Thought I'd toss this out for discussion.  Wouldn't this be nice on the Barker or Jordan lifts?



Utah ski resort plans first heated chair lift in North America


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Mike Goar, managing director of The Canyons in Park City, Utah, tries one of the ski resort's new chairs, which can warm up to 55 degrees.
By Paulk Foy, AP
Mike Goar, managing director of The Canyons in Park City, Utah, tries one of the ski resort's new chairs, which can warm up to 55 degrees.


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PARK CITY, Utah — Utah's fastest growing ski area is spending millions of dollars to reconfigure the mountain and add North America's first heated chair lift with a
bubble shield that swings over passengers like a pair of orange goggles.

The changes at The Canyons, one of Park City's three ski resorts, highlight some of the biggest development projects or plans at Utah ski areas since the 2002 Salt Lake Olympics drove major expansions.

The resorts are moving despite the down economy and saving on construction costs because of it. Ultimately they hope to steal market share from Colorado,
which draws three times as much skier traffic. Utah's resorts, with
advantages like double Colorado's snowfall and a short drive from Salt
Lake City's airport, aren't shy about making investments.

"This is the future," Mike Goar, managing director of The Canyons, said at the base of the 4,000-acre resort as bulldozers reshaped land for new lift terminals and outdoor patios. "The
experience will be so different — it will be like a new resort. The big
story is the faith we have in the potential of The Canyons."

The Canyons is owned by Toronto-based Talisker Corp., a closely held resort operator that won't reveal how much it is spending. Executives say it is one of the biggest investments by a North
American ski operator in years.


The Canyons was considered so valuable that when Talisker bought it two years ago for $123 million, Colorado rival Vail Resorts Inc. filed a lawsuit claiming it had a deal to buy the Park City resort from now-defunct American Skiing Co. but was pushed aside. Vail dropped
the lawsuit a year later but grumbled that it reserved the right to
seek monetary damages.

Now, Talisker is on a tight schedule to remake Utah's largest ski resort by December. It is opening an eighth peak for skiing and adding or realigning several lifts, while redesigning the
village base.

The main lift, an eight-passenger gondola, is being moved closer to an aerial cabriolet that picks up skiers from a parking lot.

Also at the base, the resort is adding a high-speed chair lift with seats that can heat up to about 55 degrees. That could change skiers' outlook on a frigid winter day. A bubble
shield will keep the wind off as skiers sail high onto the mountain in
nine minutes.

The lift is the envy of other Utah resorts, but others have big plans, too.

Snowbird, in the mountains just east of Salt Lake City, and Snowbasin near Ogden have filed plans for major expansions with local governments or the U.S. Forest Service.

Snowbird is an especially steep ski area that is Utah's most challenging and wants to go higher. It has proposed a second passenger tram from its 11,000-foot summit to a 11,489-foot peak
nearby.

It would open hundreds of acres of new terrain for skiing. The new tram is among a number of changes Snowbird filed in May with a master plan to the Forest Service for approval. The full plan
would take 10 years to realize.

Snowbasin has even bigger plans for all-season resort development that spill far outside its boundaries onto private land acquired over the years by owner Earl Holding, who initially spent
about $200 million to make Snowbasin an Olympic mountain — it held the
downhill races in 2002.

Now, Snowbasin wants to add golf courses, hiking and horseback trails and 5,500 housing and hotel units. It also plans lift upgrades and a second base area on the mountain.

"We have a lot of faith in the future," said Kent Lyons, Snowbasin's general manager. "It's not a bad time to do construction now if you can afford to do it."

Last year Utah's resorts drew skiers for just over 4 million visits and generated $1 billion in spending for the state's economy. Colorado drew nearly 12 million skier visits.

Among other Utah resorts sprucing up their mountains:

• Park City Mountain Resort is adding snowmaking on the lower mountain and brighter lights for more night skiing terrain. The resort says it's spending $4.5 million on those and other
improvements, and saving on more efficient night lighting.

• Deer Valley, the perennial favorite of Ski magazine — it has earned readers' No. 1 ranking for three years in a row — says it's investing $4.5 million in mountain amenities this year.
It's updating the interiors of ski lodges and replacing equipment
including snowmaking machines with more energy-efficient models.

• Brighton Resort says it has invested $5 million in ski lifts over the past few years.

• Alta, Utah's legendary powder palace, hardly ever needs improvement, but the ski area is planting trees, shrubs, mountain flowers and grasses. It's upgrading snowmaking capacity and
overhauling a quaint rope tow that pulls skiers between base areas.

• Powder Mountain, about 20 miles northeast of Ogden, is expanding popular snowcat-assisted backcountry terrain for a total of 7,000 skiable acres. The Canyons, with 4,000 lift-serviced
acres, claims to be Utah's largest. Powder says it's bigger, but skiers
there have to climb, shuffle along mountain ridges or get pulled by a
snowcat to reach much of the terrain.

Copyright 2010
The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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I wonder about the heated seats... isn't the level of ski gear we wear enough? A good pair of bibs is keeping your ass warm. I don't need a sweaty ass.

Huge disparity between ski visits in Utah vs. Colorado - I wouldn't have thought the gap would be that big.
Every ski resort is "known" for something. I guess the Canyons will be "known" for heated chairlifts. Good thing because their skiing sucks.



BTW...isn't it supposed to be cold when you ski?
First time I saw the "Bubble" at Mt ST Annes, I thought it was brilliant,....until the next year, when it was full of gum and snot.( I expect the Gondola ..errrr CHondola cars to look that way soon)
BUT
This Baby dispenses IPA and Lattes and has a Hooka built in.





55 degrees ,....hell,..I'd be thrilled with a seat that's more than 4 degrees at Aurora
I hope they would not waste their money on heated seats. Spend instead on replacing triples and cutting glades in steep rocky areas that are to thick to ride.
I am surprised Col has so many more visits than Utah also . The snow is so much lighter and Mts' are so close and STEEP.
No interest in heated seats - when someone's too uncomfortable on a lift, probably a good time to head to a lodge. The "chair goggle" has some merits - have used at Tremblant - but in the end just another complexity. Most critical ... more surface area to blow chairs around, which complicates operations.

CO vs. UT not surprising based on history and the business nature of lift served skiing. Investment money and CO politicians set out long ago to build CO's economy around skiing/tourism ... was a successfully executed plan. DEN always a transportation hub - UT later to the game.

Also, heretofore, the majority of the skiing public weren't (aren't) seekers of steep 'n deep.
I can take or leave heated seats. This discussion makes me think of that guy who fell through a flipped up powder seated last year, at Vail and attempted to sue the establishment over his exposure! Heat may have helped that debacle!

Who opens 1st? CO or UT?

CO - battle between The Basin and Loveland. Takes a LOT of snow to cover UT rocky slopes - less snow making equip due to annual snow fall and maturity of business plans.

MaiTai said:
Who opens 1st? CO or UT?

Mike, your post does not make sense. Where do you think we are going to get all the snow to cover those steep rocky slopes? Hell they can't even keep snow on Spruce Peak Cliffs because all the Joeys and boarders side slip down it. ;-)

Just sayin......

Mike Dann said:
I hope they would not waste their money on heated seats. Spend instead on replacing triples and cutting glades in steep rocky areas that are to thick to ride.
I am surprised Col has so many more visits than Utah also . The snow is so much lighter and Mts' are so close and STEEP.
I am sure I am not the only one.. The last pass installment on my credit card was billed. Real proof the season will be here soon.
hmmm...heated seats.

heat + snow = water...not sure I would want to sit on a puddle while out skiing.

Sure, the bubble is going to keep some of it off, but not all.
I love the windshield thingie

can you say fishbowlarolla
fishbowlarolla

Wheeler said:


can you say fishbowlarolla

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