Is the ski resort model dead?

Excellent points by both Riverc0il and EMSC. Vail I view like Whistler. It has the natural attributes of terrain and snow plus the other stuff, and is a very valuable property IMHO even with no growth or additional real estate.

Soulskier is not going to find anyplace where he can implement that entire laundry list. Just as the resort model didn't find some mid-size areas like Tamarack that attempted to clone it, there aren't that many locations which will fit the MRA model either. I would caution soulskier to view any prospective area within its regional context, which Tamarack and The Canyons clearly did not. I would also suggest that soulskier spend the upcoming ski season actually visiting some of the "small but interesting places," assess how viable they are and how many of the attributes on that list apply to them. I would suggest Castle Mt. and Whitewater in Canada, Powder Mt. in Utah, and some of those Montana areas q visits every year.

* A well-laid-out, strategically placed lift system
MRA-type areas almost by definition have slow lifts with some grunt work required to reach some of the goods. I would think in this model one would be very sparing in spending big $ on new lifts. You should be buying old chairs from areas putting in high speeds, even surface lifts, to serve terrain expansions.
* Free parking that offers quick access to the lifts
Agree, but you might inherit awkwardly situated parking
* Lodge floor plans that keep walking in boots in mind, as well as comfortable seating for everyone
See lift issue above. Spending big $ on shiny new lodges is probably something you should avoid. You probably want to live with the one you inherit, making incremental improvements.
* Avoiding profit margins based solely on skier visits
Since we're avoiding real estate plays and frou-frou amenities, what else would profit margins be based upon?
* Staying open until the snow runs out
Actually they do that here in SoCal, even at minimalist places like Baldy. But we have a big population base (without cold winters) to support that. Out in big snow country the locals are snow snobs and eager to move on to summer pursuits when the weather warms up.
* Base area lodges that offer healthy, cost-efficient food, are brown bag lunch supportive, and filled with fun off-the-slopes activities for those not interested in being on the hill
Agree, though the latter needs to be kept simple and inexpensive.
* A reliable shuttle bus that runs at opportune times for riders
Not sure whether we're talking about places with awkward parking or town-to-mountain shuttles. It depends on the specific situation.
* Treating all guests with respect, kindness and appreciation
That's not so easy with transient employees and erratic seasons, as I see at Baldy (another place soulskier should probably visit).
* A clock and trail updates at all lift stations
The boards like Alta's would be good. The big electronic signs like Vail or Big Bear are an unnecessary expense.
* Hydration stations located in strategic areas
I wouldn't spend $ to run plumbing where it isn't already.
* An updated, real-time website that provides information about lift operations, including weather conditions, accurate wind speeds and direction, hourly temperatures, rate of snowfall and water content, operating lifts and reason for closures, current avalanche forecast, and an interactive message board to speak your mind
This is the direction I've been advocating for Mt. Baldy. Very cost effective in improving local image and user friendly reputation.
* Low-interest and affordable payment plans for passes
This has to be a fairly hard headed economic decision. The relationship between day and season pass pricing is all over the map, varying by area and region.
* The ability to purchase investment shares, and become an owner in your own ski-energy center
* Shareholder and member privileges

This was the issue discussed at some length with Shames. MRG is the model here. This is the ski area soulskier really needs to visit and study. Hopefully he will come away with a different view than he expressed during the Shames episode.
 
In the simplest terms, I believe a greatly reduced overhead, minimal infrastructure with an emphasis on the skier experience is the new model. Then throw in the green energy component and offer membership shares. Think the Silverton ski experience, but include energy creation and owned/operated by the ski community, not an individual(s).

One of the areas the MRA is evaluating would have 1 double/triple chair, and 2-3 nut crackers. The lodge is already in place and sitting empty for the winter. Besides avalanche mitigation (plans to lower costs are being discussed), the overhead is much lower than any ski area that offers 1000's of acres of excellent terrain. The energy demand is very low, and thus would not require a huge amount of wind mills, solar panels, etc to be net negative (create more energy than is produced).

Tony Crocker":24whswk8 said:
soulskier":24whswk8 said:
Also, MRA will only be located in reliable snow belts and not need to have snowmaking, a huge expenditure.
This is a very limiting criterion, based upon the data I've collected over the years. Even in some of the better places for snow, like Whistler or Mammoth, some snowmaking is needed for extreme seasons or for runs near the base facilities that don't get as much snow as most of the terrain. If an area is affordable but has a great snow record, it's likely to be in a remote location. It's not an accident that Shames was the first area that caught soulskier's eye.

A simpler and less costly solution would be a chair with a mid station that you can download, as the snow line creeps up. In the case of Shames (which Tony wisely points out first caught my eye due to it's 1.5 CDN million price tag), the lower chair could easily be down-loadable, adding 700ish feet (I can't remember exactly) of elevation. The locals said that would add 2-3 weeks to an average season.
 
Tony Crocker":3r3mqqlf said:
Excellent points by both Riverc0il and EMSC. Vail I view like Whistler. It has the natural attributes of terrain and snow plus the other stuff, and is a very valuable property IMHO even with no growth or additional real estate.

I am curious what you mean by valuable. Does that mean the ability to charge and recieve $90+ for a lift ticket? Or do you mean property values? Please elaborate.

Soulskier is not going to find anyplace where he can implement that entire laundry list.

Just as the resort model didn't find some mid-size areas like Tamarack that attempted to clone it, there aren't that many locations which will fit the MRA model either. I would caution soulskier to view any prospective area within its regional context, which Tamarack and The Canyons clearly did not.

Absolutely. Community, environment and guests make up the three elements for MRA decisions. Involving and getting the community's input will be paramount to MRA's success.

I would also suggest that soulskier spend the upcoming ski season actually visiting some of the "small but interesting places," assess how viable they are and how many of the attributes on that list apply to them. I would suggest Castle Mt. and Whitewater in Canada, Powder Mt. in Utah, and some of those Montana areas q visits every year.


* A well-laid-out, strategically placed lift system
MRA-type areas almost by definition have slow lifts with some grunt work required to reach some of the goods. I would think in this model one would be very sparing in spending big $ on new lifts. You should be buying old chairs from areas putting in high speeds, even surface lifts, to serve terrain expansions.

Spot on, used old lifts and nut crackers to accesses ridges.

* Free parking that offers quick access to the lifts
Agree, but you might inherit awkwardly situated parking

By being values-based, I predict we will attract and have more return clients than trying to gouge them on parking.

* Lodge floor plans that keep walking in boots in mind, as well as comfortable seating for everyone
See lift issue above. Spending big $ on shiny new lodges is probably something you should avoid. You probably want to live with the one you inherit, making incremental improvements.

Minimalist approach for sure. MRA cares about the skiing experience, not some plush lodge with $15 cheeseburgers. BTW, one project MRA is evaluating already has a nice lodge that sits empty all winter.

* Avoiding profit margins based solely on skier visits
Since we're avoiding real estate plays and frou-frou amenities, what else would profit margins be based upon?

Energy creation. By making more energy than is consumed, that would translate into another revenue stream, or at the very least, a credit on the electric bill. Also, clean energy has many incentives and other opportunities to reduce overhead, such as tax credits, selling carbon offsets (when cap and trade passes), etc.

Summer mountain biking, selling MRA merchandise and being a regular music/festival venue are other examples.

* Staying open until the snow runs out
Actually they do that here in SoCal, even at minimalist places like Baldy. But we have a big population base (without cold winters) to support that. Out in big snow country the locals are snow snobs and eager to move on to summer pursuits when the weather warms up.

If many skiers had lift access to 40+ degree slopes into May and June, that would be a whole different story than at Mt Baldy.

* Base area lodges that offer healthy, cost-efficient food, are brown bag lunch supportive, and filled with fun off-the-slopes activities for those not interested in being on the hill

Agree, though the latter needs to be kept simple and inexpensive.

Exactly.

* A reliable shuttle bus that runs at opportune times for riders
Not sure whether we're talking about places with awkward parking or town-to-mountain shuttles. It depends on the specific situation.

Getting people to the mountain without driving their gas guzzler.

* Treating all guests with respect, kindness and appreciation
That's not so easy with transient employees and erratic seasons, as I see at Baldy (another place soulskier should probably visit).

If employees have a vested interest, they will treat the guests better. Tony, I grew up in So Cal and know Baldy well.

* A clock and trail updates at all lift stations
The boards like Alta's would be good. The big electronic signs like Vail or Big Bear are an unnecessary expense.

Simple, ski-centric stuff that cost virtually nothing and enhances the overall ski experience.

* Hydration stations located in strategic areas
I wouldn't spend $ to run plumbing where it isn't already.

Do you know the spickot at Brighton? Admin, does it still exist?

* An updated, real-time website that provides information about lift operations, including weather conditions, accurate wind speeds and direction, hourly temperatures, rate of snowfall and water content, operating lifts and reason for closures, current avalanche forecast, and an interactive message board to speak your mind
This is the direction I've been advocating for Mt. Baldy. Very cost effective in improving local image and user friendly reputation.

A real time website is not only cost effective, but is an awesome marketing tool and another example of being skier-centric.

* Low-interest and affordable payment plans for passes
This has to be a fairly hard headed economic decision. The relationship between day and season pass pricing is all over the map, varying by area and region.

MRA believes skiing should not be a rich man's sport. If that means making payments to support your lifestyle, so be it.

* The ability to purchase investment shares, and become an owner in your own ski-energy center
* Shareholder and member privileges

This was the issue discussed at some length with Shames. MRG is the model here. This is the ski area soulskier really needs to visit and study. Hopefully he will come away with a different view than he expressed during the Shames episode.

Some parts of MRG's model will be replicated. I appreciate what they have been able to accomplish.
 
soulskier":efea76dr said:
Energy creation. By making more energy than is consumed, that would translate into another revenue stream, or at the very least, a credit on the electric bill. Also, clean energy has many incentives and other opportunities to reduce overhead, such as tax credits, selling carbon offsets (when cap and trade passes), etc.
I remain very skeptical here. I have hands-on experience here with my solar panels. Thanks to rebates and tax credits the energy savings are about a 11% return on my investment but without them it would be 4% and not happening. Most companies that own ski areas are bottom line oriented, and more of them would be doing this if numbers pencil out as they did in my case. So Whistler, which has glacier fed hydro, has done it but very few areas are fortunate to have a resource like that. Why not investigate Mammoth as an example? Are they leaving money on the table by not putting up a wind tower or do the numbers not add up for them?

I'll save admin's breath and note that cap and trade is not happening anytime soon in the current economic and political climate. And if people like Joe Bastardi are right about La Nina, PDO etc. the actual climate over the next decade or two will put these plans on the back burner for quite a while. Technology improvements and the rising cost of oil will be the keys to growth of clean energy.
 
First of all I want to say I think this is a great thread. Lots of intelligent people with great points, keep it flowing.

Tony Crocker":31r7qzex said:
soulskier":31r7qzex said:
Energy creation. By making more energy than is consumed, that would translate into another revenue stream, or at the very least, a credit on the electric bill. Also, clean energy has many incentives and other opportunities to reduce overhead, such as tax credits, selling carbon offsets (when cap and trade passes), etc.

I remain very skeptical here. I have hands-on experience here with my solar panels. Thanks to rebates and tax credits the energy savings are about a 11% return on my investment but without them it would be 4% and not happening.

The point here was creating more energy than you consume, thus creating another revenue stream. But if the solar panels are paid off in full, wouldn't that essentially be an 11% ROI?

Mt Abram, Maine is in the permitting process for 2 acres of solar panels. When installed, they will be North America's first net negative ski area. The cost was 4.2 million, and they financed it over 40 years. And bear in mind, they have snowmaking, which as we all know, is over 60% of a ski area's energy consumption


Most companies that own ski areas are bottom line oriented, and more of them would be doing this if numbers pencil out as they did in my case. So Whistler, which has glacier fed hydro, has done it but very few areas are fortunate to have a resource like that.

That's because Whistler was benefiting from the excellent exchange rate to the dollar for many years as well as the now-collasped real estate boom, not thinking about how to be sustainable for the long term. Post Olympics, they are at crossroads on how to proceed. Check out Michel's Beaudry guest piece on this.
http://mrablog.com/2010/09/10/notes-on- ... l-beaudry/


Why not investigate Mammoth as an example? Are they leaving money on the table by not putting up a wind tower or do the numbers not add up for them?

Great idea, Mammoth is a fantastic example to examine for many reasons. Maybe we should start a Mammoth Mountain Fantasy league thread?

The problem with Mammoth is they have over 30 lifts, many of them high speed, numerous lodges and a rather large footprint. Sure they have the wind, solar and hydro, but they need to generate an enormous amount of energy to be net negative.

Say we could develop Mammoth today, in 2010, forgetting the permitting process. We would install one chairlift from the base area to the top the Gondola, with a mid loading/down loading around the top of chair 1/bottom of chair 3. Maybe a couple nut crackers to pull you out from Canyon Lodge and the bottom of Chair 13/14, so you can ski from DragonBack to Whitebark Bowl. Totally minimalist approach, but all the same terrain as is accessed today. In fact, we would add an eco friendly shuttle bus to take you back from Tamarack so you can ski the whole backside, including one of Cali's coolest run, Hole in the Wall.

Sure, you aren't skiing 40,000 vertical feet/day, but you aren't skiing bumps and crossing tracks too much either. We think it's all about the quality, not quantity.


I'll save admin's breath and note that cap and trade is not happening anytime soon in the current economic and political climate.

The elections are next month. Then maybe the politicians will start doing something again? And Cap and Trade will eventually happen, so why not position for it now?

And if people like Joe Bastardi are right about La Nina, PDO etc. the actual climate over the next decade or two will put these plans on the back burner for quite a while. Technology improvements and the rising cost of oil will be the keys to growth of clean energy.

I see that huge catastrophe off the gulf coast as a huge opportunity to develop clean energy economy.
 
soulskier":2jvw6h1y said:
Tony Crocker":2jvw6h1y said:
I'll save admin's breath and note that cap and trade is not happening anytime soon in the current economic and political climate.
The elections are next month. Then maybe the politicians will start doing something again? And Cap and Trade will eventually happen, so why not position for it now?

I really shouldn't do this but...

<soapbox unrelated to my perspective in the pending article>

If you think Cap and Trade is going to happen after Nov. 2nd's bloodbath you're being blindly idealistic. By January we're going to have a lame duck President with two years to go in his only term in office and if the lame duck Congress tries to ramrod Cap and Trade down the country's throat between November and January you're going to have nothing short of popular revolt in this country. What this country needs to focus on after the Republicans regain control of both the House and Senate is small business incentives to produce job creation, not another tax to fund a get rich scheme for certain individuals to support unproven "science" that will further extend and deepen the economic quagmire that we're in now.

</soapbox off>
 
Admin":1i3tia1p said:
soulskier":1i3tia1p said:
Tony Crocker":1i3tia1p said:
I'll save admin's breath and note that cap and trade is not happening anytime soon in the current economic and political climate.
The elections are next month. Then maybe the politicians will start doing something again? And Cap and Trade will eventually happen, so why not position for it now?

I really shouldn't do this but...

<soapbox unrelated to my perspective in the pending article>

If you think Cap and Trade is going to happen after Nov. 2nd's bloodbath you're being blindly idealistic. By January we're going to have a lame duck President with two years to go in his only term in office and if the lame duck Congress tries to ramrod Cap and Trade down the country's throat between November and January you're going to have nothing short of popular revolt in this country. What this country needs to focus on after the Republicans regain control of both the House and Senate is small business incentives to produce job creation, not another tax to fund a get rich scheme for certain individuals to support unproven "science" that will further extend and deepen the economic quagmire that we're in now.

</soapbox off>

Your right, you shouldn't do that. Let's stick to skiing, OK?
 
soulskier":2o3k3xtn said:
Your right, you shouldn't do that. Let's stick to skiing, OK?

I bend over backwards to avoid espousing my political views on these forums, and with good reason -- it's a ski forum, not a political one. There are other forums dedicated to political discussion and debate. However in this case it has a direct correlation if you're including the rewards of cap and trade, something that won't happen anytime soon if ever, in your profit equations for MRA. Where I ran afoul of my own rules was in discussing my perspective on what the country needs to do next.
 
Admin":hndvw6ks said:
soulskier":hndvw6ks said:
Your right, you shouldn't do that. Let's stick to skiing, OK?

I bend over backwards to avoid espousing my political views on these forums, and with good reason -- it's a ski forum, not a political one. There are other forums dedicated to political discussion and debate. However in this case it has a direct correlation if you're including the rewards of cap and trade, something that won't happen anytime soon if ever, in your profit equations for MRA.

You should never mention bending over backwards and politics in the same sentence [-X
 
I will leave the pure politics alone in this thread. I'm addressing the "clean energy at ski areas" issue from the perspective of economic advantage and sustainability of the ski area. A ski area should not make an investment that depends upon cap and trade becoming law soon in order to make sense. California does have a state law with renewable energy goals that might result in Mammoth's investment being subsidized to some degree by its utility.

soulskier":2tozoi40 said:
The problem with Mammoth is they have over 30 lifts, many of them high speed, numerous lodges and a rather large footprint. Sure they have the wind, solar and hydro, but they need to generate an enormous amount of energy to be net negative.

Say we could develop Mammoth today, in 2010, forgetting the permitting process. We would install one chairlift from the base area to the top the Gondola, with a mid loading/down loading around the top of chair 1/bottom of chair 3. Maybe a couple nut crackers to pull you out from Canyon Lodge and the bottom of Chair 13/14, so you can ski from DragonBack to Whitebark Bowl. Totally minimalist approach, but all the same terrain as is accessed today. In fact, we would add an eco friendly shuttle bus to take you back from Tamarack so you can ski the whole backside, including one of Cali's coolest run, Hole in the Wall.

Sure, you aren't skiing 40,000 vertical feet/day, but you aren't skiing bumps and crossing tracks too much either. We think it's all about the quality, not quantity.
Mammoth has 3,500 acres, nearly all of it usable, and the only congested sectors are near the lodges. There are people like joegm who think Mammoth doesn't have enough moguls! Mammoth also has close to 1.5 million skier visits highly concentrated on weekends, which is why it needs all those lifts. When I started skiing there in the late 1970's there was routinely a 30+ minute wait for the gondola to get up top to the expert terrain. And intermediates often had a 45 minute wait for chair 2. Do I want to go back to those days? No thank you.

soulskier":2tozoi40 said:
The point here was creating more energy than you consume, thus creating another revenue stream. But if the solar panels are paid off in full, wouldn't that essentially be an 11% ROI?
Yes, that's why I'm quite happy with it, despite having to spend another $6,300 this winter to redo the roof under the panels so it won't leak. Over time that 11% is a minimum because it assumes no increase in future electricity rates. But generating enough energy to be net negative is an ideological, not an economic goal. On the residential side at least, utility rates are tiered. The economics work (at least in my case) for eliminating the high cost tier(s) but not necessarily the half as costly basic level. Over an entire year I'm covering about 2/3 of my electricity use, though from late March to late July I covered all of it. If you go negative for a whole year you're going to be paid at the lowest rate. The more usual case is you get a credit toward a future billing period when you're net positive.

soulskier":2tozoi40 said:
Mt Abram, Maine is in the permitting process for 2 acres of solar panels. When installed, they will be North America's first net negative ski area. The cost was 4.2 million, and they financed it over 40 years. And bear in mind, they have snowmaking, which as we all know, is over 60% of a ski area's energy consumption
Photovoltaic solar? In Maine? I'd really like to see the numbers on that. During the year+ I've had solar panels I've had 84% sunshine by a crude spreadsheet model based upon my actual 87% vs. maximum production. I assume (based upon actual results from my panels) you get 20% production on a completely cloudy day from diffused light. I doubt anyone in the Northeast is over 50% sun, which would translate to 60% production. I'm ignoring effects of higher latitude, removing snow/ice from the panels promptly, etc.

I'm making constructive suggestions for the type of ski areas soulskier should visit and investigate thoroughly to see which of his criteria can be realistically implemented. Mammoth is a mega-mountain that is far from the MRA model. But I do think it's an interesting example for him to investigate on the renewable energy angle. Mammoth gets a whole lot more sun than Maine too, but I still suspect the economics of wind are better for Mammoth.

I forgot about Patrick...
Patrick":2tozoi40 said:
There are a studies out there that say that the average skier will ski more at the age of 40-45 that any other time in his life. My biggest season have been since I reached 40.
Yes it worked that way for me too, the sharp increase starting at age 44. A Kottke report a few years back showed skier/rider visits by age on a remarkably flat plateau from the early 20's to the late 40's. I suspect the 45-year-old skier visits come from fewer people skiing more days per person that the 25-year-old skier visits.

Patrick":2tozoi40 said:
in 25 years I'll be 70 ([censored] that is depressing) and wondering if Tony will ski as much then too?
At age 82 I'm sure not. :lol: This is another reason I don't get the real estate model. It's easier to modify gradually your leisure pursuits if you're not anchored to a specific vacation location. There's still my Iron Blosam week, but that was cheap and Adam will have it by then anyway.
 
soulskier":1bel3wej said:
The problem with Mammoth is they have over 30 lifts, many of them high speed, numerous lodges and a rather large footprint. Sure they have the wind, solar and hydro, but they need to generate an enormous amount of energy to be net negative.

Say we could develop Mammoth today, in 2010, forgetting the permitting process. We would install one chairlift from the base area to the top the Gondola, with a mid loading/down loading around the top of chair 1/bottom of chair 3. Maybe a couple nut crackers to pull you out from Canyon Lodge and the bottom of Chair 13/14, so you can ski from DragonBack to Whitebark Bowl. Totally minimalist approach, but all the same terrain as is accessed today. In fact, we would add an eco friendly shuttle bus to take you back from Tamarack so you can ski the whole backside, including one of Cali's coolest run, Hole in the Wall.

Sure, you aren't skiing 40,000 vertical feet/day, but you aren't skiing bumps and crossing tracks too much either. We think it's all about the quality, not quantity.
[/quote]

You're kidding right? All of Southern Cali goes there every weekend and you're advocating cutting lift capacity? So, you're not skiing 40000 feet a day, but it's quality over quantity right? :brick:

Is waiting 40 minutes every time you finish a run sound like quality? With that business strategy, Mammoth would lose customers and go under.

Don't get me started on a carbon neutral ski area. What does that have to do with economics? If carbon neutrality was a viable form of revenue many ski areas would already be doing that. Frankly, if "green energy" was really viable on an economic level we would be well on our way to being carbon neutral as a country by now( for those of us in the USA).

I'm with Crocker on this one. And I'm pretty skeptical about that resort in maine. I doubt they're carbon neutral and making snow.
 
Tony Crocker":2bdoj5on said:
I will leave the pure politics alone in this thread. I'm addressing the "clean energy at ski areas" issue from the perspective of economic advantage and sustainability of the ski area. A ski area should not make an investment that depends upon cap and trade becoming law soon in order to make sense.

MRA isn't going to invest because of the potential of the cap and trade, and the subsequent carbon offsets that will be sold. However, if and when it passes, it will be another advantage. We will put a * after that one in the future.

California does have a state law with renewable energy goals that might result in Mammoth's investment being subsidized to some degree by its utility.

Yes, subsidizing and other government handouts will be a part of the lasagna financing.

soulskier":2bdoj5on said:
The problem with Mammoth is they have over 30 lifts, many of them high speed, numerous lodges and a rather large footprint. Sure they have the wind, solar and hydro, but they need to generate an enormous amount of energy to be net negative.

Say we could develop Mammoth today, in 2010, forgetting the permitting process. We would install one chairlift from the base area to the top the Gondola, with a mid loading/down loading around the top of chair 1/bottom of chair 3. Maybe a couple nut crackers to pull you out from Canyon Lodge and the bottom of Chair 13/14, so you can ski from DragonBack to Whitebark Bowl. Totally minimalist approach, but all the same terrain as is accessed today. In fact, we would add an eco friendly shuttle bus to take you back from Tamarack so you can ski the whole backside, including one of Cali's coolest run, Hole in the Wall.

Sure, you aren't skiing 40,000 vertical feet/day, but you aren't skiing bumps and crossing tracks too much either. We think it's all about the quality, not quantity.

Mammoth has 3,500 acres, nearly all of it usable, and the only congested sectors are near the lodges. There are people like joegm who think Mammoth doesn't have enough moguls!

The MRA market will be catering to the higher level skier that prefers longer smooth and untracked runs, not bumps. Remember, with one chair and a couple nut crackers, we could access the same 3,500 acres currently accessed by 30 lifts (more than 5,000 acres if we ran an eco shuttle from the bottom of the backside/Tamarack). In all due respect, there are plenty of mountains where joegm can ski moguls.

More importantly, if you don't have 30 lifts, than you don't need 1.5 million visits.


Mammoth also has close to 1.5 million skier visits highly concentrated on weekends, which is why it needs all those lifts. When I started skiing there in the late 1970's there was routinely a 30+ minute wait for the gondola to get up top to the expert terrain. And intermediates often had a 45 minute wait for chair 2. Do I want to go back to those days? No thank you.

MRA is not looking to create the 1.5 million skier visit experience. We want to create a skier centric experience, more about legendary runs, enjoying the wilderness and the solitude.

soulskier":2bdoj5on said:
The point here was creating more energy than you consume, thus creating another revenue stream. But if the solar panels are paid off in full, wouldn't that essentially be an 11% ROI?
Yes, that's why I'm quite happy with it, despite having to spend another $6,300 this winter to redo the roof under the panels so it won't leak. Over time that 11% is a minimum because it assumes no increase in future electricity rates. But generating enough energy to be net negative is an ideological, not an economic goal.

Why not an economic goal? If your liabilities could be assets, than that makes economic sense.

On the residential side at least, utility rates are tiered. The economics work (at least in my case) for eliminating the high cost tier(s) but not necessarily the half as costly basic level. Over an entire year I'm covering about 2/3 of my electricity use, though from late March to late July I covered all of it. If you go negative for a whole year you're going to be paid at the lowest rate. The more usual case is you get a credit toward a future billing period when you're net positive.

soulskier":2bdoj5on said:
Mt Abram, Maine is in the permitting process for 2 acres of solar panels. When installed, they will be North America's first net negative ski area. The cost was 4.2 million, and they financed it over 40 years. And bear in mind, they have snowmaking, which as we all know, is over 60% of a ski area's energy consumption

Photovoltaic solar? In Maine? I'd really like to see the numbers on that. During the year+ I've had solar panels I've had 84% sunshine by a crude spreadsheet model based upon my actual 87% vs. maximum production. I assume (based upon actual results from my panels) you get 20% production on a completely cloudy day from diffused light. I doubt anyone in the Northeast is over 50% sun, which would translate to 60% production. I'm ignoring effects of higher latitude, removing snow/ice from the panels promptly, etc.

Here's an article you can download. Sounds like they will make most of their energy in the summer months, but over the course of a year, will be net negative.

http://mountainridersalliance.files.wor ... energy.pdf



I'm making constructive suggestions for the type of ski areas soulskier should visit and investigate thoroughly to see which of his criteria can be realistically implemented. Mammoth is a mega-mountain that is far from the MRA model. But I do think it's an interesting example for him to investigate on the renewable energy angle. Mammoth gets a whole lot more sun than Maine too, but I still suspect the economics of wind are better for Mammoth.

I think the most interesting comparison is that Mammoth used to be values based, and about the skiing, as opposed to trophy homes and a sterile cookie cutter village. The has not been a terrain expansion since Gondola 2 was installed, only uphill capacity, which IMO decreases the skier experience.

I'm curious to know how Dave McCoy really feels about the direction is beloved mountain has taken since he first installed the rope tow back in 1942.


I forgot about Patrick...
Patrick":2bdoj5on said:
There are a studies out there that say that the average skier will ski more at the age of 40-45 that any other time in his life. My biggest season have been since I reached 40.
Yes it worked that way for me too, the sharp increase starting at age 44. A Kottke report a few years back showed skier/rider visits by age on a remarkably flat plateau from the early 20's to the late 40's. I suspect the 45-year-old skier visits come from fewer people skiing more days per person that the 25-year-old skier visits.

Patrick":2bdoj5on said:
in 25 years I'll be 70 ([censored] that is depressing) and wondering if Tony will ski as much then too?
At age 82 I'm sure not. :lol: This is another reason I don't get the real estate model. It's easier to modify gradually your leisure pursuits if you're not anchored to a specific vacation location. There's still my Iron Blosam week, but that was cheap and Adam will have it by then anyway.
 
rfarren":12kzuuxd said:
soulskier":12kzuuxd said:
The problem with Mammoth is they have over 30 lifts, many of them high speed, numerous lodges and a rather large footprint. Sure they have the wind, solar and hydro, but they need to generate an enormous amount of energy to be net negative.

Say we could develop Mammoth today, in 2010, forgetting the permitting process. We would install one chairlift from the base area to the top the Gondola, with a mid loading/down loading around the top of chair 1/bottom of chair 3. Maybe a couple nut crackers to pull you out from Canyon Lodge and the bottom of Chair 13/14, so you can ski from DragonBack to Whitebark Bowl. Totally minimalist approach, but all the same terrain as is accessed today. In fact, we would add an eco friendly shuttle bus to take you back from Tamarack so you can ski the whole backside, including one of Cali's coolest run, Hole in the Wall.

Sure, you aren't skiing 40,000 vertical feet/day, but you aren't skiing bumps and crossing tracks too much either. We think it's all about the quality, not quantity.

You're kidding right? All of Southern Cali goes there every weekend and you're advocating cutting lift capacity? So, you're not skiing 40000 feet a day, but it's quality over quantity right? :brick:

Is waiting 40 minutes every time you finish a run sound like quality? With that business strategy, Mammoth would lose customers and go under.

We are talking in the context if Mammoth were developed today from scratch, not with a client base of 1.5 million skiers.

Don't get me started on a carbon neutral ski area. What does that have to do with economics? If carbon neutrality was a viable form of revenue many ski areas would already be doing that. Frankly, if "green energy" was really viable on an economic level we would be well on our way to being carbon neutral as a country by now( for those of us in the USA).

Just because it hasn't been done before doesn't mean it shouldn't be done in the future. Do you know there was a big uproar when the decision was made to standardize time? Besides, if climate change is not reversed, our children's children aren't going to enjoy skiing.

I'm with Crocker on this one. And I'm pretty skeptical about that resort in maine. I doubt they're carbon neutral and making snow.[/quote]

Here's the link to the article.

http://mountainridersalliance.files.wor ... energy.pdf
 
My $48,000 solar panels produce 10,000 kWh per year, so the $4.2 million producing 733,000 kWh a year in a worse climate is in the ballpark. However, 733,000 kWh a year at 11 cents is $80,630, not a great return ~2% on a $4.2 million investment. So I hope Mt. Abrams has a sweetheart deal on that 40 year loan.

soulskier":15keyi9m said:
I think the most interesting comparison is that Mammoth used to be values based, and about the skiing, as opposed to trophy homes and a sterile cookie cutter village. The has not been a terrain expansion since Gondola 2 was installed, only uphill capacity, which IMO decreases the skier experience.

I'm curious to know how Dave McCoy really feels about the direction is beloved mountain has taken since he first installed the rope tow back in 1942.

When I first skied Mammoth there were 16 double chairs and 2 T-bars. Dave McCoy moved to correct his lift line problems by installing new lifts within the existing terrain, starting with chairs 17-19 in 1979. For experts the key additions were chairs 22 (which also opened previously hike-to terrain) and 23 in 1982. This was all done before the high speed era, and by 1997 only chairs 1 and 16 had been converted to high speed. Dave McCoy sold his real estate to Intrawest then, presuming they had the expertise to improve that part of Mammoth. However Dave retained 51% control of mountain operations and got Intrawest to upgrade the gondola and several more lifts to high speed. So I think Dave was all in favor of the lift upgrades and figured out a way to get someone else to pay for them. When Dave reached 90 years old and decided to sell (rather shrewdly at the top of the real estate market in 2006 and coming off back-to-back 500+ inch, 1.5 million visit seasons), 15% of the stake went to Rusty Gregory, the CEO who came up through the ranks over 30 years.

Compared to the vast majority of mega-mountains, Mammoth stays truer to its roots. Flexible opening and closing dates and lift operations are still quite similar to "the good old days," as I've documented on the Mammoth Forum. Intrawest screwed up the Village development, notably with the parking issue, but I find little to complain about so far in Mammoth's mountain operations. I do know that Starwood (70% ownership) is carrying a lot of debt on that excessive 2006 sale price, so Mammoth is being aggressive about trying to generate revenue.

None of this is relevant to MRA. MRA is going to buy a small ski area (at least in terms of existing skier visits) because it can't afford a large one.
soulskier":15keyi9m said:
The MRA market will be catering to the higher level skier that prefers longer smooth and untracked runs
You may also have to deal with avalanche control, which is not cheap. I presume soulskier is already studying Silverton closely.
 
Any one have any stats regarding how much carbon the resort puts out compared to how much carbon its visitors put out to go skiing? The biggest issue obviously here is travel (car, plane, or both) but I suppose you could go so far as to look at all the gear each patron has bought (which incurred carbon in its creation, transportation to the retail outlet, and transportation to the retail outlet to the consumers' home). I guess that data should not argue against a resort trying to get as close to neutral as possible.

But in the bigger picture, don't we already know the enemy and the enemy is us? Can a resort be truly neutral if the consumer is not taken into account either? I am concerned about the environment and any potential harm I may be doing to it. But I can not reconcile that with my love of skiing, especially when I don't really and truly know exactly how much harm driving 200 miles round trip actually has on the environment. Is a policy to try for being carbon neutral not internally consistent with itself if customers cause the most carbon and it is not addressed?
 
riverc0il":26hbk0r7 said:
But in the bigger picture, don't we already know the enemy and the enemy is us? Can a resort be truly neutral if the consumer is not taken into account either?

Exactly.

I believe that Soulskier wants resorts with fewer beds and fewer skiers. If Mammoth were to be rebuilt today in his vision, it would be a huge mountain without the capacity to support the population interested in visiting it. We all want a huge mountain with empty lift lines, powder runs all day, and cheap lodgings, but it's not 1948 anymore. Lot's of people ski live in major urban areas (away from the mountains), and they need places to stay. Let's use Revelstoke as an example. It's hard to get to, and it's more or less a new resort. Yet, it is seeing a growth of about 10% each year in skier growth (during a recession). I promise you those stories of empty trails and powder all day will soon disappear. And as the mountain is very large, people will continue head over that way. If the lift layout is what Soulskier would want for Mammoth, most of the people visiting would probably not return, relegating Revelstoke into a locals mountain. However, there is one problem with that: Revelstoke is too large to effectively be a locals mountain( the cost of operation increases with terrain). In response, they would either have to close, or reduce the skiable terrain to contain expenses. Yep, quality of quantity.

As far as Mt. Abrams is concerned. It is a mountain with 1150 Vertical Ft. and 650 acres of skiable terrain, of which 250 acres are trails. Perhaps they make snow on all 250 acres of trails, but I doubt it. So, for them to use green energy, although still a stretch to be carbon neutral, is possible due to size. The snow making line only need to be pumped up 1150 vert ft. Now double that for a mountain with 2300 vert ft, and 500 acres of trails.... that's quite a bit more energy (in fact more than double), and that's just getting water up the side of the mountain. The increase of cost in terms of longer lifts, more staff (required in the case of medical emergencies), insurance, and upkeep would be substantial. This would result in either increased prices for lift tix, or a need to expand the number of people skiing at the ski area, or both.

IMHO, Soulskier's idea of how a ski area should work is a question of scale. It is feasible at small/smaller mountains, and maybe a few medium sized mountains close to large urban areas, but it won't work for most large areas.
 
Off to Montreal to get a letter signed :evil: ...anyhow here is a parting shot.

From MRG's website posted 3 years ago.

http://www.madriverglen.com/?page=skigreen.html

Mad River Glen, with the help of it's non-profit partner, The Stark Mountain Foundation, has implemented the "Ski Green If You Can" carbon offset program for the upcoming season. It involves Mad River Glen purchasing carbon offsets to render the ski areas already minimal operations carbon neutral. These offsets will be earmarked to fund methane digester projects on dairy farms right here in Vermont. These projects directly reduce green house gas emissions in a meaningful way and would not have been possible without these kinds of carbon offset purchases.

What sets this program apart from others in the ski industry is that it also tackles the impact of each skiers commute to the mountain, not just the operational impact. In Mad River Glen's case the skier's commute has five times the impact as the mountain's operations. Using the "Ski Green If You Can" program as a vehicle we challenge skiers to follow the mountain's lead and voluntarily offset their commute when they buy tickets or season passes. "We wanted to get involved with this program so we could help Mad River Glen offset their operations, and encourage the skiers to mitigate their impact as well," says Stark Mountain Foundation President, Penny Parson. Skiers pay either $1 for a day ticket, $3 for a Mad Card(a book of 3 discounted tickets) or $10 for a season pass when they make their purchase.
It is pretty common these days for businesses to talk about their "carbon footprint" as concern over climate change has finally begun to resonate with consumers. Mad River Glen's philosophy is; if you don't build it in the first place you won't have to offset its long-term environmental effects. That being said the ski area operations still have an environmental impact. "We looked long and hard at offsets because, frankly, I was quite cynical about them," said Mad River Glen Marketing Director, Eric Friedman. "We would only go down this road if we could guarantee that the funds raised would actually go to a project that wouldn't have happened anyway, and we wanted it to be used for a project here in Vermont. That's why we after a great deal of research we decided to buy our offsets from Native Energy." Native Energy is a privately held Native American energy company. On behalf of its member tribes, they work to power America with wind and other renewable energy sources. They are involved in many projects around the nation including methane digesters on family farms in Vermont. All proceeds from the "Ski Green If You Can" campaign will go specifically towards these local projects.
 
Good thread. Is the resort model dead?

I have two thoughts. First, however, I’ll disclose my bias (and the bias of every skier I ski with) for simple skier/rider-centered areas with lower skier densities. I first learned to ski at the Middlebury Snow Bowl as a small child. I spent many of my formative years skiing MRG. I first skied west of the Mississippi at Alta in 1984 at the age of 16. Alta has probably been the western area I have most frequently skied over the last 20 years, although I have started to prefer Solitude, Snowbasin, or Powder Mountain on powder days in recent years due to the generally lower skier densities. When I ski Snowbird, I will often skip starting the day on the tram, in part, because I hate walking through what feels like several floors of shopping mall to get to the tram line.

I also must disclose that I don’t generally follow ski industry news, and have very little knowledge or interest in ski industry economics.

Thought number one: Assuming a robust economic recovery is dependant upon big increases in consumer spending by American consumers, then, IMO, it will be a long time before a robust recovery occurs. I don’t see how this won’t effect discretionary spending on second-home real estate and expensive vacations. For much of the American middle class, wages have fallen or failed to keep pace with the cost of living for a long time. (We can save political discussion of why wages have been falling for a more appropriate forum). Continued middle class spending, however, was facilitated by easy credit. Easy credit has evaporated. In other words, like Admin, much of the American middle class has been bending over at lot lately. Unlike Admin, I’m not sure backwards is the direction they have been bending. Does anyone see higher wages and/or easier credit on the horizon right now? If not, I don’t understand how American consumers will be able to start to spend at levels necessary to revitalize the economy. Unless all or most of the second-home real estate market is driven by the wealthy, I don’t see how the resort model won’t suffer as well.

Thought number two: Those interested in the how-to aspects of keeping a bare-bones ski area in the black, might want to do a little research on Mt. Bohemia, MI. I don’t know a thing about their finances. However, for the ten years since they opened they have kept the lifts spinning and managed to add new terrain most years.

I finally managed to get out to Bohemia for a long weekend at the end of January last year and was impressed by both the quality of the skiing (9-13 inches of dry lake-effect powder took two days to track out) and the simplicity of the operation. The infrastructure is certainly minimal and operating costs must be comparatively low: two 900 vert fixed-grips and a rickety shuttle bus, no lodge, restaurant, or slope-side real estate (just a small collection of yurts, food for sale worthy only of vending machines, and a handful of primitive rental cabins), no snowmaking, no grooming, and the only patrollers I saw were national.

In many ways, Bohemia is completely inaccessible. It is very remote. It is at least seven hours from Minneapolis/St.Paul, the nearest large metro area. (Driving out on a Thursday night, arriving on the Keweenaw before midnight, we did a 110 mile stretch of road on solid snowpack without spotting a single piece of pavement. For 50 miles of that, we didn’t see a single other moving vehicle.) Bohemia has no novice or beginner terrain. It is in a very sparsely-populated region of the country that has been economically depressed for decades. The local lodging and restaurant options are few and far-between and cater mostly to U.P. snowmobilers.

In one key aspect Bohemia is quite accessible: $99.00 season passes. Bohemia is certainly accessible to students at MI Tech in Houghton as well.

With 900 vert, 250+ inches of lake-effect, and sustained steep tree skiing, I’ll acknowledge that Bohemia offers an absolutely unique product given its location in the middle of a huge part of the country devoid of actual mountains. My guess, however, is that they have learned a thing or two about running a low-overhead ski area that just might be applicable to other regions of the country.
 

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