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Villabassa

Villabassa (Niederdorf) è un comune dell'Alta Pusteria, in provincia di Bolzano, adagiato lungo il corso della Rienza a circa 1

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Villabassa (Niederdorf) è un comune dell'Alta Pusteria, in provincia di Bolzano, adagiato lungo il corso della Rienza a circa 1.158 metri di quota, in una conca ampia stretta tra i primi rilievi dolomitici e le pendici boscose che salgono verso il Parco naturale Fanes-Sennes-Braies, di cui il comune è punto di riferimento. Il paese, a maggioranza di lingua tedesca, conserva un impianto urbano compatto costruito attorno a Piazza von Kurz, cuore civile e commerciale fin dal tardo medioevo, quando la famiglia nobile von Kurz vi si insediò e Villabassa divenne una delle stazioni di posta più importanti della Val Pusteria. Da metà Ottocento, complice l'apertura della ferrovia della Val Pusteria nel 1871 e la fama di ospiti come l'albergatrice Emma Hellenstainer, il paese si affermò come stazione climatica e meta di villeggiatura, una vocazione che oggi convive con la tradizione della cura Kneipp, praticata nel parco del benessere lungo la Rienza. Punto di partenza verso la Val di Braies, il celebre Lago di Braies e le prime quote delle Dolomiti, Villabassa unisce così un centro storico raccolto, una lunga storia turistica e un paesaggio alpino che si presta a escursioni, ciclismo e soggiorni di relax tutto l'anno.

Atualizado em 17 julho 2026

Villabassa 15°
Sáb 17° 10°
Dom 19° 10°
Seg 18° 10°
Ter 19°

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A história

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Villabassa in the Alta Pusteria (Hochpustertal)

Villabassa, in German Niederdorf, lies in the upper stretch of the Val Pusteria, the Hochpustertal, one of the main valleys of eastern South Tyrol linking Brunico to the border with Austrian Tyrol. The municipality, covering about 17.85 km², occupies the valley floor along the Rienza river, between Monguelfo and Dobbiaco, at an altitude of around 1,158 metres, in a sheltered position that has given it a reputation for a healthy climate since the 19th century. To the north and south the municipal territory climbs toward conifer woods and pastures leading up to the Fanes-Sennes-Braies Nature Park, a protected Dolomite area of which Villabassa is a reference town and access point. The population, just over 1,600 residents, is predominantly German-speaking, with an Italian minority and a small Ladin component, and both names, Villabassa and Niederdorf, are in everyday use on signage and in official documents.

The Spa Tradition and the Kneipp Cure

Villabassa owes much of its fame to a tradition of health-focused holidays that began in the second half of the 19th century, when the town, favoured by the mild valley-floor climate and the opening of the Val Pusteria railway in 1871, established itself as a climatic health resort frequented by the aristocracy of the Habsburg monarchy. A key figure of that season was Emma Hellenstainer, the celebrated innkeeper of the Black Eagle Inn, whose hospitality helped make the valley known across Europe, so much so that a historic hotel in the town, still open today, bears her name. This legacy has evolved over time into the wellness park along the Rienza, dedicated to the Kneipp cure, the hydrotherapy method devised by the Bavarian priest Sebastian Kneipp and based on alternating cold and warm water stimuli. Within the park, among pools for walking in water, barefoot paths, stations for arm and face baths and clay applications, stands also Italy's first outdoor inhalation facility, opened in autumn 2010 and fed by the spring of the Bagni di Pian di Maia.

The Historic Village and its Burgher Houses

The heart of Villabassa is Piazza von Kurz, named after the noble family that settled in the town from 1475 with Jakob Kurz and controlled its economic and administrative life for centuries: the building that once housed the offices regulating the transit of goods along the Val Pusteria route still faces the square today and now serves as the town hall. Around the square stand burgher houses with painted facades and wooden-shingle roofs, typical of Alta Pusteria architecture, among which the Wassermann House stands out, a fifteenth-century noble residence of the von Kurz family that from 1892 to 1977 housed the Wassermann family's well-known coffee house, whose owners gathered a vast collection of folk artefacts. Restored in 1989, the building now houses the Museum of Tourism of the Alta Pusteria, dedicated to the history of hospitality, spa cures and early alpinism in the valley. A short walk away, the parish church of Santo Stefano, built between 1792 and 1803, is notable for its characteristic wooden-shingle roof, periodically renewed by specialised roof climbers.

Gateway to the Val di Braies and the Dolomites

Villabassa has always been a favoured starting point for the Val di Braies and its famous Lago di Braies, an internationally renowned destination within the Fanes-Sennes-Braies Nature Park: the turn-off toward the valley branches from the main road between Monguelfo and Villabassa and leads, via forest and secondary roads, to Braies di Fuori, where the route splits between those continuing to the lake and those climbing toward the Prato Piazza plateau, roughly ten kilometres from the town. The municipal territory is also crossed by the Val Pusteria cycle path, one of the most popular cycling routes in the Alpine region, which links the valleys of South Tyrol seamlessly to Austrian Tyrol and, at Villabassa, offers rest stops, bike rental and connections to the secondary paths of the Val di Braies. For hikers, trails starting from the valley floor climb quickly toward pastures and Dolomite rock faces, also intersecting Alta Via delle Dolomiti no. 3, one of the best-known hiking routes in the area.

History and Experiences in Villabassa

The earliest written records of Villabassa date to the years between 993 and 1005, when the settlement appears as Nidrindorf, the name from which both the German form Niederdorf and, through a literal translation adopted during the Fascist era, the Italian form Villabassa derive. For centuries the town was a commercial hub along the route crossing the Val Pusteria, helped by the presence of numerous craftsmen specialised in repairing carts and carriages, before turning, between the 19th and 20th centuries, into a renowned mountain holiday resort. Today this dual identity, as an old trading village and a climatic health resort, is reflected in what the town offers visitors: a visit to the Tourism Museum at the Wassermann House, walks in the Kneipp park along the Rienza, hikes toward the Fanes-Sennes-Braies Nature Park and the Val di Braies, and cycling outings on the Val Pusteria cycle path together form a range of experiences combining history, wellness and nature in a single municipality.

Not to be missed

  • Piazza von Kurz and the burgher houses of the historic centre
  • Wassermann House and the Museum of Tourism of the Alta Pusteria
  • The Kneipp park along the Rienza with its outdoor inhalation facility
  • The parish church of Santo Stefano with its wooden-shingle roof
  • A hike or bike ride toward the Val di Braies and Lago di Braies

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