


1856
Joseph Hellenstainer Buys The Pragser Wildsee
100 Austrian florins devoted to the happiness of his wife Emma. Joseph Hellenstainer, innkeeper of the "Schwarzer Adler" in Villabassa, buys the Pragser Wildsee at an auction price and pays cash. The seller is the Bishop of Bressanone, and the deal is thus approved by the highest authorities.
The Hellenstainers are considered pioneers of tourism in Tyrol atCuis that time. Joseph died in 1858, only two years after the purchase. His widow, however, becomes a legend. "Frau Emma, Tirol" is a household name in traveling circles throughout Europe. Emma rocks the family inn on the new railroad line through the Puster Valley, raises six children and sets new standards in the hotel industry during the time of establishment. Early on, she advertises the lake as the most beautiful in the Dolomites. She organizes excursions for her guests to enjoy the beauty around the lake. Later on her son, Eduard extends the mule track to the lake and offers boat trips. The excursionists have to take provisions with them; there is no inn at the lake, not even a snack bar. For a good 30 years, the Hellenstainers guard the lake like an insider tip until it is time for Emma to step aside. Eduard buys a plot of land on the lake.

1899
Otto Schmid Builds the Grandhotel Pragser Wildsee
Mother Emma and son Eduard want the original. So they commission the Viennese architect Otto Schmid to build their Grandhotel. Together with Theodor Christomannos, Schmid founded the Association for Alpine Hotels in Tyrol. He built the Grandhotels in Sulden and in Trafoi, and follows up with it in 1897 at the Pragser Wildsee using his etablished method: modern comfort, without luxury. It will be a monumental building in front of the massive mountain backdrop, built from the simple material that is "lying around" on site. Stone and wood, unplastered. Even the furniture is designed by the architect himself. Two years after the start of construction, the hotel is opened. It is immediately fully booked. In 1902, the first extension is built on, following by the second in 1929.
The hotel is one of the summer fairy tales of the Belle Époque: electricity and light from the hotel's own power station, a bakery in the building, a post office and telegraph station, lounges and extra rooms, regular bus service to the railroad lines. And, as the crowning glory of its progress the hotel was equipped with an elevator operator and a darkroom for amateur photographers. All surrounded with a view of the lake and mountains. Word gets around, and soon vacation plans are being made in the imperial house in Vienna...

1910
Archduke Franz Ferdinand Vacations on The Lake
The best advertising: the family of the heir to the Austrian throne stays longer than planned. Three weeks turn into five, and at the farewell they are so touched that gifts are sent back and forth at Christmas. In 1910, an entire floor was reserved for the archducal vacation party. Rooms with a view of the lake for family and acquaintances, rooms facing the courtyard for the staff. Franz Ferdinand receives visitors and dignitaries in a loden jacket and leather trousers. Excursions are made and impressions are made in the evenings on the hotel terrace. Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie donated a magnificent chasuble for the chapel on the lake. The couple told to the mayor that they would certainly come back.
It did not come to that but it had a long-lasting and phenomenal effect. In the years leading up to the First World War, the who's who of the monarchy and German lands travel to the head of the valley in Alta Pusteria. Gustav Mahler is photographed on the terrace where alpinists set off from the hotel on their mountain tours.
In 1910, the circular path around the lake is built. Hotelier Hermann Hellenstainer, the brother of Eduard, who died at an early age, founded a private beautification association with hotel guests. The money is raised through games, house balls and lotteries. Now the vacation at the Pragser Wildsee is perfect from A to Z. That is, if two wars did not intervene.

1945
Emma Heiss Hellenstainer Takes In Freed SS hostages
The European history of war, expulsion and flight also creeps into the Prags Valley and right up to the Hotel on the Lake. In 1919, the south of the Tyrol became Italian and vacations were only possible in-between the wars. At the end of April 1945, however, an event turns the spotlight on the Hotel Pragser Wildsee. Emma Heiss Hellenstainer, the hotel heiress, arrives in a flash. The house is closed, the summer season is far away, instead of vacationers there are general staffs in the country. 137 people from 17 countries have to be accommodated. The German SS has taken prominent special and clan prisoners from the Dachau concentration camp to Villabassa in Alta Pusteria in order to exchange them in negotiations with the Allies. Among the hostages are members of the Stauffenberg, Goerdeler, Hofacker, Hassell families, who were arrested after the Hitler assassination on July 20th, 1944. The German Wehrmacht frees the hostages on April 30th and brings them to safety at the Pragser Wildsee.
The lake is in the depths of winter. The rooms are freezing cold, food is laboriously procured. Hostess Emma Heiss Hellenstainer scores with the warmth of her heart. "They couldn’t be more thankful to be able to have taken the first steps to freedom on this beautiful patch of earth. How happy I was with them," she writes in her memoirs. For ten days, a peaceful Europe is exemplified in miniature in the hotel. Then the war ends.
60 years later, Emma's granddaughter Caroline Heiss is having the events completely reappraised. The Pragser Wildsee Zeitgeschichtsarchiv (contemporary history archive) is set up in the hotel, and the contemporary witnesses return to the lake for the first time. For the second time as guests of the hotel.

2019
120 Years Make Five Generations and a Successor to Be
The compliment stands: it is a house like 120 years ago. Its age is ennobled when the hotel is protected as a historic monument in 1991. Its liveliness is attested when the house receives the "Historic Guest House" award in 2013. Five generations of a single family have endured ups and downs for it. Over and over again, the women carried on the legacy because the men almost always died too soon. Thus Josefine Hellenstainer leads the hotel through the First World War and the economic crisis until her niece Emma is old enough to take over. Therese helps out until Emma's son Josef completes his education. Josef's wife Heidi is in charge of the hotel until their daughter Caroline is ready to become a hotelier.
Guests come and go during the long time. When Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the guru of the Beatles, discovers the place on the lake, they meditate in the hotel. As long as journalist Emilio Frattarelli has vacationed here, the grandees of Italian politics have made annual pilgrimages to the hotel terrace. "All of Rome was here," remembers Caroline Heiss while thinking of Giulio Andreotti, Pietro Nenni and more. Actors marry at the lake. Terence Hill plays a forester in the ten years long running TV series „Un passo dal cielo“ (One step from heaven). Games of Thrones heroine Emilia Clarke recently vacationed here, Instagram post included.
The hotel even survived a fire. It’s still the only hotel on the lake. A successor is in sight. He's young, but fiercely determined. His name is Andreas. You’ll certainly get to know him.

1856
Joseph Hellenstainer Buys The Pragser Wildsee
100 Austrian florins devoted to the happiness of his wife Emma. Joseph Hellenstainer, innkeeper of the "Schwarzer Adler" in Villabassa, buys the Pragser Wildsee at an auction price and pays cash. The seller is the Bishop of Bressanone, and the deal is thus approved by the highest authorities.
The Hellenstainers are considered pioneers of tourism in Tyrol atCuis that time. Joseph died in 1858, only two years after the purchase. His widow, however, becomes a legend. "Frau Emma, Tirol" is a household name in traveling circles throughout Europe. Emma rocks the family inn on the new railroad line through the Puster Valley, raises six children and sets new standards in the hotel industry during the time of establishment. Early on, she advertises the lake as the most beautiful in the Dolomites. She organizes excursions for her guests to enjoy the beauty around the lake. Later on her son, Eduard extends the mule track to the lake and offers boat trips. The excursionists have to take provisions with them; there is no inn at the lake, not even a snack bar. For a good 30 years, the Hellenstainers guard the lake like an insider tip until it is time for Emma to step aside. Eduard buys a plot of land on the lake.

1899
Otto Schmid Builds the Grandhotel Pragser Wildsee
Mother Emma and son Eduard want the original. So they commission the Viennese architect Otto Schmid to build their Grandhotel. Together with Theodor Christomannos, Schmid founded the Association for Alpine Hotels in Tyrol. He built the Grandhotels in Sulden and in Trafoi, and follows up with it in 1897 at the Pragser Wildsee using his etablished method: modern comfort, without luxury. It will be a monumental building in front of the massive mountain backdrop, built from the simple material that is "lying around" on site. Stone and wood, unplastered. Even the furniture is designed by the architect himself. Two years after the start of construction, the hotel is opened. It is immediately fully booked. In 1902, the first extension is built on, following by the second in 1929.
The hotel is one of the summer fairy tales of the Belle Époque: electricity and light from the hotel's own power station, a bakery in the building, a post office and telegraph station, lounges and extra rooms, regular bus service to the railroad lines. And, as the crowning glory of its progress the hotel was equipped with an elevator operator and a darkroom for amateur photographers. All surrounded with a view of the lake and mountains. Word gets around, and soon vacation plans are being made in the imperial house in Vienna...

1910
Archduke Franz Ferdinand Vacations on The Lake
The best advertising: the family of the heir to the Austrian throne stays longer than planned. Three weeks turn into five, and at the farewell they are so touched that gifts are sent back and forth at Christmas. In 1910, an entire floor was reserved for the archducal vacation party. Rooms with a view of the lake for family and acquaintances, rooms facing the courtyard for the staff. Franz Ferdinand receives visitors and dignitaries in a loden jacket and leather trousers. Excursions are made and impressions are made in the evenings on the hotel terrace. Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie donated a magnificent chasuble for the chapel on the lake. The couple told to the mayor that they would certainly come back.
It did not come to that but it had a long-lasting and phenomenal effect. In the years leading up to the First World War, the who's who of the monarchy and German lands travel to the head of the valley in Alta Pusteria. Gustav Mahler is photographed on the terrace where alpinists set off from the hotel on their mountain tours.
In 1910, the circular path around the lake is built. Hotelier Hermann Hellenstainer, the brother of Eduard, who died at an early age, founded a private beautification association with hotel guests. The money is raised through games, house balls and lotteries. Now the vacation at the Pragser Wildsee is perfect from A to Z. That is, if two wars did not intervene.

1945
Emma Heiss Hellenstainer Takes In Freed SS hostages
The European history of war, expulsion and flight also creeps into the Prags Valley and right up to the Hotel on the Lake. In 1919, the south of the Tyrol became Italian and vacations were only possible in-between the wars. At the end of April 1945, however, an event turns the spotlight on the Hotel Pragser Wildsee. Emma Heiss Hellenstainer, the hotel heiress, arrives in a flash. The house is closed, the summer season is far away, instead of vacationers there are general staffs in the country. 137 people from 17 countries have to be accommodated. The German SS has taken prominent special and clan prisoners from the Dachau concentration camp to Villabassa in Alta Pusteria in order to exchange them in negotiations with the Allies. Among the hostages are members of the Stauffenberg, Goerdeler, Hofacker, Hassell families, who were arrested after the Hitler assassination on July 20th, 1944. The German Wehrmacht frees the hostages on April 30th and brings them to safety at the Pragser Wildsee.
The lake is in the depths of winter. The rooms are freezing cold, food is laboriously procured. Hostess Emma Heiss Hellenstainer scores with the warmth of her heart. "They couldn’t be more thankful to be able to have taken the first steps to freedom on this beautiful patch of earth. How happy I was with them," she writes in her memoirs. For ten days, a peaceful Europe is exemplified in miniature in the hotel. Then the war ends.
60 years later, Emma's granddaughter Caroline Heiss is having the events completely reappraised. The Pragser Wildsee Zeitgeschichtsarchiv (contemporary history archive) is set up in the hotel, and the contemporary witnesses return to the lake for the first time. For the second time as guests of the hotel.

2019
120 Years Make Five Generations and a Successor to Be
The compliment stands: it is a house like 120 years ago. Its age is ennobled when the hotel is protected as a historic monument in 1991. Its liveliness is attested when the house receives the "Historic Guest House" award in 2013. Five generations of a single family have endured ups and downs for it. Over and over again, the women carried on the legacy because the men almost always died too soon. Thus Josefine Hellenstainer leads the hotel through the First World War and the economic crisis until her niece Emma is old enough to take over. Therese helps out until Emma's son Josef completes his education. Josef's wife Heidi is in charge of the hotel until their daughter Caroline is ready to become a hotelier.
Guests come and go during the long time. When Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the guru of the Beatles, discovers the place on the lake, they meditate in the hotel. As long as journalist Emilio Frattarelli has vacationed here, the grandees of Italian politics have made annual pilgrimages to the hotel terrace. "All of Rome was here," remembers Caroline Heiss while thinking of Giulio Andreotti, Pietro Nenni and more. Actors marry at the lake. Terence Hill plays a forester in the ten years long running TV series „Un passo dal cielo“ (One step from heaven). Games of Thrones heroine Emilia Clarke recently vacationed here, Instagram post included.
The hotel even survived a fire. It’s still the only hotel on the lake. A successor is in sight. He's young, but fiercely determined. His name is Andreas. You’ll certainly get to know him.