each March.

With the Arlberg ticket you can of course access more terrain parks in the region, including one in Lech, a short bus ride away.

Elevation

  • Summit
    9222ft
  • Vertical Drop
    4416ft
  • Base
    4278ft

Terrain

Beginner Runs

0%

Intermediate Runs

41%

Advanced Runs

48%

Expert Runs

11%

Runs

174 MILES

Terrain Parks

1

Longest Run

6 MILES

Skiable Terrain

260 ACRE

Lifts

  • Total Number Of Lifts: 79
  • Gondolas & Trams: 11
  • Eight Person Lifts: 1
  • High Speed Sixes: 10
  • High Speed Quads: 7
  • Quad Chairs: 4
  • Triple Chairs: 1
  • Double Chairs: 14
  • Surface Lifts: 31

Tourist Office

6580 St. Anton

Austria

Phone: +43 5446 22690

info@stantonamarlberg.com

St. Anton am Arlberg Website Tourist office

Ski-lift

Arlberger Bergbahnen AG

Kandaharweg 9

6580 St. Anton am Arlberg

Austria

Phone: +43 5446 2352-0

office@abbag.com

St. Anton am Arlberg Web site

Important Dates

Projected Opening Ski Season: 12/06/2012

Projected Closing Ski Season: 04/21/2013

Projected Days Open: 136

Days Open Last Year: 156

Years Open: 76

Average Snowfall: 276"

St. Anton am Arlberg Reviews

  • by lilalamm 17th January 2013
    • Overall Rating 5
    • Family Friendly 5
    • All Mtn. Terrain 5
    • Terrain Park 4
    • Nightlife 5

    St. Anton ist einfach am besten

    Pros: Arlberg, Piste, Party
    Cons: Nichts

     
  • by mab 24th March 2012
    • Overall Rating 4
    • Family Friendly 3
    • All Mtn. Terrain 5
    • Terrain Park 4
    • Nightlife 5

    St Anton...TERRAIN!!!

    Pros: Terrain, Lifts, Scenery
    Cons: Crowds, Expensive, Buses

     
  • by drewtwo 26th January 2012
    • Overall Rating 5
    • Family Friendly 5
    • All Mtn. Terrain 5
    • Terrain Park 3
    • Nightlife 5

    If Carling did ski holidays, it would be St Anton.

    Pros: Massive ski area, great lift system no waiting, fantastic apre.
    Cons: Waiting for a beer at the Moosvelt or Crazy Kangaroo can take 5 minutes.

     
  • by para26 11th December 2010
    • Overall Rating 5
    • Family Friendly 3
    • All Mtn. Terrain 5
    • Terrain Park 0
    • Nightlife 4

    st anton

    Pros: fantastic skiing,apres ski and brand new lifts
    Cons: some times queues for lifts can terrible

     

See All St. Anton am Arlberg Reviews

Common Misspellings

Stanton, St Anto, Stantonamarlberg, Arlberg, St anton, Saint Anton, St. Anton am Arlberg, Sankt Anton, St.Antonamarlberg, St Anoton

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