The history of Dom Frata dates back to 1928, when the caretaker of the Auersperg forests in the vicinity of Brezova Rebra lived in an old forest hut. During the Second World War, NOB activists and partisans gathered in the forest hut. In 1942, a forest hut was burned in an Italian offensive. After the Second World War, the hut was renovated and a new Partisan Home was built. Tourist home Frata, which was intended for catering activities along the famous Trdin footpath. After the independence of the Republic of Slovenia, Frata burned to the ground again in 1992. Today, Dom Frata is a beautifully renovated and tourism-oriented facility, past which many footpaths lead: the turn-off of the European footpath E7, Trdinova pot, the Ljubljana-Zagreb mountain footpath and the Straža-Frata forestry footpath.