A Remarkable Year in Lifts

The new Lone Peak Tram at Big Sky Resort on opening day, December 19th.

From the new Lone Peak Tram at Big Sky to the longest and fastest gondola in North America at Steamboat to lift served expansions and eight seat chairlifts, 2023 was an exciting year in lifts. This year will go down in history not for the mere number of projects but the sheer size and variety of lifts resorts installed.

In Idaho, Schweitzer embarked on an ambitious project to build a new day skier-focused base area, anchored by a new Leitner-Poma detachable quad.

Sixty one new lifts were completed for this winter, five fewer than last year. A handful projects were announced but later postponed for various reasons, including a new gondola at Homewood, a real estate access lift at Tremblant and a high speed quad at Mt. Holly. If all contracted projects had come to fruition, the total would have been in line with 2022, the best year for lift construction since 1999.

The Rocky Mountain region accounted for the largest share of new lifts this winter, with the Steamboat and Sun Valley undertaking two of the largest projects ever in North America. At Steamboat, Doppelmayr constructed the record-breaking second section of the Wild Blue Gondola while Leitner-Poma simultaneously built a 6,300 foot detachable quad servicing the Mahogany Ridge expansion. Sun Valley and Doppelmayr partnered to build the largest chairlift in North America by vertical transport feet per hour, a six pack called Challenger rising 3,138 vertical feet. Sun Valley also built a high speed quad that would be the biggest lift of the year in a normal year. Winter Park’s new Wild Spur Express is also notable in the Rockies, featuring 105 six passenger chairs and three stations.

Snowriver, Michigan debuted its first detachable this month, a six pack called Voyageur Express.

The Midwest also enjoyed a strong year with a dozen projects, primarily in the state of Michigan. Boyne Resorts built three new lifts at its Michigan resorts and two independent Lower Peninsula resorts added Skytrac fixed grip chairlifts. The Upper Peninsula gained its first-ever detachable lift, a Doppelmayr six pack called the Voyageur Express at Snowriver.

The new Raven quad at Whitewater, British Columbia on its third day of operation.

Canada bounced back nicely from an extended Covid slump with eight projects from coast to coast. The country’s first two eight place chairlifts debuted nearly simultaneously east and west at Mount St. Louis Moonstone, Ontario and Whistler Blackcomb, British Columbia. The Moonstone lift is the highest capacity lift ever installed in the US or Canada with a design throughput of 4,250 skiers per hour. A number of Canadian resorts poured concrete this summer for additional lifts set to debut in 2024-25 including at Grouse Mountain, Sunshine Village, Sun Peaks and Whistler Blackcomb.

The Pacific states saw a slight decline in lift construction after a strong 2022. Mammoth Mountain, Mt. Hood Meadows and Mt. Bachelor all debuted large six packs replacing first generation detachable quads.

Sunday River debuted its second D-Line bubble lift, Barker 6.

The biggest decline was the east coast, where the number of new lifts fell 60 percent year over year. Berkshire East debuted its first-ever detachable lift and Vail-owned Attitash replaced one of the most hated lifts in the east – the Summit Triple. The New York Olympic Regional Development Authority added new lifts at all three of its mountains, including a unique high speed quad with angle station at Whiteface called The Notch.

Due to topography, Whiteface utilized an angled alignment for The Notch.

The mix of lifts was very similar to 2022, with detachables slightly outpacing fixed grips. Only two gondolas opened this year, one at Sterling Vineyards in California and the other at Steamboat. More popular were bubble chairlifts, which joined fleets at The Highlands, Sunday River and Wasatch Peaks Ranch. At Big Sky, the new Lone Peak Tram became the first large aerial tram in North America in 15 years. Bottineau Winter Park in North Dakota built the lone T-Bar this year, replacing an old Hall T-Bar.

New Doppelmayr T-Bar at Bottineau Winter Park, North Dakota.

One exciting development this year was terrain expansions. In Colorado, Aspen Mountain, Keystone and Steamboat dropped ropes on a combined 1,350 acres of new terrain, all serviced by new detachable chairlifts from Leitner-Poma. Boyne Resorts also invested heavily to expand footprints in the east at Loon Mountain and Sugarloaf. Elsewhere, Trollhaugen, Wisconsin, Lee Canyon, Nevada and Whitewater, British Columbia constructed fixed grip quad chairs servicing new trail pods.

A number of resorts added infill lifts to boost capacity on existing terrain where there was no prior lift. Examples include the DeMoisy Express six pack at Snowbasin and a new beginner area at Wolf Creek, Colorado. There aren’t expansions per se but dramatically improve access to previously underutilized terrain.

Lutsen, Minnesota added a six pack in an all new alignment on Eagle Mountain this season.

The balance of projects, 47 to be exact, were simply new machines replacing old machines. 59 lifts were removed from service in 2023 at an average age of 40 years. A whopping 17 Riblets retired along with five Halls, four Yans and four Borvigs.

At Wild Mountain, Minnesota, Skytrac built the first new lift in 40 years to replace a Borvig quad.

Doppelmayr and the HTI Group (Leitner-Poma and Skytrac parent) remain locked in a fiercely competitive duopoly, vying for business not only in North America but worldwide. Independent American manufacturer Partek did build two fixed grip lifts in Minnesota and Connecticut this year, continuing its history of serving small operators. France-based MND Group, which celebrated its first detachable lift in North America last year, did not install any aerial lifts in this part of the world this year, though they did supply a handful of conveyors. SkyTrans also didn’t build any lifts, leaving just three players in the aerial lift market in 2023. Overall Doppelmayr achieved 54 percent market share in North America while Leitner-Poma and Skytrac commanded 43 percent by number of projects.

On the fixed grip side of the business, Leitner-Poma’s Alpha and Skytrac’s Monarch combined for 50 percent market share, besting Doppelmayr’s 42 percent. Doppelmayr led the detachable side with 58 percent share. Doppelmayr’s detachable projects split 50-50 between premium D-Line and standard UNI-G models.

Crest 6 at Brighton, one of nine new D-Line chairlifts built this year across the United States and Canada.

With 60 of 61 new lifts at ski resorts, Sterling Vineyards in California built the only non-ski lift in North America this year. Their new eight passenger gondola runs in a triangle alignment and carries riders to a hilltop tasting experience. Manufacturers completed zero urban projects this year in North America despite manufacturers’ best efforts and successes in other global markets.

The eight passenger aerial gondola opened in October at Sterling Vineyards in Calistoga, California.

Only three resorts opted to install used lifts this offseason, the lowest number in decades. Red Lodge reinstalled Alta’s former detachable triple, China Peak strung up Jackson Hole’s old Thunder chair and Sugarloaf refurbished a high speed quad from sister property Big Sky. Bringing old lifts up to current code is complex and many resorts don’t have the institutional knowledge and labor to install a used lift in house any more.

The Stache, a Garaventa CTEC relocation at Red Lodge Mountain.

I like to end with a chart comparing all the year’s lifts by size, measured in vertical transport feet per hour. You can see just how huge Steamboat’s Wild Blue and Sun Valley’s Challenger projects were compared to others this season. At the other end of the spectrum, Wolf Creek built the smallest new lift of the year, rising just 97 vertical feet and moving 1,200 skiers per hour.

Kehr’s chair at Stevens Pass, one of Vail Resorts’ five lift projects this year.

New this year I added a chart showing just how many lifts are being built by multi-resort conglomerates versus independents. Boyne Resorts led the pack with the new Big Sky tram, three six place D-Lines and five fixed grip chairlifts. Alterra completed major additions at six of its resorts while Vail Resorts added lifts at five of its mountains. Other multi-lift customers included Grand America Hotels & Resorts (parent company of Sun Valley and Snowbasin) and Midwest Family Ski Resorts. Still, almost half the customers for new lifts order just one.

The very first new lift to open this season was Breckenridge’s Five SuperChair in mid-November.

Unlike last year on this day, nearly all new lifts are complete and load tested, a testament to hard work and an improved supply chain. For the few that aren’t open, the reason has nothing to do with shipping delays or labor shortages but a shortage of snow. The poor start this season across the industry may impact lift sales in future seasons. Despite winter’s absence, many operators have already committed to new lifts for next season. Big Sky just announced the longest eight seater in the world and Powder Mountain plans to build four new lifts in one summer. Dozens of other projects are in the pipeline and I hope you will follow along in 2024 as the lift business moves forward. Happy New Year.

Castle Mountain Plans First Detachable Quad

Canada’s second largest resort without a high speed lift plans to build one soon. Castle Mountain, located in Southwestern Alberta, today announced it has reached an agreement in principle to acquire Sunshine Village’s outgoing Angel Express for an undisclosed sum. The 1988 Poma detachable quad will be retired this spring to make way for a new six person bubble chair at Sunshine.

“We are excited to be acquiring such a great lift from a reputable industry partner,” said Dean Parkinson, Castle Mountain Resort General Manager. “It is a great thing to be keeping this lift in Alberta and we appreciate Sunshine’s willingness to work with us on this purchase,” he continued. No location or timeline for reinstallation was announced. One logical scenario would see the quad replace the Sundance triple, Castle’s main out-of-base lift which opened in 1996. The used detachable could also replace the Huckleberry or Tamarack lifts. Perhaps more likely than either of those locations is an entirely new alignment. Castle’s latest master plan identified 10 different locations for possible future lifts as the resort grows. “When information is available on the reinstallation location and the expected timeline, we expect to share this in future press releases,” said Castle.

Once this project is complete, the largest remaining North American mountains without detachable lifts will be Red Mountain, British Columbia (4,200 acres); Discovery, Montana (2,200 acres); Bridger Bowl, Montana (2,000 acres); Lost Trail Powder Mountain, Idaho/Montana (1,800 acres); and Silverton Mountain, Colorado (1,800 acres).

News Roundup: Ropetaxi

Big Sky to Build World’s Longest Eight Seat Chairlift

Big Sky will become the first US ski area to replace a six place chairlift with a larger machine next summer on the north flank of Lone Peak. Replacing Six Shooter, the new North Side 8 will be the longest eight place in the world and crown Big Sky as the only North American resort with two eight places and three bubble D-Lines. The latest-generation Doppelmayr lift will run at six meters per second, reducing ride time out of Madison base by 30 percent.

Big Sky Resort parent company Boyne Resorts is partnering with local real estate developer Lone Mountain Land Company to realize this ambitious project, which will feature 80 chairs and 29 towers along an approximately 8,700 foot alignment. The outgoing Six Shooter is only 20 years old but was designed for a different era when Moonlight Basin operated separately from neighboring Big Sky. The two ski areas merged in 2013 and Six Shooter quickly became a bottleneck. The Garaventa CTEC lift can only move 1,800 skiers per hour and suffers periodic down time in part due to a line curve necessitated by previous property boundaries. Now that Big Sky owns Moonlight Basin ski terrain, the new lift can run in a straight alignment and carry nearly twice as many riders. “Replacing Six Shooter has long been an ask of our guests,” said Troy Nedved, Big Sky Resort’s General Manager. “The lift replacement doubles the uphill capacity at one of our last remaining pinch points, and will enhance what is one of the resort’s coldest lift rides with bubbles and heated seats.”

Up to 2,745 skiers per hour will load the new lift about 40 feet uphill of the current Six Shooter drive station to create more queuing space. In addition to now-standard Big Sky features of blue bubbles, a loading conveyor and a four ring direct drive, North Side 8 will also feature automatic lowering/locking lap bars and the United States’ first Fatzer Performa-DT haul rope for a smoother ride. Chairs will be parked inside both terminals at night rather than a separate parking building, another first for Big Sky. Construction is set to begin this spring with opening planned for late 2024.

The under construction Explorer Gondola is set to debut for the 2025-26 ski season at Big Sky.

News of North Side 8 comes at an exciting time in Big Sky just days after the new Lone Peak Tram debuted as the latest component of the Big Sky 2025 capital push. “Big Sky Resort is at the forefront of transforming the North American ski experience by adding the most advanced and comfortable lift system to our mountain,” noted Nedved. “This lift replacement, our seventh in as many years, supports our long-standing reputation for having some of the shortest lift lines in the Rockies.” Big Sky also recently commenced construction of a two stage D-Line gondola running from the Mountain Village to the new tram. A second two stage D-Line gondola is planned to link the new One&Only Moonlight Basin to the Madison base area and North Side 8.

Sun Valley Plans Next New Lift on Seattle Ridge

Fresh off replacing both major lifts on the Warm Springs side of Bald Mountain, Sun Valley today announced its next lift project will enhance the guest experience on Seattle Ridge. Following the debut of new four and six place lifts just last week, Doppelmayr will return to Baldy in 2024 to replace the Seattle Ridge detachable quad with a detachable six pack, increasing capacity by 20 percent. Interestingly the lift will not be a D-Line like the just-opened Challenger but rather a UNI-G à la Flying Squirrel and Broadway. The project is currently under Forest Service review alongside a future Christmas replacement as Sun Valley works to retire its entire fleet of seven Yan detachables built in the 1980s and 1990s.

“Seattle Ridge is home to some of Sun Valley’s most beloved intermediate, family-friendly terrain and more recently with the Sunrise expansion, some of its best off-piste terrain,” said Pete Sonntag, Vice President and General Manager of Sun Valley Resort. “Over the last five years, we’ve been able to increase the skiable terrain serviced by Seattle Ridge chair by over 200 acres, and we believe the chairlift upgrade is coming at the perfect time as we continue our investment in the mountain experience at Sun Valley,” he noted. Construction is expected to begin in April with the new Seattle Ridge six place opening to skiers late next year.

News Roundup: Cost Overruns

Bartholet Ends Detachable Partnership with MND

After five years of working together, Bartholet of Switzerland and MND Group of France have terminated their joint venture partnership effective December 13th. Under the agreement, MND Ropeways utilized Bartholet’s detachable lift technology in select markets such as France and the United States while continuing to offer its own surface lifts and fixed grip chairlifts. One final MND-Bartholet detachable project under construction in France will be completed as planned.

The end of MND’s deal with Bartholet comes as little surprise. HTI Group, the conglomerate behind Leitner Ropeways and Poma, purchased a majority stake in Bartholet in March of 2022. Bartholet and MND only completed one project jointly in the United States, the Tecumseh Express at Waterville Valley, New Hampshire in 2022. That project was contracted before HTI bought Bartholet and MND hasn’t sold a chairlift in the United States since. Bartholet continues to operate as a subsidiary of HTI in Europe with a product line distinct from Leitner and Poma.

Going forward, MND Ropeways will need to find another partner or utilize its own technology in order to continue offering detachable lifts. Prior to the Bartholet deal, MND built one detachable chairlift in La Plagne, France, which opened in March 2017 but has suffered periodic technical problems. It is rumored MND may outline its future detachable plans at the Mountain Planet trade show this spring.

News Roundup: Winter Maintenance