Tornado Damages Lifts at Snow Ridge, NY

An large tornado damaged several lifts and other buildings at Snow Ridge Ski Resort late last night. The ski area, located in Turin, New York, posted this morning that all three of its chairlifts sustained damage from extreme wind and falling trees. Photos showed lift buildings overturned, safety bars blown off chairs and towers de-roped.

All of the lifts at Snow Ridge date back the 1950s through 1970s. The Little Mountain and North doubles appeared to sustain the most damage from the storm. “The Ridge got hit pretty hard by last evening’s tornado,” Snow Ridge wrote this morning on Facebook. “Everyone is safe, which is the most important thing but this damage really hurts. We are devastated but will rebuild,” the mountain wrote.

Update: The National Weather Service determined the tornado was an EF-3 with peak wind gusts estimated at 140 mph near Snow Ridge.

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Expansion Under Construction at Lee Canyon

Just three months after Mountain Capital Partners purchased Lee Canyon, Skytrac is already working to build a new lift to the east of existing terrain. The fixed grip quad, shown as Chair 5 on the above map, will service three new beginner trails with a capacity of 1,800 skiers per hour. The chairlift will span approximately 1,400 feet with a 310 foot vertical rise. The Forest Service approved the project last year when the resort was still owned by Powdr.

The project has not been formally announced but Skytrac posted photos on Instagram yesterday of its ninth and final line survey of the year at an unnamed mountain that looks a whole lot like Lee Canyon. Aerial imagery from the Sentinel satellite network taken this morning confirms the scope of work at Lee Canyon, the only ski resort in the Las Vegas region.

In addition to Chair 5, Lee Canyon also has Forest Service approval to build two new conveyors and a westward expansion with another fixed grip quad in the coming years.

One Dead, One Injured in Gondola Incident at Mont Tremblant

One person has died and another is in critical condition following a collision between a gondola cabin and construction equipment at Tremblant, an Alterra-operated resort near Montreal. The gondola car struck a drilling rig part way up the mountain, causing two adult riders to fall to the ground at approximately 11:30 this morning. The cabin remained attached to the haul rope. Both people were transported to a hospital where one later died. Other riders on the lift were evacuated with no further injuries.

The incident occurred part way up the Panoramic Gondola, one of three gondola systems at Tremblant. The lift involved was built by Doppelmayr in 1998 with cabins supplied by Gangloff. A photo later emerged showing half of a cabin completely sheared off where there would normally be a bench seat.

“Due to an incident on the Gondola today, July 16, we regret to inform you that we are canceling the remainder of the Tremblant Blues Festival and closing our activities for the day out of respect for those involved,” the ski resort wrote in an afternoon statement. “We thank you for your understanding.”

The Quebec Ski Areas Association also issued a statement: “We are saddened by the accident. Our hearts go out to the families and the Mont Tremblant team. An investigation is in progress and we offer our collaboration to the authorities,” the association wrote.

By evening, Tremblant issued a statement clarifying that the construction equipment was operated by a third party and offered condolences to those involved, who were visiting from outside the region.

On Monday, Forage M2P Inc. said one of its drilling rigs operating on behalf of Tremblant on an approved route struck both the gondola cabin with two riders who fell and another empty gondola. A 30 year old operator was repositioning the drill at the time of the incident and he was also hospitalized.