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Madonna di Campiglio
Village and skiing resort in Italy
Village and skiing resort in Italy
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Madonna di Campiglio |
| picture | Madonna di Campiglio.JPG |
| caption | Madonna di Campiglio |
| location | Trentino, Italy |
| pushpin_map | Italy |
| coordinates | |
| pushpin_label_position | right |
| map_caption | Location in Italy |
| vertical | 1000 m |
| top_elevation | 2600 m |
| base_elevation | 1522 m |
| skiable_area | |
| longest_run | |
| lift_capacity | 31,000 skiers/hr |
| snowfall | |
| external_link | [campiglio.com](http://www.campiglio.com/) |
Madonna di Campiglio () is a village and a ski resort in northeast Italy. It is also a frazione of the comune of Pinzolo. The village lies in the Val Rendena at an elevation of 1522 m above sea level, and has approximately 1,000 inhabitants.
The ski area around Madonna di Campiglio has 57 lifts and 150 km of ski runs, with a capacity of more than 31,000 people per hour, rises to 2600 m, has 50000 m2 of snow park, 40 km for Nordic skiing and links to the pistes in Pinzolo, Folgarida, and Marilleva. Together, they have 156 kilometers (97 mi) of interconnected runs.
Madonna di Campiglio is the main point of access to the Brenta Dolomites, with its famous via ferrata, with the ski lift to the Passo Groste (or :de:Passo del Grostè) taking one directly to the northern end of the via ferrata network.
Ski resorts in the Italian Alps
Following World War II the Italian government planned and developed ski resorts. Madonna di Campiglio is still among Italy’s most fashionable ski resorts. Italian fashion can be seen on both the pistes and the streets.
The ski resort has a historic association with Fiat and Ferrari. Ski enthusiasts appreciate dramatic scenery and very steep pistes. The ski resort has three signature tree lined pistes, the Amazzonia, the Schumacher Streif and the Canalone Miramonti. Hotel Alpen Vidi is adjacent to the Canalone Miramonti piste. The nearby ski resort Passo Tonale can only be accessed with a Superskirama ski pass.
Festivals and events
The village regularly hosts World Cup alpine skiing and snowboarding races. Scuderia Ferrari Formula One and Ducati Corse MotoGP teams hold a media event in January at the resort. In summer the village hosts the Rally Stella Alpina, an Italian classic race. In cycling, the village has been the location for the finish of stages of the Giro d'Italia twice: in 1999 Marco Pantani won the stage whilst wearing the pink jersey, before being disqualified from the race after a blood test revealed a high haematocrit level, whilst in 2015 the stage was won by Mikel Landa.
On 17 December 1974, Swedish alpine skier Ingemar Stenmark won his first world cup competition here.
On 8 January 2025, Albert Popov made a remarkable comeback in the second run, securing his first World Cup race victory in the classic 3-Tre night slalom at Madonna di Campiglio.
References
References
- (Winter 2025–2026). "Madonna di Campiglio Ski Area".
- Allen, E. John B.. (2012). "Historical Dictionary of Skiing". Scarecrow Press.
- (28 October 2025). "An expert guide to ski holidays in Italy's quintessential ski resort". The Telegraph.
- (18 July 2025). "15 of the best ski resorts in Italy". The Times.
- Kennedy, Tristan. (18 October 2024). "Where to Ski: The 25 Best Ski Resorts in the World 2025".
- (Winter 2025–2026). "Superskirama Ski Pass Rates". Skirama Dolomiti.
- "29° rievocazione storica Stella Alpina". APT Campiglio.
- (24 May 2015). "2015 Giro d'Italia to return to Madonna di Campiglio".
- . (24 May 2015). ["Giro d'Italia: Alberto Contador extends lead as Mikel Landa wins"](https://www1.skysports.com/cycling/news/21683/9863382/giro-ditalia-alberto-contador-extends-lead-as-mikel-landa-wins).
- Öhrling, Petter. (17 December 2014). "Jag trodde inte att jag var en vinnare". Sportbladet.
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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