: Dolomiti di Brenta), a subgroup of the Rhaetian Alps in the Italian Region of Trentino-Alto Adige, with a height of 2,339 metres (7,674 ft)).
[1] The mountain is mostly known for its imposing South-West face that rises with a straight vertical 900 meters from Val dell Seghe, above Molveno, up to the summit ridge.
Starting with a rather winding trajectory at the base, it then goes straight up through the inside corner between the west wall and the big south-west buttress overcoming a key passage round a massive protruding rock, “il masso squarciato” and then turning to the outer ridge of the shoulder towards the top.
The Armani-Fedrizzi Dihedral, first climbed by Matteo Armani and Cornelio Fedrizzi in 1936 through fissures and exposed chimneys to the east of the central buttress(UIAA: V and VI).
(UIAA: VI and A1) [9] The area is supported by two privately managed mountain cabins, Rifugio La Montanara, accessible by cable lift from Molveno, and Rifugio Croz’ dell Altissimo that can be reached from Molveno through Pradel or Val delle Seghe.