4000th facility has been added to the Ski Jumping Hill Archive
7000th ski jumping hill added to the Archive!
New Granåsen ski jump in Trondheim inaugurated
Fire destroys ski jumps in Biberau-Biberschlag
Copper Peak: Funding of the renovation finally secured
2025-06-24
2025-06-23
2025-06-22
2025-06-21
2025-06-20
2025-06-19
2025-06-18
2025-06-17
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K-Point: | 32 m |
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42.0 m |
Take-off height: | 1.5 m |
Further jumps: | no |
Plastic matting: | no |
Year of construction: | 1924 |
Year of destruction: | 1940 |
Status: | destroyed |
Ski club: | Schneeschuh Club Windsbraut |
Coordinates: | 50.814381, 15.498210 ✔ ![]() ![]() |
In the years 1923–1924, in response to the development of tourism and winter sports in the region, the Zackelfallbaude mountain hut (located near the Kamieńczyk Waterfall) was significantly expanded by its then-owner, Franz Adolph. Directly next to the hut, which had been operating since 1872, a modern winter toboggan and bobsleigh track was built for the guests, as well as a ski jumping hill.
Zackelfallschanze (also known as the ski jump at Kamieńczyk Waterfall) was one of the first and most important facilities of its kind in the Karkonosze Mountains. It was built by the Schneeschuh Club "Windsbraut" from Szklarska Poręba. The hill featured a 1.5-meter-high stone take-off table and had a construction point of K32.
In 1924, during a competition held on this hill, German jumper Kurt Endler suffered an injury when he broke a new pair of skis, forcing him to withdraw from further participation.
Until the Himmelsgrundschanze in the Owcze Skały (Sheep Rocks) was opened (1930–1931), Zackelfallschanze was the largest ski jumping hill in the Karkonosze Mountains. Today, no physical traces of the Zackelfallschanze remain.
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