Safety Board: Retrofitting Wouldn't Have Prevented Fatal Titlis Gondola Crash
Following last week's fatal accident, the Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board stated that retrofitting the cable car clamps would not have averted the crash in such strong winds, highlighting the physical limits of the system.

Key Takeaways
- The Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board (STSB) concluded that retrofitting cable clamps would not have prevented the Titlis gondola crash.
- The accident occurred on March 18, 2026, killing a 61-year-old woman who was the sole occupant.
- Titlis-Bahnen, the operator, had declined a technical retrofit offered by manufacturer Garaventa in 2022.
- Wind monitoring protocols trigger a warning at 40km/h and an alarm at 60km/h.
By The Numbers
They Said
"It’s pure physics and geometry."
"If the wind speed is too high, a gondola comes off its normal axis and can crash into parts of the installation or get caught on rope catchers and be torn from the hoisting rope."