Steamboat Ski Resort

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationRoutt County, Colorado, United States.
Nearest major citySteamboat Springs
Coordinates40°27′32″N 106°48′11″W / 40.459°N 106.803°W / 40.459; -106.803
StatusOperating
Steamboat Resort
Base of the mountain in 2008
Base of the mountain in 2008
Steamboat Resort is located in the United States
Steamboat Resort
Steamboat Resort
Location in the United States
Steamboat Resort is located in Colorado
Steamboat Resort
Steamboat Resort
Location in Colorado
LocationRoutt County, Colorado, United States.
Nearest major citySteamboat Springs
Coordinates40°27′32″N 106°48′11″W / 40.459°N 106.803°W / 40.459; -106.803
StatusOperating
OwnerAlterra Mountain Company
Vertical  3,668 feet (1,118 m)
Top elevation10,568 feet (3,221 m)
Base elevation  6,900 feet (2,103 m)
Skiable area3,741 acres (15.1 km2)
Trails170 total
- 14% beginner
- 42% intermediate
- 44% advanced
Longest run"Why Not" ~ 3 miles (5 km)
Lift system24 total: 3 gondolas,
1 high-speed six-pack,
8 high-speed quad chairs,
4 triple chairs,
2 double chairs,
6 surface lifts
Terrain parksYes, 6
Snowfall400 inches (33.3 ft; 10.2 m)
Night skiingYes
Websitesteamboat.com

Steamboat Resort is a major ski area in the Western United States, located in northwestern Colorado at Steamboat Springs. Operated by the Steamboat Ski & Resort Corporation, it is located on Mount Werner, a mountain in the Park Range in the Routt National Forest. Originally named Storm Mountain ski area, it opened on January 12, 1963.[1][2]

The ski area has 297 named trails spread over 2,965 acres (4.6 sq mi; 12.0 km2). Of those, 14% are classified as beginner-level, 42% as intermediate, and 44% as advanced. It also contains the Mavericks Superpipe, one of the premier[according to whom?] half-pipes in North America. Limited trails available for night skiing began to be offered in the 2013–14 season.

In honor of local Olympian Buddy Werner (1936–1964), Storm Mountain was renamed Mount Werner in 1965,[3] and the ski area's name was changed as well.[4] Dallas-based conglomerate LTV purchased Mount Werner ski area in the fall of 1969,[5] rebranded it as "Steamboat" the following summer,[6] and hired world champion and Olympic silver medalist Billy Kidd as director of skiing.[7][8][9]

In 2017, Steamboat Ski Resort was purchased by Alterra Mountain Company from Intrawest, a Canadian resort management company. Steamboat was one of the seven resorts owned by Intrawest.[10] Prior to Intrawest's ownership, Steamboat was owned by the American Skiing Company. Intrawest purchased the resort at the end of the 2006–07 season.[1]

Mountain statistics

Elevation

  • Base: 6,900 feet (2,103 m)
  • Summit: 10,568 feet (3,221 m)
  • Vertical Rise: 3,668 feet (1,118 m)

Trails

  • Area: 3,741 acres (5.8 mi2; 15.1 km2)
  • Trails: 182 total (~12% beginner, 40% intermediate, 48% advanced)
  • Longest Run: "Why Not" ~ 3 miles (5 km)
  • Terrain Parks: 6 (including Mavericks Superpipe)
  • Average Annual Snowfall: 400 inches (33.3 ft; 10.2 m)[1]

The four lower mountain lifts (the Steamboat Gondola, the lower portion of the Wild Blue Gondola, Thunderhead Express, and Christie Peak Express) service most of the green runs, which include the long Why Not trail from Thunderhead. Blue trails can be found mostly off of these same lifts, plus the two high speed quads on Sunshine Peak, although more funnel to the Sunshine Express lift. A couple of blue runs can also be found from the Four Points, BAR-UE, and Storm Peak Express lifts, as are a few in Morningside Park.

The blue-black runs are scattered about the mountain, but most of them are located off the Pony Express lift in Pioneer Ridge. Black runs can be found off of all eight high-speed quads except Greenhorn Ranch Express, the highest concentrations are on north Sunshine Peak, most of Storm Peak, Pioneer Ridge, and Morningside Park. The double-black runs are only located directly around the peak of Mt. Werner and in Fish Creek Canyon off of Mahogany Ridge Express.

Slope Aspects

  • North: 20%[11]
  • South: 23%
  • West: 55%
  • East: 2%

Lifts

NameTypeManufacturerBuiltVertical
(feet)
Length
(feet)
Notes
Wild Blue Gondola Gondola10 Doppelmayr 2022 (stage 1)
2023 (stage 2)
590 (stage 1)
2782 (stage 2)
4267 (stage 1)
12243 (stage 2)
Two-stage gondola running from the base area to the summit of Sunshine Peak, with a midway turn station serving the Greenhorn Ranch. Constructed over a two year period, the lower stage opened in 2022 and the upper stage opened in 2023.
Steamboat GondolaGondola 8Doppelmayr201921768849Replaced an older Doppelmayr gondola that was built in 1985. Bottom terminal was moved uphill in 2021 to make room for Wild Blue.
Christie Peak ExpressHigh speed six packLeitner-Poma200711024636Has a mid-unload turn station, and is open for night skiing. Lower segment was realigned in 2022 to make room for Wild Blue Gondola Stage I.
Storm Peak ExpressHigh Speed QuadDoppelmayr199221596885Former bubble lift
Sundown ExpressHigh Speed QuadDoppelmayr199219365418Former bubble lift. Provides access to "Shadows" off skiers right. Shadows is widely renowned as the most difficult glade skiing in the continental United States
Thunderhead ExpressHigh Speed QuadDoppelmayr199716415530
Pony ExpressHigh Speed QuadGaraventa CTEC199816535003
Sunshine ExpressHigh Speed QuadPoma200612805647Operated from 1997 to 2006 as the Tombstone Express at Canyons Resort
Elkhead ExpressHigh Speed QuadDoppelmayr20167262411
Greenhorn Ranch Express High speed quad Doppelmayr 2022 230 1206 Learning lift, with auto-locking safety bars
Mahogany Ridge ExpressHigh speed quadLeitner-Poma202318686329
South PeakTripleYan19843051700Retrofitted with Doppelmayr chairs from the former Sunshine triple
Four Points Triple Yan 1992 1365 3986
MorningsideTripleGaraventa CTEC19965452685Main lift outside of the Morningside bowl.
Burgess CreekTripleLeitner-Poma20049393490
BashorDoubleYan19743051505Oldest lift on the mountain, and dedicated terrain park and race training lift.
Bar-UEDoubleYan197713524820
Wildhorse GondolaPulse Gondola 6Leitner-Poma20091041942Does not serve any skiable terrain, built to connect Wildhorse Meadows (Housing development) to the base area.

According to steamboat.com, plans are in the works to place a high-speed six-pack along the Thunderhead lift line.

The $15 million gondola replacement project lasted through the summer of 2019. Some of the helicopter-enabled tower replacements were streamed online, and the lift was extensively tested under load. It opened with fanfare on November 23, 2019, at the start of the winter 2019-2020 season, but broke the next day on November 24,[12] when a main driveshaft sheared (possibly due to unexpected stress during transit from Austria). The manufacturer (Doppelmayr) sent a team from Austria to help with the situation, and the Steamboat lift Ops worked together around the clock to build, ship, and install the replacement part(s). The gondola reopened on December 5, almost 12 days later.[13]

NCAA Championships

Steamboat has hosted the NCAA Skiing Championships nine times (1968, 1969, 1979, 1993, 2006, 2010, 2016, 2018, 2024).

Full Steam Ahead

References

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