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From planning to the finished MTB trail: two trail construction specialists explain how they apply Swiss know-how to tourist destinations worldwide

Patrick Bardelli
15.8.2022
Translation: Megan Cornish
Pictures: Manuel Wenk

Allegra Tourismus has been supporting the development of various mountain bike destinations since 2003, and today the company from Engadine operates worldwide. The team not only advises its customers on planning the entire infrastructure, services and market positioning; it also takes care of the construction and maintenance of trails and hiking paths.

In the early 2000s, mountain bike tourism in Switzerland was still in its infancy, in contrast to countries such as the USA and Canada. In 2003, Darco Cazin from Engadine returned to Pontresina after a lengthy trip to North America, where, having been impressed by the mountain bike boom overseas, he founded the company Allegra Tourismus with his father Fadri.

Biking is in the company’s DNA

Allegra’s current managing director is Domenico Bergamin. The father from Lenzerheide has held various positions in the tourism industry during his career, including as an interim director of tourism in Lenzerheide. The sports and business science graduate has been responsible for operational matters at the company for six months. I met the 41-year-old for a chat in his office in Zurich Wiedikon, a far cry from zippy single trails.

Domenico, do you only employ bikers?
If a person fits the job description, I’d hire them if they’re not a biker. However, I don’t think anyone would apply to work with us if they didn’t have a connection to MTB. I think that’s a given. Everyone in the company bikes, no matter whether they’re a beginner or an advanced rider.

That can have fatal consequences.
Absolutely. E-bikes enable many people to get to places where they could never go under their own steam. But there’s often a lack of relevant technique. You see it occasionally with tourists who rarely, if ever, ride a bike, renting a bike during their holidays and then getting stranded helplessly on the mountain.

What else is important to these people? Regardless of whether they’re using pedal power or electrical assistance.
It’s a question of where riders can be on the road and avoid as much conflict as possible. People who have been mountain biking for a long time, for example, will rarely go to Appenzell Innerrhoden. I’ve heard horror stories of farmers attacking bikers with pitchforks, barbed wire being stretched across paths, and more.

Separation: the solution to crowding?

There’s increasing pressure on the alpine region. More and more people are cramming into the mountains in search of either relaxation or adventure, which means more and more stress on hiking trails and mountain bike trails. How can conflicts between individual user groups be avoided?

The magic word in recent years is separation, heralded as the panacea for this problem. Domenico Bergamin isn’t wholly convinced. You can’t completely separate all paths and keep them exclusive for the respective user group because there are hikers, riders, people with dogs, trail runners and bikers. Then there could be e-bikers, who would have different needs to organic bikers, gravel bikers and so on. It’s almost impossible to separate everyone.

According to Domenico Bergamin, Allegra Tourismus takes a different approach. At the beginning, the priority is taking a holistic view of the space, whether it’s an entire canton, a city or a village in the Alps. Which areas would need complete protection? Where would there be scope for people to stay? Secondly, they work to identify the most popular hiking and bike tours in the area.

The aim is to determine the needs of individual user groups as precisely as possible as early as the planning stage. Relying on the peaceful coexistence of different groups can often be quite feasible, but if there are paths which get crowded and, for example, bikers and hikers get in each other’s way, this is where separation would come into play.

From Zurich to Schruns

Time for a change of scenery. A few weeks after my visit to the director of Allegra Tourismus in Zurich, I’m in Austria. The company is building some trails here for a new customer. They’re pure MTB tracks, known as single-flow trails. This is the ideal time to get an impression of the work on site. The construction site above Schruns in Montafon is where I meet Allegra’s construction manager, Colin Leutenegger.

Colin, we’re sitting on a section of a trail that you have recently built and is due to open shortly. What challenges have you and your crew had to overcome here in Montafon?
The biggest challenge is definitely the terrain, as we often have to work in very steep areas. But trail building is pretty much all challenges (smiling).

Does it make a difference for you as a site manager whether you’re building a trail in Switzerland or here in Austria?
As we have a branch in Innsbruck as well as our headquarters in Pontresina, we’re very familiar with the local conditions. The same goes for the somewhat different legal situation. And our customer here, the Silvretta Montafon mountain railways, wants the same thing as our Swiss customers.

And what’s that?
As a rule, they want a new tourist attraction on their mountain. Mountain railways have an interest in people buying a ticket, using their infrastructure and creating jobs as a result.

Years of planning, rapid construction

All in all, Colin Leutenegger and his team are building three trails with different levels of difficulty over a distance of around seven kilometres on the mountain. From the simple flow trail for beginners to the advanced single trail with jumps for experienced bikers, there’s something for everyone. The trails will be completed and opened in mid-August. The customer is then responsible for maintaining and operating the trails.

An interesting detail: in Switzerland, building a metre of trail costs between 50 and 100 francs, depending on the terrain on which it’s built.

Speaking of building, I watched the trail crew at work and also picked up a shovel and rake myself. Stay tuned to find out what happened. If you don’t want to miss anything, click here to follow me and stay up to date.

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From radio journalist to product tester and storyteller, jogger to gravel bike novice and fitness enthusiast with barbells and dumbbells. I'm excited to see where the journey'll take me next.


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