- Vail Resorts reports pass sales down 1 percent in units and up 2 percent in dollars. Full season skier visits fell 3 percent (7 percent in March and April), quarterly net income rose 8.5 percent, lift revenue rose 3.3 percent, ski school revenue fell 0.6 percent, dining revenue rose 1.4 percent, retail revenue fell 10.1 percent and rental revenue fell 5.5 percent.
- Colorado as a whole reports its third best season ever with 13.8 million visits.
- Vermont also posts strong results with skier visits 6.2 percent over the 10 year average.
- Lake Louise looks to open the Richardson’s Ridge expansion sometime during the 2025-26 season.
- Monarch releases the map for the No Name Basin expansion with a lift named Tomichi. The frontside of the mountain also gets a new map.
- Angel Fire shows where two new lifts will go.
- Steel and aluminum tariffs increase to 50 percent as of June 4th.
- An Austrian resort fits tables to chairlift restraint bars for happy hour chairlift rides with food and drinks.
- A new master plan for Crescent Hill, Iowa includes replacing both chairlifts.
- The Town of Mountain Village, Colorado seeks feedback for replacement gondola station designs.
- A 2024 French tram crash is blamed on human error with several safeties bypassed.
- Sunlight to offer retired chairs to the public through a raffle, online auction and live auction.
- Hawaii’s first gondola proposal faces opposition.
- Dagmar, Ontario teases major mountain investment.
- Sponsored job: Mountain Designer and Planner at SE Group.
Leitner
An Adventure in Europe with Leitner-Poma
A few weeks ago I ventured to the Alps with a delegation from Leitner-Poma of America. LPOA is the North American arm of High Technology Industries, the holding company behind iconic European ropeway builders Leitner, Poma and Bartholet. While Leitner-Poma of America fabricates upwards of 85 percent of its equipment in Colorado and Utah, the US outpost partners closely with its sister companies back in Europe. The trip included peers from a dozen US and Canadian resorts along with Leitner-Poma employees and partners (full disclosure, LPOA covered the cost of my trip other than airfare.)





Our first stop after arriving in Munich was the Nebelhorn, near the town of Oberstdorf. Leitner constructed a state-of-the-art 2S system here in 2021, replacing several jig-back tramways. A 2S combines the efficiency of a monocable gondola with the stability and long spans of a tram. The Nebelhornbahn features two sections, automated parking and striking Symphony cabins designed by Pininfarina. Oberstdorf Lifts CEO Henrik Volpert took us on a fantastic tour of the gondola’s motor rooms, maintenance bays and parking areas. Not only does Henrik oversee seven ski areas in the region but he also serves as President of the German Ski Areas Association.
At the top of the 2S, we continued onto an older jigback tramway, the first of several on this trip. It was closing day for this resort and locals were still skiing on the upper mountain while we ate lunch.




After lunch we headed to the other side of the valley, where another of Henrik’s mountains had already opened for summer. This family ski area features a mountain coaster, several kid-friendly activities and hiking in the summer season (there’s no real offseason here.) We rode a neat monocable gondola with a 90 degree angle station to mid-mountain. Everything on the lift was top of the line including Leitner’s premium stations, a direct drive and Diamond EVO cabins.
The next day took us through Austria to Italy, where Leitner’s first 3S system operates between the city of Bolzano and the mountain village of Ritten/Renon (towns in this region carry both German and Italian names.) This unique 3S operates in a pulse fashion with cabins coming to complete stops in the stations while the line keeps moving at varying speeds. The 3S serves as public transit for more than a million riders a year and costs just five Euros to ride. The lift spans nearly 15,000 feet with ten 35 passenger cabins. At the top, an electric train carries riders further up the plateau with views of the Dolomites.








A highlight of the trip was seeing Leitner’s factories, the largest of which lies in the company’s hometown of Sterzing. There’s a ski area right in town, of course, but it had closed for the season. Our host here was Anton Seeber, the friendly leader of HTI Group and its many brands. Sterzing is a true production facility with workers and machines cutting and welding raw steel into bullwheels, tire banks and towers. Sterzing also produces casings for direct drives used all over the world. We visited this factory on a Sunday so no one was working but it was cool to see components in varying stages of completion.




The next day we headed back to Austria and a newer factory which specializes in assembly of chairs, grips, hangers and direct drives. The 45,000 square meter Telfs plant opened in 2008 and serves just three customers: Leitner, Poma and Leitner-Poma of America. The various arms of HTI used to produce chairs and grips in different plants but consolidation to Telfs improved efficiency and quality control. In a busy year, LPOA buys 1,000 chairs from Telfs out of 2,600 to 4,000 chairs produced there. Chairs are built in batches for a specific lift. The reason for this is a six place chair, for example, can be ordered in 230 different variations depending on customer preferences. The day we were in the factory a crew was busy assembling chairs for Snowmass’ new Elk Camp six pack, set to open next season. Two Snowmass guys were on the tour and got to sit on their new chair for a photo months before first chair. Bretton Woods’ Bethlehem Express chairs had just been completed and were being readied for their boat ride to New Hampshire.







Every chair begins as a straight piece of tubular steel. An automated bending machine transforms each tube into a chair bail. Another machine cuts holes in the tube and other finishing is completed by hand. The bails are sent out for galvanization before returning for assembly. Other than the bail, the rest of a chair’s parts are sourced from a network of suppliers, many of whom also supply automakers in nearby Germany. A single chair can contain 1,500 parts and workers use high tech torque wrenches linked with software to optimize workflow. A screen shows the assembler exactly where a particular part goes on the chair.
There’s one other chair component Telfs fabricates as opposed to just assembling: bubbles! This factory will produce around 600 bubbles in 2025, all starting as flat sheets of polycarbonate. The process Leitner uses is proprietary but can be summarized as thermo stretch forming. This work is highly specialized and difficult with not every bubble meeting quality standards (around 10 percent are discarded instead of making their way to lifts.) After forming, holes are drilled and a plastic rim is glued on before the bubbles are installed on chairs.


The third section of Telfs we toured was direct drive assembly. This was the first time I got to see the inside of a direct drive as normally they’re not opened once installed. Leitner was the pioneer of direct drive lifts and Telfs completes around 50 to 60 units a year, most of which stay in Europe.




The last stop was the LPA grip assembly line, designed using systems from modern automobile and aircraft factories. HTI formerly built detachable grips in three places but now every grip and hanger come off this one line. Parts are delivered to the line by an automated system but the actual assembly is done mostly by hand. Once a grip is complete, it’s tested and a series of cameras take dozens of photos to detect any anomalies. This also allows Leitner to track each grip and hanger to a specific production run on a specific date by a specific employee. The grip and hanger mechanisms are then shipped together to project sites. Once on site, crews simply connect a chair to a hanger with one bolt. This is fast but also ensures quality and safety with most of the assembly done in a controlled environment rather than a ski area parking lot.












After Telfs we ventured up to Stubai Glacier, home to a spectacular Leitner 3S and numerous other lifts. Although we weren’t skiing, several gondolas and chairlifts still carried skiers at higher elevations. Many towers were pinned to the glacier rather than traditional foundations. On the 3S, carriers can be parked at all three stations, allowing the line to be cleared of cabins automatically in a matter of minutes. Of course each section is driven by a direct drive. This lift is so big that tire sections are run by motors rather than PTO belts. These helper motors are bigger than those powering entire chairlifts in the Midwest.
Our last stop was Innsbruck, home to the Interalpin mountain technology tradeshow. Before the show, we ventured up the Nordkette Cable Car, which Leitner part owns. This ski area is accessible right from downtown Innsbruck via a Leitner funicular railway. The funicular includes a bridge over a river, several tunnels and grades ranging from zero degrees to very steep. At the top of the funicular, we rode a series of jig back tramways to reach a 2,334 meter summit. It was foggy that day so I didn’t take many pictures of the two trams we rode.




This was my second time to Interalpin and I could spend days there. If a company sells technology to ski areas, they come to Interalpin. The Leitner booth featured a ConnX autonomous gondola cabin, several Symphony gondolas and a Leitner premium chair (the new Ropera detachable was unveiled the day after our visit.)




Doppelmayr of course had a large presence including a 3S cabin for an installation opening next winter in the Dolomites, a 10 seater cabin from Paris’ upcoming urban gondola and a Stella cabin for the soon-to-open TRI-Line at Hoch-Ybrig, Switzerland. MND was there too with a cabin from their Orizon detachable line. AI was a major focus of the show with manufacturers highlighting software products to improve maintenance and operations.


I haven’t even mentioned all the delicious food we ate, the good times had in the evenings and many other warm people we encountered. Thank you to Daren Cole, Jon Mauch and everyone at Leitner-Poma for including me on the trip. My advice to anyone interested in lifts who has not been to Europe: Go!
News Roundup: Ropera
- Deer Valley updates its expansion site to show Lift 6 as two detachable quads (6A and 6B) instead of a six pack with mid-station.
- Vail Mountain seeks permission to replace Orient Express #21 with a six pack, swap Little Eagle #15 for a detachable quad and remove Wapiti #24.
- Leitner-Poma discusses the impact of tariffs on the SAM huddle.
- Burke Mountain emerges from nine years of government receivership with new owners.
- Mount Saint Louis-Moonstone, Ontario teases a new era coming to the Outback side of the mountain.
- Leitner introduces its next generation monocable detachable called Ropera, combining technology from Leitner, Poma and Bartholet. The launch customer will be Speikboden, Italy with a six place chairlift.
- Leitner and Doppelmayr release annual yearbooks.
- Snoqualmie unveils new renderings of the Edelweiss project at Alpental.
- A Colorado man succumbs to injuries sustained in a fall from Keystone’s Ruby Express last December.
- Powder Mountain tells the Utah tram board it’ll install between one and four new lifts this summer.
- A jury declines to award millions to a Mt. Bachelor skier who fell getting off a chairlift.
- Killington to donate and match proceeds from closing day to Whaleback Mountain’s chairlift replacement fund.
- Snow Partners to launch a new multi-mountain pass product offering three total days at six to ten Eastern resorts.
- Mt. Ashland, Oregon looks to replace the Ariel and Windsor doubles with Skytrac triple chairs in 2026.
News Roundup: Pacific Northwest Icons
- HTI, the parent company of Agudio, Bartholet, Leitner, Poma, LPOA and Skytrac, reports stable revenue of €1.4 billion and record R&D investment of €41 million.
- Leitner teases “the exclusive launch of a groundbreaking new standard for monocable uni-directional ropeways” at Interalpin.
- Leitner also nears completion of a material transport gondola that includes a 1,600 foot underground tunnel.
- The next phase of the Bartholet RopeTaxi on demand gondola network is delayed to December.
- President Trump tempers announced tariffs on most countries to 10% for 90 days.
- Calls continue for the Government of Quebec to terminate its lease with Resorts of the Canadian Rockies for Mont-Sainte-Anne.
- Freakonomics tackles the economics of ski areas with help from Loveland and Mt. Ashland.
- Mt. Hood Meadows to retire the Blue double without replacement, raffle the chairs.
- Alpental plans an all weekend celebration for the retirement of iconic Chair 2.
- Doppelmayr breaks ground on its new Salt Lake City building.
- French authorities propose nearly €2 million in fines against MND and its investors for alleged disclosure and insider trading violations.
- You can buy an Overbrook chair from Ski Butternut
- McCauley is also selling chairs.
- CBS drama Fire Country to feature a ficticious ski lift disaster tonight.
News Roundup: Riverbanks
- 19 deluxe cabins arrive stateside for South Carolina’s only gondola.
- Ragged Mountain goes on the market.
- Leitner-Poma posts an ad hiring lift installers for a project at Crystal Mountain, Washington.
- A widow sues Breckenridge following her husband’s fatal fall from the Zendo chair, alleging “an unreasonable amount of snow and ice accumulation.”
- Purgatory acknowleges belt tightening on the mountain as it renegotiates long term debt.
- The Forest Service shows two Mission Ridge expansion proposals as canceled.
- The Forest Service releases a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for Grand Targhee’s proposed expansion including three pared down alternatives.
- Big Sky raises $150,000 for charity selling Explorer chairs.
- An idea to connect two Seattle neighborhoods by gondola resurfaces.
- Leitner teases a “New Era of Ropeways” coming at Interalpin.
- Relations sour between the Town of Mountain Village and Telluride Ski Resort owner Chuck Horning with the Town Manager giving a lengthy speech about problems at the resort.
- Skeetawk, Alaska’s only chairlift shuts down for a multi-week repair.
- Stowe’s FourRunner quad has been out of service all week.
- Vail reopens Riva Bahn after a two week gearbox rebuild.
- Kicking Horse’s gondola remains closed indefinitely; the resort will transport gear up to Stairway to Heaven free of charge but guests still have to walk there.
- Vail Resorts presents its strategic vision to investors.
News Roundup: Split Decision
- Voters green light funding for continued operations of the Telluride-Mountain Village gondola and an eventual replacement.
- Casper, Wyoming voters say no to a new chairlift for Hogadon.
- Hunter Mountain shows off a brand new trail map showing two new lift alignments.
- Arizona Snowbowl’s latest map shows the new Aspen quad.
- Big Sky’s new map includes the paths of the new One&Only Gondola and Madison 8.
- Ober Mountain’s three chairlifts gain new names.
- Snowbird’s 24-25 map illustrates Wilbere’s new alignment.
- The longest gondola in the world progresses toward completion in the Caribbean.
- Closed Big Tupper, New York sells for $650,000 to investors hoping to reopen it.
- The nonprofit that runs Anthony Lakes, Oregon is interested in resurrecting Spout Springs.
- Leitner opens a new global logistics center in Italy.
- A 162 foot tall wind turbine is installed at Skytrac’s new facility in Utah.
News Roundup: Ever Optimistic
- Vail Resorts reports annual skier visits down 9.5 percent, net income down 14 percent, EBITDA down 1 percent and season pass sales down 3 percent in units but up 3 percent in dollars. The company announced no new 2025 lift projects and will lay off 14 percent of corporate staff along with limited operational staff.
- Hatley Pointe, North Carolina retires the Laurel double, plans to build a new chairlift eventually.
- County planners unanimously reject the Shadow Mountain Bike Park proposal in Colorado.
- Sleeping Giant, Wyoming will hibernate again this winter.
- Huff Hills, North Dakota reaches a one year agreement to operate this winter.
- Aspen’s proposal to replace Lift 1A remains alive.
- Whitetail, Pennsylvania to sell Hall chairs from Jib Junction.
- Leitner to build a seven station urban gondola in Morella, Mexico for $100 million.
- Mexico’s President and President-elect inaugurate a six station urban gondola line by Doppelmayr in Mexico City.
- A Hezbollah rocket strikes a chairlift in Israel held territory.
- Snowbird turns an old tram cabin into a bar.
- Sandia Peak proposes replacing Chair 1.
- Tamarack scales down expansion plans to seven new chairlifts and an extension of the Wildwood Express with no new gondola.
- The under construction One&Only resort with a two station gondola connecting to Big Sky Resort catches fire.
- Ever optimistic Les Otten still aims to re-open The Balsams with three new chairlifts in phase one.
News Roundup: Megaprojects
- Alterra details its 2024 capital plan, totaling $300+ million with six new chairlifts.
- Following yesterday’s announcement of three new lifts this year, Deer Valley also outlines the seven detachable lifts opening in 2025 for a total of 10 in two years (counting the two section gondola as two.)
- A presentation details massive construction underway at Deer Valley.
- Deer Valley will hold an open house to update the community on construction and future plans next Thursday.
- Park City continues to explore a gondola connection from Main Street to Deer Valley.
- Speaking of megaprojects, here are some unofficial photos of the two D-Line gondolas with six total stations under construction at Big Sky.
- The world’s largest indoor ski area opens near Shanghai with a detachable chairlift and gondola from Poma.
- Parks Canada approves the Banff Gondola owner’s purchase of the Jasper SkyTram.
- A Swiss newspaper reports Alterra may be as interested as Vail in acquiring Swiss resorts.
- Vail Resorts to report earning September 26th, traditionally when lift projects are announced for the following year.
- Vail to sell Wildcat Express gondola cabins, run only chairs in the future.
- Solitude will auction 29 chairs from the Moonbeam quad, which operated only four years.
- Wachusett orders a Doppelmayr UNI-G six pack to replace the Polar Express.
- A rider is injured and airlifted after falling while boarding Schweitzer’s Great Escape Quad.
- Five years since the Sea to Sky Gondola‘s haul rope was first cut and four years since it was cut again, police are still looking for the perpetrator(s).
- Maintenance workers on London’s IFS Cloud Cable Car plan a strike.
News Roundup: 750
- Leitner plans to offer the ConnX multi-model gondola system from 2025 after passing tests in Hungary.
- A progress report on the first Doppelmayr TRI-Line in Switzerland.
- Also on the first MND Orizon detachable in France.
- MND inaugurates a new production facility to support the Orizon line.
Skytrac celebrates its new facility in Tooele, Utah.
Bartholet releases its 2024 reference book. - Alta clarifies it supports a Little Cottonwood gondola.
- White Pass adds chairs to boost capacity on the Great White Express.
- A viral video shows a lift being jostled by a small tornado.
- Homewood now plans to build its already-delivered D-Line gondola in 2025 and upgrade Ellis in 2030.
- Burke Mountain delays summer opening to mid-July due to a mechanical issue with the Sherburne Express.
- Marmot Basin to sell chairs from the Knob double.
- Jackson Hole to auction Sublette chairs.
- Beartooth Basin is for sale.
- I visited my 750th ski area this week, marking the completion the Canada Lift Database.
News Roundup: Metrics
- Aspen Mountain’s Lift One project inches closer to reality.
- Aspen Skiing Company reports skier visits declined 2.3 percent last season.
- Colorado as a whole reports its second best season ever, down five percent from last year’s record.
- New Hampshire was down four percent.
- Vail Resorts reports a 5 percent increase in lift revenue but a 7.7 percent decline in visits with season pass unit sales down 5 percent for next season.
- Colorado’s Estes Park Tram reopens after an extended closure.
- Nordic Valley works to reactivate Apollo, which missed last season.
- Legoland New York’s new 10 passenger gondola to open June 24th.
- A Park City resident files an appeal of Deer Valley’s Lift 7 approval.
- Sun Peaks flies towers for the new West Bowl Express.
- Leitner’s 2023 annual report is out highlighting global projects.






