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K-Point: | 60 m |
Inrun length: | 85 m |
Inrun angle: | 30° |
Take-off length: | 8 m |
Take-off angle: | 7° |
Take-off height: | 3 m |
Landing angle: | 36° |
Hill certificate: |
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Further jumps: | no |
Plastic matting: | no |
Status: | destroyed |
Ski club: | SC Mürren |
Coordinates: | 46.567738, 7.887709 ✔ ![]() ![]() |
Mürren in the Jungfrau region in the Bernese Oberland was developed early on as a summer and winter tourist destination. The village was discovered by tourists from England as early as around 1860. The place also gained fame through the Arlberg-Kandahar races, which took place there regularly from 1931 to 1971, and the 1969 James Bond film "On Her Majesty's Secret Service".
The Ski Club Mürren was founded in 1912 and initially it was more involved in the Nordic skiing disciplines. In the period from 1912 to approx. 1945, around 6 ski jumps were built in the municipal area of Mürren: the Gruebischanze (behind the tennis court of Hotel Jungfrau), Mürrenbergschanze (on the Allmend area facing the Blumental), Schaf-Fährichschanze (facing northeast with a view of the Aegertental), Mittelbärgschanze (in Mittelberg next to Peters Gully), Wintereggschanze and the Aegertenschanze at Maulerhubel ski lift.
Only Ägertenschanze is still visible today. For the construction of the 40-meter facility, the site had to be cleared, dug up and a take-off with large boulders was built. It was later expanded as a K60. The inrun and the landing slope are now completely over grown - the ski jump has probably not been in operation for 40 years or more.
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