The Herald on Sunday

Town in crisis The race to save Aviemore

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TIME is running out to save Scotland’s iconic ski resort.

The Cairngorm mountain resort has been hit with the closure of its funicular railway – and a recent inspection suggests there is little chance it will be open in time for the ski season.

The problem is causing real concern for local businesses, and local MSP Kate Forbes said the situation was “potentiall­y devastatin­g”. Proposals for a community buyout could offer a lifeline – but campaigner­s want action now to prevent disaster.

I would be delighted if the buyout was brought forward in a desirable timescale. However, we need action now

As another winter approaches, and with snow already falling on our mountains, Scotland’s ski resorts are beginning to open for business with high hopes for a bumper season. But at one resort – possibly the best known of them all – the outlook is not so positive. Sandra Dick visits Aviemore, and finds a race against time to avert disaster for an entire community

TIME is running out for the Cairngorm mountain resort – and the community that relies on what was once the jewel in the crown of Scotland’s winter sports scene is not prepared to stand by and let it happen.

In a race to prevent the resort – and the neighbouri­ng town of Aviemore – collapsing into terminal decline, local people and politician­s are mobilising.

Scotland’s largest and potentiall­y most complex community buyout is being compiled in a bid to create a new, all-yearround attraction. The plans, by the Aviemore and Glenmore Community Trust, include building a network of summer mountain bike trails, an Alpine bobsleigh-style coaster, an education centre, and a self-sufficient hydro electric scheme.

But, most importantl­y, it is a way for the community to protect its livelihood amid mounting concerns over the future of the Highlands and Islands Enterprise-owned ski and snowboard resort, which has seen years of falling market share, and accusation­s of poor management and lack of investment.

The resort’s prospects for this winter have been dealt a major blow with confirmati­on that the £19.5 million funicular railway, which transports visitors from car park to upper slopes, is out of action amid safety concerns for the structure.

The funicular railway’s foundation­s are being inspected by specialist engineers who are due to report on its future next month. However, by then the winter weather is expected to make significan­t repair work unlikely until next spring.

Concerns over the railway’s future and the impact on snow sports enthusiast­s who have already bought 2018/19 season tickets follows the dismantlin­g of the resort’s chairlifts last autumn. That move sparked fury among snow sports enthusiast­s and raised further questions over the management of the area at a time when rival centres appear to be flourishin­g.

If it was to go ahead, a community buyout would dwarf other land-grab projects in terms of scale and potential financial implicatio­ns.

While numbers visiting Cairngorm for snow sports have fallen, with the resort’s market share sliding from 40.6 per cent in 2013 to 23.6 per cent last year, a buoyant winter season of skiing and snowboardi­ng is estimated to be worth £10 million to the Speyside economy.

Community buyout campaigner­s say questions over the funicular railway – essential for transporti­ng learner skiers and snowboarde­rs to upper levels – plus a surprise decision by the HIE-appointed resort operator, Cheshire-based Natural Retreats, to close its ski school operation for the season, has brought the future of the mountain to a crossroads.

Aviemore and Glenmore Community Trust director Mike Dearman said: “The operators’ announceme­nt not to operate a ski school seems to say that they have no faith in their own ability to run skiing on the mountain.

“People are worried, but in some ways it has galvanised them. We believe there’s a positive future for Cairngorm snow sports, and some relatively small investment could move it forwards.”

The buyout proposals suggest AGCT could take over ownership of the land and assets from HIE, and inherit the 25-year lease deal with Natural Retreats. The community trust would then work with the operator to seek fresh funding streams, allowing HIE to revert to its traditiona­l role of supporting the business and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

It suggests an £860,000 investment in hydro-electric schemes at Coire Cas and Coire na Ciste which would provide an income stream plus power lifts and snow-making equipment.

A £1m snow factory would produce cover for lower slopes, while 6km of mountain bike trails and a year-round Alpine coaster – a winding track which would carry thrillseek­ers down the mountainsi­de – would attract summer visitors, bringing much-needed investment and seasonal work.

Drew Hendry, MP for Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey, said he would be “delighted” if a community buyout were to proceed.

“There needs to be a change,” he said. “Natural Retreats has lost the confidence of local people. Communicat­ion with the public has been awful. They have shown an inability to engage properly and there has been an unacceptab­le sequence of events from the closing of the ski school

to a lack of informatio­n of the problems affecting the funicular.

“I would be delighted if [the buyout] was brought forward in a desirable timescale. However, we need action now and the community proposal would take some time to get together.”

He added: “I’ve contacted [ Rural Economy Secretary] Fergus Ewing, and I am asking HIE and Natural Retreats to get around the table to sort something out. We can’t go through another season where we have got skiers in other resorts and not coming to Cairngorm.”

Kate Forbes, MSP for Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch, said: “The situation with the funicular has brought things to a head and prompted a lot of concerns. The conversati­on over who runs the mountain has gone on for over two years. While there is a community proposal, it’s one thing saying the current operators are not good enough, and another to come up with an alternativ­e.”

Campaigner­s anxious to secure the future of snow sports in the area believe the time is right for the buyout.

Alan Brattey, of Aviemore Business Associatio­n, said: “I have no doubt that the Cairngorm mountain business will come to local businesses and the AGCT to manage. The plans they have are substantia­l and will drive forward the need for radical change.”

Questions have been raised over whether the funicular railway can be repaired and, if so, whether the repairs will enable the facility to run reliably for many years to come.

Susan Smith, business developmen­t manager at HIE, defended the management of the snow sport facility.

She said: “It’s been hard for the operator in many ways because there was a significan­t requiremen­t initially to understand the mountain environmen­t and business opportunit­y. Running a mountain business is tough and complex and requires significan­t amount of resources to get it right. We understand the frustratio­n of the community.”

Smith added that the issues affecting the funicular railway were not foreseen. “This came up under a routine inspection. It’s a complex engineerin­g structure and specialist bridge engineers need to look at it.

“Health and safety is paramount.”

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 ?? Photograph: Peter Jolly ?? Cairngorm mountain resort is facing a string of serious issues which threaten the viability of the entire community
Photograph: Peter Jolly Cairngorm mountain resort is facing a string of serious issues which threaten the viability of the entire community

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