Switzerland on a budget
by Doug Sager from Fall 2009 issue
Hard times need not rule out high
times. Even if you’re on a gap year,
don’t write off that dream trip to
the Alps just yet. True, even a less than
luxurious hotel room can easily cost $500 to
$1,000 in a top resort. But there are plenty of
high-altitude, low-budget alternatives—even
in some of the most chic resorts.
Sadly, one of the best and certainly one
of the most unusual of inexpensive hostels
is slamming shut its two-foot-thick concrete
and steel portals this winter. Ten years ago
Verbier’s Jürgen Taudien did something very
un-Swiss. He went downmarket. Taudien saw
that in the decades since he (and I) had been
ski bums in Verbier, young skiers and boarders
were literally being priced out of the resort.
As director of Verbier’s sports centre,
Taudien inherited a huge, cavernous
underground bomb shelter, something found
in every Swiss village, indeed in every Swiss
apartment house. With bunk beds, showers
but no windows and little in creature
comforts, The Bunker had instant appeal for
the impecunious.
Downtown Verbier for $25 a night and free
passes to the indoor swimming pool! The
guestbook counts more than 2,000 Canadian
visitors. None of those paid $10,000 for the
house special cocktail at Verbier’s swank
Coco Club. And few would have been in the
market for a week at the Septième Ciel, where
former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham and other
celebrities have stayed in Verbier, at prices
soaring to $80,000 a week.
Alas, all the teen spirit and hijinks, like
removing the plate-glass panels in the bar
above The Bunker and snowboarding down
a ramp into the swimming pool, proved
too much for the town elders, who equate
underground with infra dig. But Jürgen
Taudien’s bunker idea lives on since it
has been officially approved by the Swiss
government, and the concept is spreading.
Below Verbier, a short walk from the valley
lifts, a new bunker, called Le Stop, has
opened at $29 a night and is run by a top
paragliding instructor.
The good news is that the Alps also
abounds with ample choice of inexpensive
accommodation, from downright dirt bag to
cheap and cheerful for the family. At the top
end of the scale, but on average five times
cheaper than a three-star hotel, is the bed
and breakfast. The B&B concept is relatively
new in Switzerland but is spreading rapidly.
There is a subtle social difference between
the new B&B and the traditional “rooming
house” concept of the pension or gasthaus.
The latter date back a century or more and
tend to be purpose-built. The B&B is more
of an afterthought. And the hosts tend to
regard you more as potential friends than as
overnight nuisances.
Take the example of the most charming
B&B I have visited in Switzerland, situated
in a tiny valley village between Verbier and
the ski area of Bruson (where Intrawest has a
resort in the planning stages). Their children
grown and gone, Andrée-Noëlle Filliez and her
ski instructor husband, Francis, transformed
the upstairs of their stone tower into two
huge bedrooms with a sitting/TV room area
in between. It’s an authentic home and a
rare chance to see how the Swiss (who never
invite foreigners home) really live.
Time is money. Take your time and scour
the Internet for accommodation in towns or
cities with good public transport links to ski
areas. You will lose time in travelling to the
skiing, but save a lot on sleeping.
Alas, encore, Verbier’s authorities, in
addition to closing The Bunker, have
destroyed the last of its dozen poubelle huts. These small wooden chalets with pine
floors were the dirt bag’s last resort. Built as
receptacles for plastic garbage bags, these
huts had a habit of burning down. Some
say the cause was sleeping ski bums whose
candles set rubbish alight.
SAGER’S GUIDE
TO AFFORDABLE
ACCOMMODATION
Switzerland is thought to be an expensive ski nation,
but ironically it also has some of the best budget
accommodation. Here’s my short guide of places I
can personally vouch for:
• Downtown Lodge, Grindelwald
Under the Eiger in a ski pass area that covers
Mürren, Wengen and Grindelwald, this collection
of single-storey wooden shacks is the antithesis
of Swiss chalet architecture. But inside comfort
rules: polished wood floors, comprehensive game
room and families can have their own building.
From $36, with breakfast.
• Matterhorn Hostel, Zermatt
The Matterhorn Hostel dates back to the days of
Edward Whymper’s conquest of the eponymous
mountain. It’s clean, simple and charming with
free Internet, a restaurant offering $20 menus
and a lively bar. A bunk bed costs $34 a night.
• Swiss Backpackers,
Europe’s most expensive country offers an
expansive choice of 33 inexpensive city and
countryside hostels—no membership required and
big discounts for Swiss rail pass holders. These are
not youth hostels but independently owned lodges.
Ski resort locations include St. Moritz, Lenzerheide,
Kandersteg, Grindelwald and Flims-Laax.
• Hostel In Europe,
Mixing youth hostel accommodation with private
inns, this site offers 13 ski resorts in Switzerland,
half a dozen each in Italy and Austria, but only
two in France.
• La Chamade B&B, Cotterg
Filliez family, $70 a night, wifi, ski guiding.
• Le Stop, Le Chable, Switzerland
Bombproof bedding from $29 a night.
• More than 200 farms across Switzerland offer
straw beds for $20-30 a night. Low on night life
but plenty of dairy products, plus many Swiss
farmers have daughters.
• www.myswitzerland.com
Click on “other types of lodging.”