Beck-Peccoz Regional Museum of Alpine Fauna
The Beck-Peccoz Regional Museum of Alpine Fauna is a natural history museum dedicated to the wildlife of the Valle d’Aosta, located in the alpine town of Champoluc in the upper Ayas valley. The museum bears the name of the Beck-Peccoz family, an aristocratic dynasty closely associated with the social and cultural history of the Ayas valley, and houses a significant collection of specimens representing the mammals, birds, and other fauna of the high-Alpine ecosystem. It is one of the principal natural history institutions of the region and a reference point for understanding the ecology and conservation of the western Alps.
At a glance
- Type
- Regional natural history museum — Alpine fauna
- Period
- 20th century (collections assembled from earlier periods)
- Style
- Alpine vernacular museum building
- Location
- Champoluc, Ayas, Valle d’Aosta, Italy
Overview
The museum is situated in Champoluc (elevation approximately 1,570 m), the main village of the Ayas valley — one of the four major lateral valleys of the Valle d’Aosta that cut northward into the Monte Rosa massif. The collection encompasses taxidermied specimens, osteological material, and interpretive displays covering the full range of vertebrates found in the alpine and subalpine zones of the western Alps. The museum serves both scientific and educational purposes, addressing school groups, naturalists, and general visitors drawn to the region’s outdoor heritage.
History
The Beck-Peccoz family, originally of Milanese origins, established a strong presence in the Ayas valley during the nineteenth century, contributing to the opening of the valley to early alpinism and tourism. The family’s interest in natural history led to the systematic collection of alpine fauna specimens over several generations. The museum as a regional institution was formalised in the twentieth century under the auspices of the Valle d’Aosta autonomous regional government, which has developed a network of specialist museums reflecting the region’s natural, linguistic, and cultural distinctiveness.
What you see
The museum displays specimens of the principal large mammals of the Alps — ibex, chamois, red deer, roe deer, marmot, and fox among them — alongside a comprehensive bird collection covering raptors, corvids, and high-altitude species such as the ptarmigan and Alpine chough. Interpretive panels explain the ecology of each species and its relationship to the alpine landscape across the seasons. The museum building itself, set in a mountain village environment, offers a low-key and genuinely instructive counterpoint to the region’s ski and outdoor leisure infrastructure.
Cultural significance
The museum reflects the Valle d’Aosta’s longstanding commitment to documenting its distinctive natural environment as an expression of regional identity. The Beck-Peccoz name also connects the collection to the broader history of nineteenth-century alpine exploration, when aristocratic and bourgeois families across Europe combined a passion for hunting with nascent naturalist science.
Practical information
- Address
- Champoluc, 11020 Ayas AO, Italy
- Coordinates
- 45.7756° N, 7.8271° E
- Hours
- Check official website or Valle d’Aosta regional museums portal for seasonal opening times
- Admission
- Check official website for current ticket prices
Getting there
Champoluc is reached by road from Verrès on the A5 motorway via the SS506. Regional buses connect Verrès and Champoluc. The valley has no rail service; a car or bus is required from the main Aosta valley floor. The journey from Aosta city takes approximately 1 hour by car.
