While one life was tragically lost, a staggering 100 to 200 other skiers and tourists were left suspended in mid-air, grappling with fear as operations ground to a halt. Following the crash, the Titlis Xpress Trübsee-Stand system—which opened in 2015 and boasts a capacity of eight people per cabin—was immediately stopped, trapping passengers in 40 gondolas strung out along the 1,900-metre line.
The situation demanded an urgent and complex rescue operation at an altitude of 2,400 metres. Emergency teams executed a high-precision evacuation, bringing hundreds to safety from the paralyzed lift. The sheer scale of the evacuation highlights the popularity of Engelberg, central Switzerland’s largest ski resort, and the potential magnitude of the disaster had the failure been more widespread. The operator, Titlis Bergbahnen, is now facing intense scrutiny. With the lift system inspected as recently as last September, questions are mounting about how a catastrophic detachment could occur on a modern installation designed to transport thousands of visitors daily.