Steamboat Ski Resort
Steamboat Resort is a major ski area in northwestern Colorado, operated by the Steamboat Ski & Resort Corporation in Steamboat Springs. It is located on Mount Werner, a mountain in the Park Range in the Routt National Forest. The ski area first opened on January 12, 1963.[1]
Steamboat Resort | |
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Steamboat Resort from the base of the mountain | |
Steamboat Resort Location in Colorado Steamboat Resort Steamboat Resort (the United States) | |
Location | Routt County, Colorado, USA |
Nearest major city | Steamboat Springs, Colorado |
Coordinates | 40°27′10″N 106°46′23″W |
Top elevation | 10,568 feet (3,221 m) |
Base elevation | 6,900 feet (2,100 m) |
Skiable area | 2965 acres (12.0 km²) |
Runs | 165 total 14% beginner 42% intermediate 44% advanced |
Longest run | "Why Not" ~ 3 miles (4.8 km) |
Lift system | 23 total (1 gondola, 1 high-speed six passenger, 6 high-speed quad chairs, 4 triple chairs, 3 Double chairs, 6 Surface lifts |
Terrain parks | 4 |
Snowfall | 400 in/year (10.15 m/year) |
Website | http://www.steamboat.com |
The ski area has 169 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 half-pipes in North America. Limited night skiing began with the 2013–14 season.
Ownership
In 2017 Steamboat Ski Resort was purchased by Alterra Mountain Company. Previously Steamboat Resort was owned by Intrawest, a Canadian resort management company. Steamboat was one of the seven resorts owned by Intrawest.[2] 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 (2,100 m)
- Summit: 10,568 feet (3,221 m)
- Vertical Rise: 3,668 feet (1,118 m)
Trails
- Area: 2,965 acres (12.00 km2; 4.633 sq mi)
- Trails: 169 total (14% beginner, 42% intermediate, 44% advanced)
- Longest Run: "Why Not" ~ 3 miles (4.8 km)
- Terrain Parks: 6 (including Mavericks Superpipe)
- Average Annual Snowfall: 400 inches (1,000 cm)[1]
The three lower mountain lifts (the 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 five high-speed quads, the highest concentrations are on north Sunshine Peak, most of Storm Peak, Pioneer Ridge, and Morningside Park. The sole double-black runs of the area make up the extreme terrain on Mount Werner.
Slope Aspects
- North: 20%[3]
- South: 23%
- West: 55%
- East: 2%
Lifts
- 23 total
- 1 Gondola (formerly known as the Silver Bullet)
- 8-Passenger Gondola (2,200 ft. vertical rise, 9:00 ride time, Doppelmayr, installed 1986. First 8 passenger gondola in the world.)
- 1 high speed six pack
- Christie Peak Express (1,103 ft. vertical rise, 4:45 ride time, Leitner-Poma, installed 2007)
- 6 high speed quads
- Storm Peak Express (2,160 ft. vertical rise, 7:00 ride time, Doppelmayr, installed 1992)
- Sundown Express (1,936 ft. vertical rise, 5:30 ride time, Doppelmayr, installed 1992)
- Thunderhead Express (1,638 ft. vertical rise, 5:30 ride time, Doppelmayr, installed 1997)
- Pony Express (1,657 ft. vertical rise, 5:20 ride time, Garaventa CTEC, installed 1998)
- Sunshine Express (1,300 ft. vertical rise, 5:30 ride time, Poma, installed 2006, originally Tombstone Express at Canyons Resort installed in 1997.)
- Elkhead Express (710 ft. vertical rise, 2:30 ride time, Doppelmayr, installed 2016)
- 6 triple chairlifts
- Christie III (1,030 ft. vertical rise, 7:30 ride time, Lift Engineering (YAN), installed 1979, (used primarily on high demand days as an auxiliary lift to the Christie Peak Express. In 2007, the lift received Doppelmayr chairs from the Sunshine lift.)
- Preview (vertical rise NA, ride time NA, Lift Engineering (YAN), installed 2007, originally Southface(YAN) installed new in 1979)
- Four Points (1,366 ft. vertical rise, 7:30 ride time, Lift Engineering (YAN) with Doppelmayr chairs and sheaves. Originally installed 1983 as the Storm Peak lift, shortened to current length in 1992. In 2013, the lift received new Doppelmayr EJs.)
- South Peak (340 ft. vertical rise, 4:00 ride time, Lift Engineering (YAN), installed 1984. The lift received Doppelmayr chairs from the Sunshine lift in 2007.)
- Morningside (542 ft. vertical rise, 6:00 ride time, Garaventa-CTEC, installed 1996)
- Burgess Creek (950 ft. vertical rise, 7:30 ride time, Leitner-Poma, installed 2004)
- 3 double chairlifts
- Priest Creek (1,930 ft. vertical rise, 10:30 ride time, Lift Engineering (YAN) with Heron-Poma chairs, installed 1972, used primarily on high demand days as an auxiliary lift to the Sundown Express)
- Bashor (315 ft. vertical rise, 3:00 ride time, Lift Engineering (YAN), installed 1974)
- Bar-UE (1,380 ft. vertical rise, 9:00 ride time, Lift Engineering (YAN), installed 1977)
- 6 Surface
- Rough Rider (Surface Platter Tow) (140 ft. vertical rise, 3:00 ride time, Doppelmayr, installed 1989)
- Wrangler (Magic Carpet)
- Desperado (Magic Carpet)
- Easy Rider (Magic Carpet)
- Sundance (Magic Carpet)
- Buckaroo (Magic Carpet)
- 1 Gondola (formerly known as the Silver Bullet)
According to steamboat.com, plans are in the works to place a high speed six-pack along the Thunderhead lift line.
Historical season dates
- 2015 / 2016 Ski Season Dates: November 27, 2015 - April 10, 2016
- 2014 / 2015 Ski Season Dates: November 26, 2014 – April 12, 2015
- 2013 / 2014 Ski Season Dates: November 27, 2013 – April 16, 2014
- 2012 / 2013 Ski Season Dates: November 21, 2012 – April 14, 2013
- 2011 / 2012 Ski Season Dates: November 23, 2011 – April 15, 2012
- 2010 / 2011 Ski Season Dates: November 24, 2010 – April 10, 2011
- 2009 / 2010 Ski Season Dates: November 25, 2009 – April 11, 2010
- 2008 / 2009 Ski Season Dates: November 26, 2008 – April 12, 2009
- 2007 / 2008 Ski Season Dates: November 30, 2007 – April 6, 2008
References
- Fetcher, Bill. "History of the Steamboat Ski Area". ColoradoSkiHistory.com. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
- "Intrawest – Vacation Destination Resorts". Intrawest. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
- "Best Ski Resorts: Steamboat Ski Resort Terrain, Snow Quality and Mountain Ranks". ZRankings. ZRankings LLC. Retrieved 7 April 2015.