Inauguration Noël 1957 (≈ 1957)
Put the cable car on.
31 août 1958
Helicopter accident
Helicopter accident 31 août 1958 (≈ 1958)
Collision with cable, four dead.
29 août 1961
Breaking of the tractor cable
Breaking of the tractor cable 29 août 1961 (≈ 1961)
six dead, 81 stranded passengers.
9 juillet 1966
Collapse of the tower
Collapse of the tower 9 juillet 1966 (≈ 1966)
four dead, 15 wounded.
8 septembre 2016
Major failure
Major failure 8 septembre 2016 (≈ 2016)
Passengers blocked one night.
5 janvier 2018
Storm Eleanor
Storm Eleanor 5 janvier 2018 (≈ 2018)
Split carrier cable.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Dino Lora Totino - Engineer and designer
Designed the Chamonix-Courmayeur connection.
Bernard Ziegler - Military pilot
Responsible for the 1961 accident.
Christian Mollier - Chamoniard guide
Secured cabins in 1961.
Origin and history
The Panoramic Mont-Blanc cable car, although named "télécabine" because of its small cabins, is technically a pulsed cable car. It connects the Midi needle (3,777 m) to the Helbronner point (3,462 m) by crossing the Mont-Blanc massif for 5 km, flying over the Vallée Blanche and the Géant glacier. Its course includes a tower suspended from the Flambeaux pass, a unique technical innovation.
Inaugurated at Christmas 1957, it was designed by Count Dino Lora Totino, a Turin engineer, completing a chain of ski lifts between Chamonix (France) and Courmayeur (Italy). The project, controversial as early as 1935 for security reasons, was carried out despite the unfavourable opinion of the site commission. The line, with its 36 cabins grouped into trains of three, operates in pulsed stops due to extreme conditions.
The cable car experienced several major accidents. In 1961, a military aircraft cut the tractor cable, resulting in the death of six passengers and a spectacular rescue of 81 people blocked 19 hours at altitude. In 1966, the collapse of the suspended tower of the Flambeaux caused four deaths. Other incidents, such as the 2016 breakdown blocking dozens of passengers a whole night, marked his story.
Technically, the line is distinguished by its crossing without intermediate tower on 2,831 m above the Giant Glacier, and its tower building of Gros Rognon, where the cables are diverted. The cabins, which are not removable to avoid frost, require a complete shutdown of the system on each arrival at the station. The upstream station, dug into the rock, and the downstream station, at Helbronner Point, allow connection to the Skyway Monte Bianco towards Italy.
The installation, although modern for its time, revealed flaws in marking and regulation. The 1961 air maps did not mention cables, contributing to the F-84 accident. Despite these dramas, the cable car remains a symbol of Alpine engineering and a key link in cross-border tourism between the Haute-Savoie and the Aosta Valley.