Bivouac de Bella Tola

1.1
Piedmont, Italy

About

Bivouac de Bella Tola sits at 3,029m on the north face of Bella Tola, in the Gran Paradiso massif of Piedmont. Reach it from Rifugio Vittorio Emanuele II (2,732m) in roughly 2 hours of scrambling and fixed rope sections. The approach is steep and exposed—bring a harness, carabiners, and know how to move on rock. This is not a walk-up hut. Alternatively, approach from the Val di Rhêmes side via Rifugio Sella, though that route is longer and rougher.

The bivouac is a small, unstaffed stone shelter holding 6–8 people on a squeeze basis. There is no water, no food, no electricity. Bring everything: sleeping bag, mat, food, water or snow for melting. The shelter provides only walls and a roof. The location serves mountaineers tackling the Gran Paradiso peaks and traverses in the 3,000m range. Open year-round, though winter access requires winter mountaineering skills and avalanche awareness.

This is a climber's refuge, not a tourist stop. Plan your own supplies and logistics completely. Notify the Rifugio Vittorio Emanuele II (managed by CAI) before heading up so they know your intentions. Carry a map, compass, and GPS—there is no reception. Go with experience or a guide if you are unfamiliar with Alpine mountaineering and fixed protection. Expect cold nights, wind, and solitude.

Frequently Asked Questions

This is an unstaffed bivouac—no booking required. Arrive when you want, but check weather and snow conditions on cai.it before heading up, especially outside summer.
It's open year-round as an unstaffed emergency shelter; reliable access is typically June through September when snow clears and conditions are stable.
Start from Rifugio Vittorio Emanuele II (2,732m) and scramble up the north face via fixed ropes for roughly 2 hours—steep, exposed terrain requiring a harness and climbing experience; the Val di Rhêmes approach via Rifugio Sella is longer and more difficult.
It's a basic unstaffed stone shelter with no services—bring all food, water, and a sleeping bag; there's no water source on site.
No—this is strictly for experienced mountaineers comfortable with scrambling, exposed terrain, and self-rescue; not suitable for families or hikers without rock-climbing skills.

Quick Facts

Managing club
CAI
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Dormitory
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Private rooms

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