Germany’s iconic Zugspitze peak, the country’s highest mountain, will temporarily lose its famed gilded cross as it undergoes restoration. The 4.88-meter (16-foot) tall, 300-kilogram (661-pound) cross was airlifted by helicopter on Tuesday from the 2,962-meter (9,718-foot) summit, shared between Germany and Austria in the Bavarian Alps. The restoration is necessitated by the accumulation of hundreds of stickers left by visitors over the years. The cross is now at the workshop of craftswoman Andrea Würzinger in Eschenlohe, where she will meticulously remove the stickers, sand the iron surface, and reapply gold leaf selectively due to the high cost of gold. The current cross, crafted by Würzinger’s father, Franz, in 1993, replaced the original 1851 version, which was irreparably damaged. Würzinger noted that the number of stickers has surged from just three during its first re-gilding 15 years ago to hundreds today. The Zugspitze, attracting around 600,000 visitors annually, is easily accessible via mountain railway and cable car. However, the actual peak, where the cross stands, requires a short but potentially hazardous climb from the summit station. Visitors often attempt risky maneuvers to place stickers on the cross, prompting the installation of a replica cross inside the summit station in July to deter such behavior. Würzinger and the Bayerische Zugspitzbahn, the operator of the summit transport system, aim to complete the restoration in time for the ski season’s start on November 28.
The gilded cross on Germany’s highest peak has too many stickers. Now it’s being restored
