BC Business Magazine

MATRIX

Lift upgrades are happy events for the skiers who use them but otherwise not especially remarkable—except when half a dozen B.C. ski resorts hop aboard at the same time. Whether there's something in the air (apart from lifts) or it's just a coincidenc­e, t

- By Felicity Stone

Some of the province's biggest ski resorts get a lift

BIG WHITE SKI RESORT in Kelowna once had the oldest triple chairlift in Canada, built in 1979. Not anymore. Now its Powder Chair is a $3.9-million four-passenger fixed-grip Leitner-poma, able to carry 2,400 passengers an hour.

RED MOUNTAIN RESORT in Rossland has purchased a triple chairlift to bypass the bottleneck that occurs at Motherlode on busy days. Look for it to start operating next winter between Grey Mountain and Silverlode, opening up five new runs at Topping Creek.

SILVERSTAR MOUNTAIN RESORT

northeast of Vernon has a new eight-person gondola. The Des Schumann Summit Express whisks passengers from the village to the summit in four and a half minutes–nearly three times faster than the old double chairlift built in 1970. SUN PEAKS RESORT north of Kamloops is installing a $4-million four-passenger fixedgrip chairlift to Orient Ridge. It will serve previously underutili­zed terrain plus two new runs: Main Village Connector and Hasta La Vista.

WHISTLER BLACKCOMB

has a trio of new lifts. A 10-passenger gondola from the Upper Village to the Peak to Peak connection replaces the Wizard and Solar Coaster quad chairlifts; the Catskinner triple chair is now a high-speed quad; and the Emerald Express quad has been upgraded to a high-speed six-seater.

WHITEWATER SKI RESORT near Nelson ditched its double-lift Summit Chair, in use since the resort opened in 1976, in favour of a brand new Leitner-poma fixed-grip quad chairlift last winter.

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