Alagna Valsesia
Alagna Valsesia is a comune and small village high in the Valsesia alpine valley in the province of Vercelli, Piedmont, northern Italy, a UNESCO World heritage site since 2013. It is a tourist place for mountaineering and winter sports, and it is internationally renowned for the freeride off-piste skiing. It is also the traditional starting point for the Margherita Hut climb, at above sea level, the highest building in Europe. It was originally settled by Walser at the beginning of the 12th century. It is located at an elevation of just south of the Monte Rosa, elevation ; It is very close to Milan and to the international Milan–Malpensa Airport.
Since December 2005 a cable car connects Alagna with Gressoney through the Passo dei Salati.
History
Founded in the 13th century by a German population descending from the north into the Italian valleys around Monte Rosa, it has preserved today its atmosphere with several buildings built around 1500-1600 in a pure "Walser Style", still in perfect condition, built using local wood and stones. This spontaneous architecture has been totally preserved: the wooden cage around the building was in fact invented for putting the hay to dry out.Main sights
The Church of Saint John the Baptist was built in 1511 and it has preserved many sculptures by Giovanni d'Enrico a famous Italian artist.At the entrance of the town, there is the native house of Tanzio da Varallo, brother of Giovanni d'Enrico and one of the most famous Italian artists. His works are in the most prestigious art gallery in the world.
Mountaineering
Alagna is one of the Alpine towns which have played a crucial role in the history of mountaineering. The Guides Association was founded in 1872 and it is the oldest in Italy second only to that of Courmayeur. From the town started all the first expeditions on the close Monte Rosa; the first one was on 23 July 1801 when Pietro Giordani, a native of Alagna, reached the summit of the peak which now is called by his name. In 1819 Zumstein reached the third-highest Monte Rosa peak. Finally between August the 8th and the 9th, the Alagna parish priest, reached, after three attempts, the fourth tallest peak of Monte Rosa and the highest in the Alagna Valley, the today called Gnifetti Peak.The mountaineering tradition is still alive: Silvio Mondinelli, the second Italian climber to reach all the 14 peaks of the world, has done several climbs on the Alagna side of Monte Rosa. In September 2011, Hervè Barmasse and his father opened a new route on the south-east face of the Gnifetti peak, which is at the moment the most difficult route on this side of the massif and one of the most challenging in the entire group. Finally, Alagna is the starting point for reaching the Margherita hut, the highest hut in Europe, on the Gnifetti Peak top.