JÜRG STEINER Climate activists could maybe learn a trick or two from Grison’s decision to ban cars in the early 20th century – a move that went against the grain but commanded majority support within the canton. “People of Grisons!” exhorted the banner. “Do you really wish to graft and grovel for those who roar past you in their motor cars with an air of haughty contempt?” The rhetoric went full-throttle, more or less turning the anti-car argument into a class war. Twenty years after the first automobile had been patented by German engineer Carl Benz in 1886, cars were portrayed as “stink boxes” flaunted by flash tourists from the lowlands. The canton’s Alpine valleys would be engulfed in dust, noise and stench if nothing was done to stop them. It took a remarkably long time for such views to change. Grisons became a car-free enclave, banning all motor vehicles between 1900 and 1925 – longer than anywhere else in Europe. Bolting horses It was the Grisons cantonal government, no less, that crank-started the prohibition on cars, taking the public’s concerns seriously. Baulking at the prospect of these newfangled contraptions endangering other road users on the narrow, winding mountain passes of Engadine, it issued its canton-wide ban in 1900. If visiting motorists came rattling around the corner, carriage drivers feared that their horses would bolt and take them and their passengers down the mountain with them. Cars quickly became an accepted form of transport elsewhere in Switzerland. After the ban came into force in Grisons, officials in Chur soon began to worry that being car-free could put the canton at an economic disadvantage. Yet the all-male electorate (women were not allowed to vote) remained unmoved. The ban survived nine consecutive popular votes, despite road users occasionally taking matters into their own hands: photos of the time bear testimony to vehicles being pulled by horses once they passed into Grisons. It was not until 21 June 1925 that a narrow majority voted in favour of the motor car. Some suspect – not Grisons – from car-free to four-wheel drive Grisons was stubbornly anti-automobile until 1925. One hundred years later, the Alpine canton now leads the way in road infrastructure and cars per capita. We look at the hairpins that were negotiated in between. republished essay to mark the 100th anniversary of the ban being lifted. From June 1925, the car began to take the 150 valleys of Switzerland’s largest canton by storm, it is now safe to say. Only 136 passenger cars were registered in Grisons at the end of 1925. The number is now 126,000. The canton leads the way in numerous mobility-related “disciplines”, scoring above the national average in terms of cars per capita. There are significantly more cars than households in Grisons. Based on the latest information from the Federal Statistical Office, people in the canton have a penchant for buying big, expensive cars. And the proportion of new fourwheel-drive vehicles is higher than anywhere else in Switzerland. Driving over the mountains Grisons historian Simon Bundi has followed the story of automobiles closely. He curates the car museum at Emil Frey Classics in Safenwil (canton of Aargau) and has led a research project devoted to 100 years of the motor car in Grisons, the results of which are now available in a book. There are several reasons why the ban lasted so long, Bundi tells us. Grisons is Switzerland’s most sparsely populated canton, statistically speaking. But it has an extensive transport network. Back then, there were significant doubts as to whether a relatively small number of taxpayers would be able to cover the cost of maintaining roads for cars. People feared that the financial burden might be too great. At almost the same time as the advent of the automobile, Grisons had also made the expensive decision to establish the Rhaetian Railway (RhB). The RhB regarded the car as a comwithout reason – that the June date was chosen deliberately, because farmers would be up in the pastures and unable to vote no. More cars than households Cars were permitted with immediate effect thereafter. Pockets of opposition remained, and nails would sometimes be scattered on roads. And the police were unforgiving towards motorists who broke the speed limit (12 km/h in towns and villages; 40 km/h outside built-up areas), as Bernese author Balts Nill recounts in “GR!”, a The canton’s Alpine valleys would be engulfed in dust, noise and stench if nothing was done to stop them. Argument of those in favour of a car ban Higher, farther, faster, more beautiful? In search of somewhat unconventional Swiss records This edition: the canton that resisted the lure of the motor car longer than anywhere else. Swiss Review / October 2025 / No.4 16 Report
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