ChrisC
Well-known member
I am incredibly surprised by these recent articles about Aspen One (SkiCo)'s business updates, especially how they might relate to Alterra. While the Crown family owns Aspen One and an ownership stake in Alterra, Aspen One functions independently of Alterra and is only a partner mountain.
Most interested in the following:
www.aspendailynews.com
www.aspentimes.com
Most interested in the following:
- Aspen down 21.5%. (Means Vail's CO resorts likely took a 25-29% decline to get to Colorado's overall decline number. Likely CO destination resorts held up better.)
- Acknowledged they compete with European resorts. Aspen's future model is not Vail, but a year-round resort like Gstaad or Zermatt.
- Aspen is no longer a ski town, but just a resort town. New visitors are not there to ski, but just for a quick hit visit/check-box/IG post. (Likely more in common with Nantucket, Laguna Beach, Hilton Head (vs. Revelstoke/Steamboat/Whitefish).
- Is Aspen still a ski town, or is it becoming a luxury real-estate/influencer town with skiing as scenery?
- Claim lift tickets are only 20% of a visitor's spend. Said Lodging Costs are the main culprit of increased vacation costs - up 200-250% in the last 10 years? Thought lift tickets were equivalent to food and airfare costs, and giving away free lift tickets would not move visitation numbers.
- Refuse to grow skier visits through the Ikon Pass. Want to preserve the experience.
- “I think we are increasingly a real estate town. I’m not sure that’s a choice anyone wants to make, but it’s a reality we are facing, and it’s driving a lot of decisions and economics.” Tanner said there’s risk of becoming “a valley whose economy serves a property market.”
- On traffic, the presentation showed data indicating that about 30% to 40% of vehicles were construction vehicles and other “service vehicles” that support the real estate economy rather than the skiing economy.“Skier visits are going down yet traffic is increasing,” Buchheister said.
SkiCo execs paint uncertain future, describe reinvestment as at risk
During three presentations to elected officials, Aspen SkiCo executives question whether skiing will remain at the heart of the Roaring Fork Valley.
Aspen One’s CEO Dave Tanner gives update on state of the business
The future of the skiing industry is a more somber one than many might think.
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