Every Tuesday, I feature my favorite Instagram photos from around the lift world.
Ski Santa Fe to Reopen Lift Tuesday Following Grip Slip Incident
A full triple chair slid into another chair carrying three people at Ski Santa Fe, New Mexico Saturday, leading to a partial rope evacuation of the Tesuque Peak lift. No injuries were reported and the lift was taken out of service. “Ski Santa Fe experienced a mechanical issue on the Tesuque Peak triple chair, resulting in a prolonged stoppage of the lift,” the resort posted to social media. “Patrol crews responded quickly to evacuate the affected chairs and all other riders were unloaded from the lift.”
General Manager Ben Abruzzo told the Santa Fe New Mexican an investigation revealed the affected chair had been removed over the summer for nondestructive testing and incorrectly reinstalled. A subsequent pull test on the grip did not catch the mistake.
Tesuque Peak is a 1983 Doppelmayr fixed grip triple with 163 chairs. Over the past few days workers removed and re-checked the 20 percent of chairs that were removed last summer and completed a visual inspection on the rest of the lift, which is expected to reopen tomorrow at 11:00 am.
Deer Valley Unveils Phasing for Eastward Expansion
Deer Valley Resort today detailed plans to open a two stage gondola and eight chairlifts for the 2025-26 season in phase one of Expanded Excellence. Deer Valley also revealed the new village portal along U.S. Route 40 will be named Deer Valley East Village. Previously known as Mayflower, the expansion is a collaboration between Deer Valley owner Alterra and Extell Development Company of New York. In August, the two companies came together and announced all new terrain would become part of Deer Valley rather than a separate ski resort.
Deer Valley East Village will cater to both day skiers and destination guests. The project includes a skier services facility with ski school, children’s programs, rentals, retail, and dining options along with 1,200 new skier parking spaces. The village will also be home to the upcoming Grand Hyatt Deer Valley and two additional hotels totaling more than 800 rooms.
A burly 10 passenger gondola will anchor mountain expansion, traveling from the East Village to 9,350 foot Park Peak. This 15,000 foot long lift will feature an angle station on Big Dutch Peak, servicing a variety of trails which return back to the village. Two six place chairlifts are also planned to terminate near the gondola on Park Peak, one for beginners and the other geared toward intermediate and advanced skiers. The larger of the two, Park Peak Express, will feature a mid-loading station for repeat upper mountain skiing.
Also opening by the 2025-26 season are two lifts on Sultan’s Nose unloading near Deer Valley’s existing Sultan Express and Mayflower. One of these lifts is a six pack from the new village and the other a high speed quad starting mid-mountain. Finally, four quad chairlifts are planned on the lower reaches of the expansion servicing the East Village, Marcella and Velvære communities. Many of the lift alignments have already been cut and graded and lift construction is likely to begin this summer. Deer Valley has not yet announced a manufacturer for the nine lifts in phase one.
While the majority of terrain will open in 2025-26, full buildout will continue over several years. Future phases will see three additional connector lifts to legacy Deer Valley terrain, two quad chairs on Hail Peak, two quads on South Peak and a high speed quad on Big Dutch Peak. In total the expansion adds 16 lifts and more than 3,700 acres to Deer Valley. Upon completion, the resort will offer over 5,726 acres of skiable terrain accessed by 37 chairlifts serving 238 runs.
“At Deer Valley Resort, we are proud of our legacy as a top-tier ski destination, and we’re staying true to our founding principles set over four decades ago,” said Todd Bennett, President & COO of Deer Valley Resort. “This expansion improves our resort’s accessibility and enriches the guest experience with additional world-class amenities. We will honor our history and strengthen our ties to the community as we expand over the next several years.”
News Roundup: Rough Week
- A ski patroller dies at Titus Mountain, New York in an accident involving a chairlift.
- Bittersweet, Michigan says last week’s lift incident was caused by high winds.
- A 15 year old dies after falling from a lift at Sommet Morin Heights, Quebec.
- Hickory, New York to open this weekend for the first time in years.
- Sandia Peak works toward doing the same.
- Sleeping Giant, Wyoming won’t open this season.
- Neither will Misty Ridge, Alberta.
- A viral video shows chairs stacking up on a de-roped lift in France.
- Nordic Valley reopens after a lodge fire shuttered the resort.
- Doppelmayr and Mantis Ropeway Technologies secure regulatory approval for unmanned chairlift unloading stations in Austria and Switzerland.
- The Mantis system is also undergoing testing in Canada.
- Leitner Ropeways provides significant compensation to the families of 14 people who died in a 2021 Italian tram incident.
- Vail Resorts reports North American early season skier visits declined 16.2 percent but lift and ski school revenue were up.
- Hundreds sign a petition urging Powder Mountain to maintain public access to two existing and one future chairlift planned to go private.
- PowMow asks the public to weigh in where the outgoing Paradise Quad should be reinstalled.
- Double Diamond/Southern Cross at Stevens Pass closes for repair.
Instagram Tuesday: Making Repairs
Every Tuesday, I feature my favorite Instagram photos from around the lift world.
Chair Falls From Lift at Bittersweet, Michigan

An unoccupied chair fell from Bittersweet’s new Snow Flyer lift today according to a post on Reddit. It appears one of the lift’s communication lines became entangled with several chairs, causing one of them to detach from the haul rope. No injuries were reported and the lift was evacuated by ski patrol and closed. Weather at the time was unsettled with high winds and snow.

Snow Flyer is just over one year old. The Leitner-Poma detachable quad rises 319 vertical feet with 40 chairs.
News Roundup: Peak 9
- Breckenridge proposes building a new C-Chair and gondola to mid-mountain learning center on Peak 9.
- Park City’s Sunrise Gondola project receives unanimous support from the local planning commission.
- Whitefish’s one year old Snow Ghost Express misses the holiday period due to continued mechanical issues.
- A teenager who fell 25 feet from a Wachusett lift secures a $3.3 million verdict.
- A viral video shows an unseated passenger travelling the entire way up Copper’s Woodward Express.
- Vandals continue to damage haul ropes at a ski resort in Italy.
- Vermont taxpayers are on the hook for $16.5 million going to Jay Peak investors and their attorneys under a settlement.
- A French-Swiss company which recently purchased two Quebec ski areas forms Quebec Ski Mountain Company (CMSQ) and looks to invest in more mountains.
- The Forest Service publishes a draft decision approving Jackson Hole’s Sublette replacement project.
Gondola Crash in Austria Injures Six
Falling trees caused a gondola cabin to fall to the ground this morning in Austria, seriously injuring three people and critically injuring a fourth. Two others in an adjacent cabin suffered minor injuries. The accident happened in the town of Oetz on the Acherkogelbahn, an eight seat gondola built by Doppelmayr in 2000. The lift features 66 cabins with DT-108 grips. The carrier fell from a height of approximately 23 feet about half way up the line in a steep, wooded area. The injured were evacuated via helicopter and the rest of the lift was cleared of riders without incident.
This is at least the third lift accident in the past year caused by falling trees. Just before Christmas, trees fell on a detachable quad in Italy, causing chairs to stack up and injure riders. A year ago at Park City, Utah, a ski patroller was killed when falling trees violently shook a triple chairlift during a heavy snow cycle.
Instagram Tuesday: 2024
Every Tuesday, I feature my favorite Instagram photos from around the lift world.
News Roundup: Gondola Down
- The on-demand Ropetaxi gondola in Switzerland suffers from outages, slow speeds and confused riders after opening.
- Gore Mountain’s Northwoods Gondola goes down for a week and counting due to a gearbox bearing issue.
- The Heavenly Gondola is also out of service while bearings are replaced.
- Both Doppelmayr and Leitner-Poma are expected to bid on the Cannon tram rebuild with completion targeted for December 2026.
- A child is injured falling from the Gold Coast chair at Palisades.
- The strong earthquake in Japan shakes running chairlifts.
- Windham Mountain Club runs out of weekend Ikon reservations for most of the winter.
- The Forest Service approves replacements for Mineral Basin and Gadzoom at Snowbird, the proposed Brighton Chondola and a Coach replacement at Bogus Basin.
- Snowbasin plans to replace the Becker triple.
- Boyne Mountain will spin lifts 75 hours straight for a good cause.
- Alterra President and CEO Jared Smith participates in an interview with Colorado Public Radio covering a range of industry hot topics.







