- Telluride’s ski patrol strike ends after 13 days.
- Le Massif partially reopens with limited hours as a strike drags on.
- More than 500 people spend most of an overnight atop the Palm Springs Tramway following a technical issue, now resolved.
- Nearly 200 are rescued safely from Whitefish’s Big Mountain Express in a multi-hour rope evacuation.
- Sugarloaf’s SuperQuad goes down due to a gearbox issue.
- Leitner-Poma will build the new Canyons Village gondola at Park City.
- Anakeesta’s new LPOA gondola to be called Crystal Express.
- Doppelmayr wins the contract for Killington Snowdon with a total project cost of $7.04 million.
- Doppelmayr also will build the world’s longest urban gondola in Mexico City with 12 stations, 462 cabins and 114 towers over 9.4 miles.
- Wildcat reopens its beginner chair after a year-long closure.
- Castle Mountain’s new map shows lift expansion on Mt. Haig.
- A state evaluation following the Park City gondola mishap last week notes no mechanical malfunction but says “a gondola cabin leaving a terminal with a passenger being suspended by the foot is not acceptable and has the potential for extremely serious injuries.” During a Utah Passenger Ropeway Safety Committee Meeting, Park City’s Director of Mountain Operations Nick Dana notes “we did have a loading incident on Red Pine Gondola last week so we’re continuing to look into that and work with the manufacturer to investigate into our door monitoring switches there at top of Red Pine Gondola.”
- Also from the UPRSC, the Forest Service notes several recent chair detachments on Riblet and Stadeli lifts in Montana.

How is the Snowdon project 7 million? Heaven’s Gate at the Bush last year was only 4 million, and it was a more difficult alignment. Is this just tariff related or am I missing something?
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Snowdon is slatted to be a detachable six-pack, which is a much more complicated and expensive type of lift than a fixed-grip quad, like Heaven’s Gate, even if the latter has a more challenging alignment
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That is incorrect. It is also going to be a CLF-4. Look at the act 250 page as well as the announcement on here about the lift from a little while back.
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Yes, Snowdon is slated to be a Doppelmayr 4-CLF, or fixed-grip quad. I think you’re confusing the new lift with the current one, which is a detachable bubble six-pack or 6-CLD-B.
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Whoops, I think I got Snowdon confused with Superstar. I apologize for the misinformation and I don’t really know why Snowdon would be more expensive than Heavens Gate.
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I’m sure the tariff impact is part of it (this would be a great reporting angle, Peter!), but there’s also more that goes into a project like this than just the lift.
It looks like they have 7.5 acres of earthwork and regrading, and some reconfiguration and a tight construction area at the base. Plus, it’s not a short fixed-grip, with 20 towers.
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I feel like the Whitefish/Kalispell media (and social media) is unnecessarily harsh on WMR. It’s not common, obviously, but it’s not that unusual to do a rope evac. There are procedures in place to do it safely and efficiently. The media and social media peanut gallery give the impression that the WMR situation (What? Two rope evacs in three years?) is unique. It isn’t!
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