The Solvay Hut is located on the north-eastern ridge
of the Matterhorn, near Zermatt in the canton of Valais in Switzerland.
At 4,003 meters (13,133 feet) it is the highest mountain hut owned by
the Swiss Alpine Club, the largest mountaineering club in Switzerland.
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Mountain huts are intended to provide food and shelter to mountaineers,
climbers and hikers.
But Solvay Hut can be used only in case of emergency. About two thirds
up the mountain, 743 m above the Hörnli Hut and 475 m below the summit,
many Matterhorn climbers have rested on the small ledge outside the hut
admiring the spectacular view of all the Monte Rosa summits.
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The hut was built in August 1915. All the building material was brought
up to the Hörnli Hut at 3260 meter by help of animals.
From there a small temporary cable car was used to transport the
material up to the building site at 4000 meter. The hut was erected
within only five days.
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In 1966 the hut was rebuilt and in 1976 an emergency telephone was
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The hut is named after Belgium Ernest Solvay (1838-1922) who donated the
well-known hut on the Hörnli Ridge on the Matterhorn as a gratitude for
the unforgettable hours he spent in the mountains, and from the
realization that occasionally sudden thunder storms lead to tragedies.
Before his alpine career began after retirement, Ernest Solvay was an
inventor and businessman who invented the industrial process for sodium
carbonate production, from which a world-wide undertaking resulted.
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