Hauglibakken is an abandoned ski jumping hill located in Brunkeberg, Norway opened in 1868.
Hauglibakken | |
---|---|
Location | Brunkeberg, Norway |
Coordinates | 59°26′18″N 8°29′10″E / 59.4382°N 8.4860°E |
Opened | 8 March 1868 |
Size | |
K–point | K20 |
Hill record | 19.5 m (64 ft) Sondre Norheim (8 March 1868) |
History
editSondre Norheim set the second men's ski jumping world record in history and only one on this hill with 19.5 meters (64 ft) on 8 March 1868.[1][2][3]
Originally, distance was measured in ells, an old Norwegian unit. One Norwegian ell (alen) equaled 62.75 centimetres. The first recorded ski jump[clarification needed] was originally measured at 31 ells (19.5 metres).[nb 1]
In 1986, Morgedal IL club, built two new K20 and K40 hills, called Hauglandsbakken, on the exact same spot as the old historic hill.[clarification needed] They are now also abandoned.
Ski jumping world record
editNo. | Date | Ski jumper | Country | Ells | Metres | Feet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#2 | 8 March 1868 | Sondre Norheim | Norway | 31 | 19.5 | 64 |
Note
edit- ^ Tim Ashburner tells in the book The history of ski jumping (ISBN 1-904057-15-2, p. 14) that Norheim's longest jump in the circuit in Hauglibakken should have been measured at 50 Norwegian ells / alen (31.5 meters as one ell was then equal to 62.75 cm), but that the newspapers in Christiania stated that the length "with a certain exaggeration" should have been 30 ells (19 metres). However all statistics cites 19.5 metres as the world record, which corresponds to 31 ells.
References
edit- ^ tv2 (15 February 2015). "Wirkola hyller Fannemel: – Fantastisk! Jeg tror vi har nådd grensen nå". Retrieved 15 February 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Luftseilas på ski (page 4)" (in Norwegian). Nordlands Avis. 1 April 1952.
- ^ Tim Ashburner: The History of Ski Jumping (page 14). History of Ski Jumping. 31 January 2013. ISBN 978-1-904057-15-4.
External links
edit- Hauglibakken / Hauglandsbakken skisprungschanzen.com