Schneeberg (Alps)

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The Schneeberg ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}), with its Template:Convert high summit Klosterwappen, is the highest mountain of Lower Austria, and the easternmost and northernmost mountain in the Alps to exceed 2000 m. It is a distinctive limestone massif with steep slopes on three sides and one of the most prominent and most isolated/dominant mountains of Austria.

The Schneeberg is one of the Northern Calcareous Alps in the borderland between Lower Austria and Styria, in the eastern part of Austria. It and the Rax (Template:Convert), some Template:Convert to the south-west, are collectively considered the Viennese Hausberge (Vienna's "local mountains"). The rich Karst plateaux have provided drinking water for Vienna, via a Template:Convert long pipeline, since 1873, and is claimed to be the best drinking water in the world.

On clear days, Schneeberg can be readily seen from parts of Vienna, some Template:Convert away (as the crow flies), from Bratislava in Slovakia and even from Babí Lom above Brno 180 km away. The Schneeberg is a summit with a height of over 1500 m, which just misses the limit for an ultra-prominent peak (1500).

A rack-and-pinion railway, the Schneeberg Railway, now over 100 years old, climbs to a height of Template:Convert, reducing the walk to the summit to an hour or two. There are also a number of other routes for walkers, including from the spa resort of Puchberg am Schneeberg to the east, or from the south, in Höllental. On the north side of the Schneeberg there is the Fadensteig as an ascent path. For experienced hikers, the path over the Fadensteig is worthwhile. The starting point of the Fadensteig is the Edelweißhütte on the Fadensattel at an altitude of 1,235 m.<ref>Schneeberg (2076m) classic from Losenheim over the Fadensteig (German)</ref>

The summit plateau has a number of mountain huts which are visited by thousands of walkers, climbers and even mountain-bikers each year. There are numerous ski runs, some of them very steep, the most famous of which leads over the Breite Ries.<ref>Alpenverein Edelweiss: Schneeberg, Breite Ries</ref><ref>Thomas Rambauske "Skitour zur allerersten alpinen Steilabfahrt" (German: Ski tour to the very first steep alpine descent), Der Standard, 14.March 2014.</ref>

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