Daily Press (Sunday)

Faster rides and shorter waits for US slopes

Ski resorts now sporting notable chairlifts, gondolas

- By Christophe­r Steiner

Major ski resorts across North America have plowed hundreds of millions of dollars into concrete, steel and padded seats in recent years, with 2022 ushering in a remarkable number of new chairlifts and gondolas. New lifts tend to be safer, faster, have greater capacity, and can include heated seats and wind visors.

The flurry of constructi­on comes as many of the United States’ best-known ski lifts have been operating for 25 years or more, and require overhauls or full replacemen­t. This past winter was also the busiest yet at U.S. ski resorts, with nearly 61 million visits despite dismal snow totals in January and February across the West. Without terrain expansion, the only way to curb lines is to increase speed and uphill capacity.

Many projects curried controvers­y, including two previously approved replacemen­t lifts at Utah’s Park City Mountain Resort that were blocked by the local planning commission for fears that their added capacity would lure more visitor traffic to Park City. The mountain’s owner, Vail Resorts, responded by shipping the chairs, a six-person lift and an eight-person lift, to British Columbia’s Whistler Blackcomb, where they will open next winter.

Rebuking the city’s move, the ski resort’s chief operating officer, Deirdra Walsh, said at the time, “Chairlift tourism does not exist.”

That may be true when it comes to straightfo­rward replacemen­t chairs, but many of this winter’s new lifts offer compelling upgrades and improvemen­ts.

Here’s a guide to the most notable new lifts opening across the United States this winter.

Palisades Tahoe, California — Base to Base Gondola:

When the parent company of the erstwhile Squaw Valley purchased Alpine Meadows in 2011, it merged two ski resorts known for some of the steepest terrain in the Sierra Nevada, totaling 6,000 acres. The ski areas, now under one name, Palisades Tahoe, have previously only been connected via shuttle bus. The $65-million, eight-passenger Base to Base Gondola, which spans 2.4 miles, will make Palisades the third-largest contiguous ski resort in North America, behind Whistler Blackcomb and Park City. From the Palisades base, the gondola will ascend the resort’s famed KT-22 terrain and let skiers unload there before descending to the Alpine Meadows base area.

Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, Wyoming — Thunder:

This chairlift will replace a 28-yearold four-person lift that brought skiers from roughly mid-mountain to some of the upper reaches at Jackson Hole. Other than the resort’s storied tram, Thunder is the only lift that gets skiers to the mountain’s Sublette lift and the steep terrain it services, including the narrow Alta Chutes and the uninterrup­ted descents of the Hobacks. The old Thunder’s chairs were “fixed-grip,” meaning

they were rigidly attached to the lift’s cable. Many newer chairs, including the new Thunder, detach from the cable and slow down for loading and unloading, making it easier and safer for skiers to get on and off. Lifts with detachable chairs can be run faster — the new Thunder, which climbs 1,466 vertical feet, will halve the old seven-minute ride time.

Telluride Ski Resort, Colorado — Plunge:

Plunge lords over some of the best terrain in North American skiing, with steep and consistent north-facing slopes covering 2,100 vertical feet. The top of Plunge, known as Chair 9, nears 12,000 feet and gives skiers a bevy of choices: some of the most sustained steep bump runs in North America, groomed runs sheer enough to slow the sharpest of experts and forested terrain that twists between subalpine firs and Engelmann spruce. The old Plunge lift, a fixed-grip triple chair, had been turning since 1985. The new detachable four-seater will increase uphill capacity by 70% to 1,800 skiers per hour and cut a 13-minute ride almost in half.

Sunday River, Maine — Jordan 8:

Maine’s flagship ski resort has designs on expansion in the future and the start of those plans includes the Jordan 8, which replaces the Jordan Express. While riders in the old chair could be whipped by winds, Jordan 8 will be enclosed by a red-tinted bubble and offer individual heated seats for up to eight passengers. The chairs will weigh more than a ton each, but newer technologi­es from the Austrian lift manufactur­er Doppelmayr will make this among the fastest chairs in North America, moving up to 3,200 people per hour.

Grand Targhee Resort, Wyoming — Colter:

As Jackson Hole’s slopes have grown more crowded and its population has become, by some measures, the richest in the United States, there has been a spillover of homebuyers across Teton Pass into Idaho. Those on the Idaho side, near the towns of Driggs and Victor, can choose to ski Jackson and brave the pass — whose steep grades are often frosted by snow — or they can head to the increasing­ly popular Grand Targhee. The resort, still sleepy compared with Jackson Hole, has ambitious plans of expansion. The first step is the new six-passenger Colter lift, which heads up Peaked Mountain. This will be the first lift-serviced terrain opened at Targhee in 20 years. The 600 new acres give Targhee 30% more area and offer steeper pitches compared with most of the resort. Colter will give skiers access to terrain only reachable previously via Targhee’s now-retired snow cats, whose treads let them carry people over the snow.

Waterville Valley Resort, New Hampshire — Tecumseh Express:

The new six-person, high-speed chairlift replaces what was the first high-speed lift in the state. This will be the first detachable lift built in the U.S. by France’s MND Ropeways and will feature ergonomic seats from Porsche Design Studio, as well as a bubble that can be lowered over the chair to protect riders from New Hampshire’s winter winds.

Whitefish Mountain Resort, Montana — Snow Ghost Express:

As Whitefish, once branded as Big Mountain, became more popular, it coped by building out its base area and lodging — the next phase is upgrading its lifts. To reach the resort’s summit and its more interestin­g terrain, skiers at the newer Base Lodge area have needed to board at least two chairs. The six-person Snow Ghost chair fixes that, as it will deliver up to 2,200 skiers an hour straight from Base Lodge to near the summit within seven minutes. Snow Ghost replaces Chair 4, which terminated farther down the mountain and was installed in 1978, before the constructi­on of Base Lodge.

 ?? BLAKE KESSLER/PALISADES TAHOE ?? The new Base to Base Gondola at Palisades Tahoe in California spans 2.4 miles.
BLAKE KESSLER/PALISADES TAHOE The new Base to Base Gondola at Palisades Tahoe in California spans 2.4 miles.

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