The horse stable from Luchsingen was part of a larger whole: the villa “Hof” was built in Luchsingen between 1851 and 1858 and a few years later this "horse palace" was added.
The horse stable from Luchsingen was part of a larger whole: the villa “Hof” was built in Luchsingen between 1851 and 1858 and a few years later this “hoss palace” was added. A sumptuous estate without space for garaging coaches and stabling horses was at the time unthinkable – just as we today cannot imagine a house without a car garage.
The long disused stable came to Ballenberg in 2014. It stands right across from the Chalet Schafroth from Burgdorf (361), which formerly enjoyed a complement of buildings large enough to allow a bourgeois lifestyle. The horse stable from Luchsingen is, however, more than just a stable and remise: it also served for storing feed for the animals, while the deep veranda suggests that it was once lived in.
The staff of the villa Hof did in fact live in the multipurpose building. There was even a hothouse addition which was also transported to the Ballenberg Open-Air Museum. The fretwork and the ochre paint are quite reminiscent of the chalet style – together with the apiary from Gwatt (383) and the pavilion from Sarnen (761) this building from Glarus encounters in the Open-Air Museum its contemporaries, which were also built in the romanticising architectural dialect of the popular “Swiss House style”.
Ballenberg
Swiss Open-Air Museum
Museumsstrasse 100
CH-3858 Hofstetten bei Brienz
Opening hours
10 April to 2 November 2025
10 am to 5 pm daily