Global Cooperation

3 things you probably didn't know about Davos

A worker removes snow from the roof of a building in Davos, Switzerland January 15, 2019. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann - RC13E89D4B60

A Davos rooftop: flat, unlike the usual Alpine style - and it's all because of the city's sanatorium history Image: REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann

Ceri Parker
Previously Commissioning Editor, Agenda, World Economic Forum
This article is part of: World Economic Forum Annual Meeting

Every year, the small, unassuming Swiss mountain city of Davos morphs into the setting for a gathering of global leaders and luminaries. CEOs and social entrepreneurs slither on icy pavements; news cameras beam broadcasts of Prime Ministers and Presidents to the world.

But away from the annual glare of publicity, Davos has a hidden history of culture and cooperation. Here are some of the lesser known facts about Davos the place, as well as the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting.

1. Davos is high. Very high. At 1,560 metres it's the highest city in Europe, and its location is inextricably linked to its history, culture and character. The dry Alpine air established Davos as a setting for sanatoriums in the nineteenth century, offering some respite to TB sufferers before the age of antibiotics. Nobel Prize-winning writer Thomas Mann set his novel Der Zauberberg, or The Magic Mountain, in Davos, drawing on his experience accompanying his wife to a sanatorium.

In the author's own words: "If I have one wish for the posthumous fame of my work, it is let it be said that it encaptures a zest for life, even though it was the product of death."

TB patients would rest outdoors in all weathers, swathed in blankets Image: Davos.ch

Bonus fact: The roofs of Davos are flat rather than sloped in the traditional chalet style because in the sanatorium age, architects designed large, light-filled rooms to treat ailing patients. The roofs actually incline slightly towards the middle, allowing snow to melt and drip through a central gutter, once providing drinking water.

2. The creator of Sherlock Holmes was a Davos ski pioneer. Arthur Conan Doyle, the British author best known for his pipe-smoking sleuth, also spent time in Davos with his tubercular wife. Not much given to rest and relaxation, he was one of the earliest British proponents of Alpine skiing - now a mainstay of the local economy. In 1894, he completed an audacious ski tour across a high mountain pass from Davos to Arosa, clad in tweed and using equipment some may now call elementary.

Arthur Conan Doyle in action Image: Davos.ch

The sanatoriums may have long since shut down or turned into hotels for hale and healthy tourists, but the connection between Davos and culture continues to this day. Every year, the World Economic Forum honours artists who make a positive impact on the world with the Crystal Awards. This year's winners, as pictured below, are the conductor Marin Alsop; Haifaa Al-Mansour, Saudi's first female film director; and the broadcaster Sir David Attenborough.

3. The World Economic Forum first came to Davos in 1971. Back then, it was known as European Management Symposium, it lasted two weeks, and the world looked very different.

Professor Klaus Schwab opens the first meeting in Davos Image: World Economic Forum

Professor Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum, pioneered multistakeholder theory: the idea that business should behave responsibly to everyone affected by its activities. This has guided Davos ever since, as it expanded to include leaders from every sphere of society, from social entrepreneurs to civil society activists.

Snowy, remote Davos was first chosen as a location so that participants would feel relaxed enough to speak frankly, in an atmosphere of mutual respect and cooperation. This became known as the “Davos Spirit,” and is still the hallmark of all Forum gatherings.

The Co-Chairs of the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting 2018 Image: World Economic Forum

From the oil crisis to the collapse of communism, from the rise of China to the echoes of #metoo, the major trends in recent world history have played out in Davos.

The image below captures a key moment marking the end of apartheid. South African State President Frederik de Klerk shared a stage with Nelson Mandela in 1992, dismantling the system that stripped black South Africans of their rights. A former political prisoner, Mandela attended subsequent meetings in Davos, seizing the opportunity to rebuild South Africa's economy after the injustices of the past.

Image: World Economic Forum
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