A castle above the rooftops, reached by funicular through the trees.
The Gütsch hill has watched over Lucerne since 1590, when a defensive tower marked
the westernmost point of the city's fortifications. The castle standing there now
dates to 1901, rebuilt after a fire by architect Emil Vogt in the manner of
Neuschwanstein — which explains the towers and the pointed roofs visible from the
old town below.
A funicular, first built in 1881, connects the hotel to street level in under two
minutes. The ride is brief enough to feel almost private.
From the terrace, the view takes in the full sweep of Lucerne: the Reuss, the
Chapel Bridge, the lake extending east toward Vitznau, Pilatus closing the horizon
to the southwest. Queen Victoria spent five weeks here in 1868. Arturo Toscanini
returned each summer during the Lucerne Festival.
The grounds include a sculpture park with 24 works. The forest begins at the edge
of the property. It is the kind of place that rewards an afternoon of doing very
little.