After more than a year of evacuation, the residents of the Graubünden village of Brienz/Brinzauls have been permitted to return, marking a moment of great relief for the community that lived under the threat of a catastrophic landslide.

"A great relief."
"We hope that those who never gave up hope can now return."
A staggering 62 weeks of silence have finally been broken in Graubünden. On Monday, the barriers blocking the entrance to Brienz/Brinzauls were lifted, ending an agonizing exile for a community that has lived on the edge of catastrophe. Mayor Daniel Albertin declared the moment "a great relief," a sentiment that reverberates through the entire Albula valley. This is not merely a bureaucratic change; it is the reclamation of home against the overwhelming force of nature.
For over a year, the threat of a massive landslide turned this vibrant Swiss hamlet into a forbidden zone. Now, the authorities have signaled that the immediate danger has subsided enough to allow life to return. However, the atmosphere is charged with a mix of jubilation and caution. The return marks a critical victory for the residents who refused to let their village be erased from the map, but the memory of the evacuation remains a fresh wound for the community.
Brienz currently resembles a "ghost village," with shutters drawn tight against the elements and streets devoid of life—but the silence is ending. While many houses remain sealed, the brave few are already making their way back. Among the first to breach the perimeter is Hermann Bossi, who wasted no time bringing his belongings home this Monday. His stance is defiant; he explicitly stated he is "not afraid" of the masses of rock that hang above the village.
"We hope that those who never gave up hope can now return," Mayor Albertin told the press, acknowledging the psychological toll of the long wait. The visual contrast in the village is stark: a few chimneys are beginning to smoke, signaling warmth and habitation, while neighboring properties remain dark and dormant. This uneven return highlights the deep scars left by the evacuation, as neighbors wait to see who else will summon the courage to restart their lives in the shadow of the mountain.
Despite the reopening, a critical question hangs over the valley: is this return permanent? The cancellation of the evacuation order has thrown a wrench into the plans of many. A significant cohort of the population—25 households—had already signed up for preventive resettlement, resigned to the idea that Brienz was lost. Now, the sudden permission to return casts doubt on those difficult decisions, leaving families grappling with a choice between their ancestral homes and a safer, albeit displaced, future.
Mayor Albertin admits the situation harbors "uncertainty for the future." The mountain has not moved away; it merely sleeps. The geological instability that triggered the crisis is a complex beast, and the reprieve could be temporary. Residents are returning to a reality where the landscape itself is a volatile actor. The tension between the desire to stay and the logic of leaving creates a psychological divide within the community that may take years to heal.
Normalization is arriving one bolt at a time. Municipal workers have begun the symbolic and practical task of reinstalling traffic signs that were stripped away during the 62-week hiatus. These signs, removed when the village was surrendered to nature, are now being planted back into the earth, marking the re-establishment of civil order and daily routine.
This administrative restoration serves as a powerful signal to the rest of Switzerland: Brienz is open for business. However, the road ahead is long. Rebuilding a community requires more than just unlocking doors; it requires re-weaving the social fabric that was torn apart by dispersion. As the first cars navigate the newly signed streets, the people of Brienz are not just moving furniture; they are reclaiming their identity from the rubble of uncertainty.