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Cerler

Ski resort in Huesca, Spain

Cerler

Summary

Ski resort in Huesca, Spain

FieldValue
nameCerler
logoLogo Aramón Cerler.png
pictureCerler1.jpg
captionSunset view of the resort town.
locationPyrenees, Spain
nearest_cityBenasque
pushpin_mapSpain#Spain Aragon#Pyrenees
pushpin_reliefy
top_elevation2650 m
base_elevation1500 m
skiable_area72 km
number_trails65
liftsystem9 chair lifts. 5 ski tows. 5 magic carpet lifts.
external_linkhttp://www.cerler.com

|}}

Cerler, officially called Aramón Cerler, is a Spanish ski resort situated above the village of Cerler in the high Benasque Valley, near the town of Benasque in the central Pyrenees (province of Huesca, Spain). Near Cerler are the highest peaks of the Pyrenees, Aneto, Monte Perdido, and Posets.

Resort

Former Cerler logo
thumb]]Cerler has 72 km of marked [[piste]]s and is one of the highest resorts of the Pyrenees. The highest point is 'Gallinero' peak, at 2650 m [[AMSL]], giving a vertical drop of 1150 m.

Cerler village, situated at 1500 m AMSL, forms the base of the resort and comprises a traditional nucleus and a purpose-built extension that includes several hotels and apartment complexes. From there a 4-seat chair lift provides the main access for the resort. The resort itself occupies two different high mountain valleys, defining two sectors: Cerler and Ampriu. Each sector is accessible by road and has a parking area, both sectors are linked by chair lifts.

Lifts

Almost all of the resort's lifts are modern and of high capacity, the resort has:

  • 9 chair lifts.
  • 5 ski tows.
  • 5 magic carpet lifts.
  • total skiers: 24,800/hour

Pistes

The resort offers 65 pistes of different difficulties:

  • 7 beginners.
  • 16 easy.
  • 25 intermediate.
  • 14 expert.

Services

  • 4 restaurants.
  • 3 skiing school.
  • 1 snow gardens for children.
  • 1 kindergarten
  • 2 ski hiring stores.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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