Bivouac Giuliano Perugini
Bivacco Giuliano Perugini
2,060m
Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy
About
Bivacco Giuliano Perugini sits at 2,060m in the Tagliamento valley, managed jointly by CAI Trieste. Reach it from Rifugio Pordenone (1,249m) via CAI trail 353 in 2 hours. The approach is straightforward hiking through established terrain.
The bivouac has 9 beds plus 9 emergency spaces. Facilities are basic: a table and benches, but no meals, no piped water (collect from a source 100m away), and no power. The hut reopened after renovation in 2005. Staff are present during summer months. Winter access is possible but the hut remains unstaffed then—bring a sleeping bag and be prepared for cold.
Book by email through rifugi.cai.it or contact CAI Trieste directly. Summer weekends fill quickly July through September; reserve well ahead. Winter use requires advance notice so staff know someone is coming. This is a working climber's base, not a resort hut—go prepared.
The bivouac has 9 beds plus 9 emergency spaces. Facilities are basic: a table and benches, but no meals, no piped water (collect from a source 100m away), and no power. The hut reopened after renovation in 2005. Staff are present during summer months. Winter access is possible but the hut remains unstaffed then—bring a sleeping bag and be prepared for cold.
Book by email through rifugi.cai.it or contact CAI Trieste directly. Summer weekends fill quickly July through September; reserve well ahead. Winter use requires advance notice so staff know someone is coming. This is a working climber's base, not a resort hut—go prepared.
Frequently Asked Questions
Book at least 2–3 months ahead for July and August via rifugi.cai.it or email; winter visits require coordination directly with CAI Trieste since the hut is unstaffed.
Staffed in summer (roughly June to September); open but unstaffed in winter, so you'll need to arrange access with the managing CAI section.
Start from Rifugio Pordenone (1,249m) and follow CAI trail 353 for 2 hours; the route is straightforward hiking terrain with 800m elevation gain.
9 beds plus 9 emergency spaces, table and benches; no meals, no piped water (collect from a source 100m away), and no power.
Yes—the 2-hour approach from Rifugio Pordenone is non-technical hiking, but expect very basic conditions (no meals, no water on-site) and bring a headtorch and full provisions.
Quick Facts
- Managing club
- CAI
- Season
- –
- Total
- 9
- Dormitory
- Emergency
- 9
- Private rooms
Facilities
Contact & Booking
- [email protected]
- Phone
- Website
- https://www.caitrentaottobre.it/bivacchi