国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Project 360 alpinists travel on the ridge between the Swiss and Italian summit of the Matterhorn.
Project 360 alpinists travel on the ridge between the Swiss and Italian summit of the Matterhorn. (Photo: Mammut)

How a Small Swiss Gear Company One-Upped Google

Google's virtual climbing projects are getting most of the press, but Mammut beat them to the punch鈥攂y nearly a year

Published: 
HANDOUT - Das
(Photo: Mammut)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

In June, when Google unveiled its plan to offer 360-degree views of a virtual climb up El Capitan听in Yosemite National Park, armchair adventurers around the world took note. Climbing titans Lynn Hill, Tommy Caldwell, and Alex Honnold helped to film the project. The New York Times covered it. But the news overshadowed an inconvenient truth as far as Google鈥檚 role as a pioneer was concerned: the Swiss gear company Mammut had beaten Google to the punch by nearly a year.

Tony Brown in Yosemite National Park.
Tony Brown in Yosemite National Park. (Mammut)

Mammut expects to have 30 virtual climbs available through what it calls 听by the end of 2015.听Among them are routes ranging from Heckmair on the north faceof the Swiss Eiger, to the Nose on El Cap and an expeditionup the 18,000-foot dormant volcano of Mt. Elbrus in Russia. Filming is handled by sponsored climbers like听Dani Arnold, who听holds the speed record on both the north face of the Eiger and the north face of the Matterhorn鈥攈e broke Ueli Steck's records in both cases鈥攁nd听Stephan Siegrist, who听has made first ascents on all seven continents,听as well as Mammut employees at the company鈥檚 headquarters in Seon, Switzerland. To capture panoramic footage of the undertakings, climbers听use听special camera听rigs mounted on the their backs.听

The peak of Mount Elbrus in Russia.
The peak of Mount Elbrus in Russia. (Mammut)

We spoke with Mammut marketers Christian Gisi and Harald Schreiber to find out how Project 360 came to be and how they persuaded world-class climbers to carry an extra 17 pounds of film equipment up big walls.

Whose idea was this?
GISI: That鈥檚 a little complicated. For some time we鈥檝e been working with a guy named Matthias Taugwalder, a specialist in panoramic photography, who鈥檚 actually a descendant of one of the first people to climb the Matterhorn. In January 2014, he shot the Lauberhorn World Cup downhill and placed a panoramic camera on [Swiss racer] Bruno Kernen鈥檚 helmet. Right after that, he called me and said, 鈥淐ouldn鈥檛 we do something like this with steep skiing or a little more alpine?鈥 I said, 鈥淥K, but instead of racing down, why not climb up something famous?鈥澨

A panoramic from the 360-degree camera from the summit of the Matterhorn.
A panoramic from the 360-degree camera from the summit of the Matterhorn. (Mammut)

From that came the idea of doing something like Google Street View but for extreme alpinism in a place like the Eiger North Face. Right about the same time, a German agency contacted us with pretty much the same idea, but no clue how to manage it on the technical side. By bringing all parties together, we created a system that worked.

What other routes or famous peaks can we expect to see by the end of the year?
GISI: Basically all the 4,000-meter peaks in Switzerland, including the Weisshorn, Jungfrau, the M枚nch鈥攜ou name it. We鈥檙e going to do Mont Blanc in two weeks. We鈥檝e already climbed it, but the tech let us down. We gave our CEO, Rolf Schmid, one of the cameras, but Murphy鈥檚 Law shook us hard and one of the cameras failed. We don鈥檛 know why. In two weeks, he鈥檚 going up again.

What鈥檚 the most interesting feedback you鈥檝e gotten?
GISI: Although it was a hard punch, the fact that Google did pretty much the same thing with pretty much the same technique, but just one year later than we did it, I felt that was a compliment. They posted it under the name of Street View, but they dedicated a special micro site for El Cap. It鈥檚 the same principle. Very nicely done.

How receptive to this idea were the climbers?
SCHREIBER: Honestly, in the beginning they were very skeptical, because they didn鈥檛 know where we were going with the project and the idea of climbing all these faces with an additional eight kilograms [about 17.5 pounds] on their backpacks was a little strange to them. But after Dani Arnold and Stephan Siegrist climbed the Eiger North Face [in April 2014] and looked at the footage, they were all in on the project.

Dani Arnold arrives in Death Bivouac in the Eiger North Face.
Dani Arnold arrives in Death Bivouac in the Eiger North Face. (Mammut)

What kind of gear did they use to film?
GISI: They carried the Trion Nordwand 35-liter pack with six GoPro Hero3+ cameras鈥攍ike a [six-sided] die with a camera on each side鈥攎ounted on an extended pole. First we attached an aluminum plate to the back of the pack then we attached a small tripod to that plate and a longer carbon pole, about four feet long, to the tripod. The die sits on top of that pole. Then you have a spare battery inside the pack connected via cables. Also, it was essential that the backpack could still be used to carry food and climbing gear.

Is this something we will see on 8,000-meter peaks?
GISI: We had plans to do Everest this May, but we couldn鈥檛 finance it. We鈥檙e still a small company and with all the permits involved and everything else logistically, it was not doable this year. It would have cost about $300,000, as a very rough estimate. And it鈥檚 obviously still a high-risk adventure. We鈥檙e very afraid that Google is going to do it. They would be silly if they don鈥檛. I鈥檓 pretty sure they have the money.

Lead Photo: Mammut

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online