Financial Times Europe - 02.11.2019 - 03.11.2019

(Grace) #1
6 ★ FTWeekend 2 November/3 November 2019

House Home


G


emsstock, a ski vantage
point beloved by off-piste
schussers high in the
Alps, towers above the
sleepy Swiss village of
Andermatt. In winter, residents are
woken to the sound of dynamite as the
slopes are cleared of excess snow to pre-
ventavalanches.
There is plenty of old-time charm
here.Andermatt was spared the “sins
of construction” of the 1960s and
1970s — the slabby concrete resorts that
dominate the Alps, and the locals have a
reputation for protecting their idyll
from overdevelopment. In the 1930s,
they opposed a hydropower plant that
would have flooded the valley — and,
according to local legend, chased away
the company that proposed the plan
withpitchforks.
Yet today a new Andermatt is under
construction, one of shiny apartment
blocks, chic restaurants and luxury
hotels.Thetownhastwonewhotels:the
Chedi,whichopenedin2013,andRadis-
son Blu Reussen, which started opera-
tions last winter; a concert hall, golf
course, the SkiArena — a linked ski area
of 180km between Andermatt, Sedrun
and Disentis with new or restored infra-
structure — and eight completed apart-
ment blocks, with a further 34 planned.
Two restaurants will open soon on the
slopes above. Even more hotels, apart-
mentsandprivatechaletsaretocome.
The development is part of the
broader SFr1.8bn (€1.6bn)Andermatt
SwissAlpsdevelopmentproject,funded
by Samih Sawiris, an Egyptian business-
man, and Orascom Development,
which builds and operates resorts in
Egypt, Montenegro, Switzerland and
elsewhere. Orascom is Sawiris’s family
company,whichhechairs.
Andermatt, within reach of Zurich,
Basel and Milan airports, is the biggest
new Alpine development, under way at
a time when the winter sports industry

€1.6bn
Andermatt Swiss Alps
development project investment

€118m
Cost of SkiArena

10
Andermatt’s place in the Savills
Ski Resilience Index

At more than 1,400m above sea level,
snow is more reliable here thanin
St Moritz and Verbier, according to the
Savills Ski Report. Last year, Andermatt
was the biggest mover up theSavills Ski
Resilience Index, which measures qual-
ity and reliability — from 45th to 10th.
On a good winter’s day the town’spopu-
lationof1,500isswelledbyupto14,000
skiers, and over the course of the seven-
month season, around 400,000 people
willskiintheresort.
Sawiris first came here in 2005 as a
consultant to the local government ot
advise onthe resort’s development. His
plans were so ambitious the Swiss gov-
ernment was not confident anyone
wouldtaketheprojecton.Sohedid.
“Andermatt’s central location — right
in the midst of the granite mountains of
the Swiss Alps — and the realisation that
nooneelsecouldredevelopandsavethe
resort—allinspiredme,”hesays.

(Above) The
Andermatt
Reuss
development;
(left) the Après-
Ski train
Valentin Luthiger

Vision in the valley


Switzerland property Andermatt|


is undergoing an ambitious


overhaul to bring it up to date while


preserving its Alpine environment.


ByAleksandra Wisniewska


is under pressure. The number of ski
visits worldwide has remained broadly
static since 2000, according to theLau-
rant Vanat International Report on
Snow and Mountain Tourism, and cli-
mate change has shortened the Alpine
ski season as snow coverage becomes
lessreliable,evenathighaltitude.
Nevertheless, Sawiris is optimistic he
can make the resort a year-round desti-
nation,andhasintroducedflexiblepric-
ing on the ski pass and an environmen-
tally conscious approach to resort man-
agement — all of which are important
forattractingyoungadults,hesays.

Ski Special


NOVEMBER 2 2019 Section:Weekend Time: 10/201930/ - 17:46 User: elizabeth.robinson Page Name:RES6 , Part,Page,Edition:RES , 6, 1

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