Mountain hut
An Alpine hut is a building located in the mountains intended to provide food and shelter to mountaineers and climbers. Alpine huts are usually operated by a section of an Alpine Club. Most Alpine huts are tended to by Alpine Club personnel throughout the mountaineering season, who prepare meals and drinks for mountaineers, similar to a restaurant, but usually with a limited selection, as it is not always easy to transport the food to the hut. Furthermore, Alpine huts provide simple sleeping berths. Any mountaineer is allowed to access Alpine huts, but members of an Alpine Club usually get a discount. Some huts in more remote areas have no personnel, but mountaineers are allowed to access them.
As there is a lot of mountaineering activity in the Alps, there is a large number of huts along the mountaineering paths. One cannot necessarily count on finding a similarly dense network of paths and huts in other mountain ranges.
Climbing hut
A climbing hut provides accommodation for climbers and mountaineers, close to a climbing area. It is essentially a simple, unwarded alpine hut.
In the UK and Ireland the tradition is of unwardened huts providing fairly rudimentary accommodation (but superior to that of a bothy) close to a climbing ground; the huts are usually conversions (eg of former quarrymen's cottages, or of disused mine buildings), and are not open to passers-by except in emergency. Many climbing clubs in the UK have such huts in Snowdonia or in the Lake District. A well-known example is the 'Charles Inglis Clark Memorial Hut' (the 'CIC Hut') under the northern crags of Ben Nevis in Scotland - this is a purpose-built hut, high up the mountain, probably nearest in character to the Alpine huts.
Gallery
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Refuge de la Selle in the French Alps
See also
- Bothy - simple shelter
- Wilderness hut - rent-free, open dwelling place for temporary accommodation
- Vernacular architecture - traditional architecture in particular area