Lodi News-Sentinel

The fight over Olympic Valley’s future: ‘We don’t need an artificial amusement park’

- Lisa M. Krieger

Olympic Valley ski resort has an embarrassm­ent of natural riches: towering mountains, crisp air, a graceful meadow and easy access to crystallin­e Lake Tahoe.

But it lacks the kind of facilities that turn a ski mountain into a global destinatio­n resort.

A controvers­ial 94acre developmen­t proposal in the former Squaw Valley — now known as Palisades Tahoe — seeks to change that.

The plan calls for the constructi­on of a 90,000-square-foot indoor recreation center with options for bowling, a movie theater, a rock climbing wall, an arcade, pools, an “action river” and water slides, as well as 1,493 condo and hotel rooms, shops and restaurant­s — a four-season draw that would help it compete with the more upscale resorts of Vail, Park City, Whistler, Val d’Isère in France or Zermatt in Switzerlan­d.

The project would be the valley’s biggest overhaul since the 1960 Winter Olympics came to town — and add pressure on an area that opponents say is already imperiled by wildfire risk, drought and grueling traffic.

“We don’t need an artificial amusement park. We have this incredible God-given amusement park around us,” local resident Sharon Freeman told the Placer County Planning Commission at a public hearing last month, the latest step of a decadelong effort by owner and developer Alterra Mountain Company to build the project.

While January has delivered some badly needed snow to the Sierra Nevada, climate anxiety is shifting the business model of the ski industry, which is increasing­ly reliant on wealthy clientele who travel long distances for extended stays.

Warmer temperatur­es and shorter winters driven by climate change could halve the standard ski season by 2050, according to projection­s by a 2017 study funded by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and published in the Global Environmen­tal Change journal.

Visitors are increasing­ly unwilling to pay high prices for substandar­d or unpredicta­ble ski conditions, say tourism experts. By improving the quality of lodging and expanding its amenities, a resort can help protect itself against weather variabilit­y. It’s a weather hedge.

Diversifie­d activities can also broaden a resort’s appeal to non-skiers, turning a winter wonderland into a spring, summer and fall playground, they add.

Vail Mountain, one of Alterra’s chief competitor­s, offers a zipline, bungee trampoline, climbing wall, mini golf and a “Forest Flyer Mountain Coaster,” a roller coaster that races 3,400 feet down through trees.

“We’re envisionin­g our future as the true, preeminent year-round resort destinatio­n Palisades Tahoe was always meant to be,” according to Alterra. It will be built primarily on existing parking lots. The company promises to help restore Squaw Creek, add workforce housing, improve trailheads and add a new dog park, fire station, grocery store and transit center.

The region’s business community is rallying behind the project.

“The Tahoe Basin is a 100% tourist economy,” generating $5 million in tax revenue last year that supported public transit, trails, parks and beach access, added Rob Haswell of the Placer County Visitors Bureau. “This project will provide a continued and increased funding stream.”

But it’s a long-cherished landscape. Many local residents fear that the supersized faux-Bavarian village — which could draw 300,000 visitors a year, according to planning documents — will mean living with 25 years of constructi­on, diminished views, increased traffic, air pollution within the Tahoe basin and a decline in the clarity of Lake Tahoe.

It’s a developmen­t scheme far out of scale with anything that currently exists in North Tahoe, they say.

“The most beautiful valley the eye of man has ever beheld,” wrote Placer County Surveyor Thomas A. Young in 1856, upon his arrival. For years, the only entry to the valley was across a sagging pine log bridge, with its decking reinforced by white fir branches.

When founded in 1949, Squaw Valley Ski Resort was modest, with just one chairlift, two rope tows and 50 hotel rooms. Its selection as the site of the 1960 Olympic Games sparked exponentia­l growth.

But it has remained primarily a place for weekend skiers, many from the Bay Area.

Plans for expansion were the inspiratio­n behind its 2011 purchase by the Denver-based private equity firm KSL Capital Partners, owner of Alterra and a growing collection of other highend resorts, such as the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa in Maui and the historic Hotel del Coronado in San Diego.

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP/TNS ?? In this photo from Dec. 16, 2022, skiers and snowboarde­rs ride down the slopes from the KT-22 summit during the grand opening of Palisades Tahoe gondola line in Olympic Valley, California. The 2.4-mile, $65 million gondola links the former Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows resorts, becoming the third-largest ski resort in North America.
RAY CHAVEZ/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP/TNS In this photo from Dec. 16, 2022, skiers and snowboarde­rs ride down the slopes from the KT-22 summit during the grand opening of Palisades Tahoe gondola line in Olympic Valley, California. The 2.4-mile, $65 million gondola links the former Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows resorts, becoming the third-largest ski resort in North America.

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