Intro

The Chesa Planta was built in 1595 by the von Salis family as a stately patrician house and extended to a semi-detached house in 1760. The building is an impressive example of an Engadin aristocratic house.

The Chesa Planta was built in 1595 by the von Salis family as a stately patrician house and extended to a semi-detached house in 1760. The building is an impressive example of an Engadin aristocratic house. Today, the Chesa Planta houses the Upper Engadin Cultural Archive, which bears witness to the rich cultural history of the Upper Engadin with an impressive number of photographs, books, plans, herbarium specimens and art. In the Chesa Planta, visitors can also experience the domestic culture of the 18th and 19th centuries. A Rhaeto-Romanic library is also housed in the building.

Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.

General information

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Contact address
Chesa Planta Samedan
Mulins 2
7503 Samedan
081 852 12 72
info@chesaplanta.ch

Group & pricing information

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Further prices (starting from)
Adults CHF 10.00, children & students CHF 5.00

Booking Information

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Address

Chesa Planta
Mulins 2
7503  Samedan
Switzerland

Phone  +41 (0)81 852 56 24
chesa.planta@bluewin.ch
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Overview

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Overview
Samedan
Graubünden
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Contact

Chesa Planta
Mulins 2
7503 Samedan
Phone  +41 (0)81 852 56 24
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Opening hours

Guided tours: every Thursday at 4.30 pm (end of December to end of March and beginning of July to mid-October) Also by appointment Closed on Sundays and public holidays

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