- The Town of Jackson, Wyoming inches closer to approving the Snow King Gondola five years after it was first proposed.
- Aspen Skiing Company eliminates nearly 50 positions citing the “ever shifting Covid landscape.”
- The Miami Dolphins won’t operate their SkyView stadium gondola this NFL season.
- In New Zealand, ski resorts say they are not the mask police.
- Alps resorts prepare to reopen this month.
- The Colorado Passenger Tramway Safety Board grants a variance for a new Telemix on Aspen Mountain.
- Ikon Pass holders will need a reservation to visit certain resorts this season while other mountains will not require reservations and more are still deciding.
- Big Sky’s Lone Peak Tram will be open this winter but guests may be allowed to boot pack to the summit as an alternative.
- A second indoor ski resort for the United States moves ahead near DC.
- Aspen Snowmass and other creditors will appeal a judge’s decision to keep Liftopia out of bankruptcy.
- Some Canadians aren’t happy with Vail’s pandemic-era customer service.
- Magic Mountain, Idaho is threatened by a wildfire.
- A study finds the proposed Oakland Athletics gondola would carry a million riders a year and generate $685 million in economic activity.
- This summer’s construction projects are just the beginning for the new Saddleback Mountain.
- A planned urban gondola in Los Angeles get a fresh name and website as it prepares for environmental review.
- Leitner Ropeways will build New Zealand’s first eight passenger chairlift.
- The Utah Department of Transportation continues to refine alternatives for Little Cottonwood Canyon and will release a report this fall.
- Great Bear solicits bids for a new chairlift.
Los Angeles
News Roundup: 3S
- An affiliate of Silver Mountain buys 49 Degrees North.
- A citizen group wants the Colorado Passenger Tramway Safety Board to regulate lift operations more broadly than the current mechanical focus.
- Bogus Basin will auction a bunch of Riblet triple chairs beginning Sunday.
- The Disney Skyliner is not a normal gondola and will be evacuated as such in an emergency.
- Steamboat already has a gondola construction update.
- So does Bretton Woods.
- A guy accused of ducking ropes around a chairlift terminal at Killington is charged with disorderly conduct.
- Whistler Blackcomb will open some of the same lifts for both skiers and mountain bikers for the first time this spring.
- The Forest Service gives its blessing to the Eldora Jolly Jug expansion and high speed lift.
- Doppelmayr USA is on Facebook.
- Vail Resorts reports a fantastic season with skier visits, lift ticket revenue, retail, ski school and dining all up between 6.2 and 9.3 percent through April 21st.
- The Los Angeles Dodger Stadium 3S is headed to environmental review.
- Poma’s 3S project in China is going to have an insane 5,775 people per hour capacity.
- CWA teases its soon-to-debut 3S cabin.
News Roundup: Urban Momentum
- Plans for a 3S gondola servicing Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles move ahead.
- A new gondola system ridership record is set: 406,459 passengers in a single day.
- Killington joins the bubble club with Snowdon Six Express.
- Fatzer says it has donated more than 180 miles of wire rope leftover from ropeways to build 600 bridges in developing countries.
- Ramcharger 8 flies tomorrow at Big Sky Resort.
- Accidents knock two gondolas out of commission at the same Austrian ski resort in the span of a week. One due to a fire and the other a pileup of cabins. The latter one is already back in service.
- Doppelmayr USA taps former New York State Olympic Regional Development Authority head Ted Blazer to lead the company’s urban ropeway push.
- Copper Mountain hopes to have the new American Flyer bubble lift operational by Christmas.
- There might be some news regarding the shuttered Hermitage Club early next week.
- Big White’s Powder 2.0 opens today.
- So does the big Blackcomb Gondola.
- More than 150 guests are evacuated from the Blue chairlift at Mt. Hood Meadows after multiple systems fail.
- Peak Resorts releases quarterly financial results including strong season pass sales figures.
- Timerline Four Seasons Resort keeps pushing back its opening day, now scheduled for December 21st. Yesterday its managing partner was arrested and charged with failing to remit hotel taxes.
- Work carriers are spotted traversing Walt Disney World.
Mayor, Dodgers Back a 3S Gondola in Los Angeles
One of the last remaining Major League Baseball stadiums not serviced by permanent public transportation could be reached by gondola in 2022, says a group with early support from the Los Angeles Dodgers and Mayor Eric Garcetti. Aerial Rapid Transit Technologies LLC presented the idea to the Metro regional transit authority this morning as part of its Extraordinary Innovation unsolicited proposals program. The tricable system would link Dodgers Stadium to Union Station, the busiest rail hub in the Western United States.
The 3S would be capable of transporting 5,000 passengers per hour and direction along a 1.25 mile route before, during and after Dodgers Stadium events. It would cross over Chinatown and Interstate 110 with a terminus on the southeastern side of the ballpark with an unknown number of towers in between. Utilizing 30 to 40 passenger cabins, the lift would be the largest gauge gondola in the western hemisphere and was selected for its optimal capacity and ease of accessibility. “This is a major investment in the future of Los Angeles, with a zero-emission, sustainable technology that is increasingly popular for urban areas throughout the world,” noted Martha Welborne, project director for ARTT in a press release. “We look forward to working with Metro to make it a reality.” Welborne is a former Senior Vice President of Corporate Real Estate at Disney and also served as Chief Planning Officer at LA Metro.
Mayor Garcetti commented on the project too, saying, “Dodger fans know better than anyone: making history means swinging for the fences and never stopping until you get home. Our team has been at the center of so many landmark moments for Los Angeles, and this bold idea to ease congestion could transform how Angelenos — and millions of visitors — experience our city on their way to and from the ballpark.” Lakers legend Magic Johnson also tweeted his support.
The estimated $125 million project would be funded privately but require the blessing of various public entities, especially to secure a lease at or near Union Station. The founding principal of ARTT is McCourt Global, whose Chairman and CEO Frank McCourt formerly owned the Dodgers. Much work lies ahead for the group including specific route selection and public outreach. Operations are eyed for 2022, six years before Los Angeles hosts the Olympics for a third time.


