Cardrona Alpine Resort

Cardrona Alpine Resort is an alpine resort in New Zealand's South Island. The ski field ranges from 1,260m to 1,860m. The distribution of slopes is 25% beginner, 25% intermediate, 30% advanced and 20% expert[1]. There are 2 detachable quad chairlifts[2], 1 fixed-grip quad chairlifts, 1 detachable express chondola, 3 surface conveyor learner lifts and 1 platter lift to service the halfpipes and big air jump. Snowmaking supplements the 2.9m average annual snowfall. Freestyle Snowboarding and skiing are well catered for with 2 half pipes and 4 terrain parks. There is also a "high performance centre" which trains more advanced skiers and snowboarders. Families with infants and young children can use child care facilities provided in the Cardrona Nursery and Ski Kindy.

Cardrona Alpine Resort
LocationOtago South Island, New Zealand
Nearest major cityWanaka, New Zealand
Vertical600 m
Top elevation1894 m
Base elevation1670 m
Skiable area345 hectares
Lift system6 total; 4 chairlifts (one fixed quad, two detachable quads, one detachable chondola), 2 magic learner, 1 platter
Lift capacity10200/hour
Terrain parks7 (2 Half Pipes, 4 parks and 1 gravity cross course)
Snowfall2.7 m (8.9 ft)
SnowmakingYes
Night skiingNo
Websitehttp://www.cardrona.com

The resort is located near Wanaka, 5.5 hours drive from Christchurch, 3 hours drive from Dunedin and 50 minutes drive from Queenstown. On-mountain accommodation is provided in the form of 15 self-contained apartments.

There was a tradition, that at the bottom of the mountain, women leave their old bra on the Cardrona Bra Fence before leaving town[3].

Cardrona Alpine Resort was founded by Cardrona Valley locals John and Mary Lee. It opened for its first winter in 1980.[4] There was so much snow in the first winter that the mountain was only able to open for 3 weeks, around many days of clearing the resort road with a bulldozer. John Lee was not a skier, so built Cardrona's base area in the middle of the resort at 1670m – something very rare for a ski field.

The resort was bought by the Vealls of Melbourne in 1989. This was also the year Cardrona built New Zealand's first international halfpipe.[5]

The old Captain's chairlift (replaced by the Captain's Express) was reinstalled, as the Valley View Quad, below the existing Whitestar Express before the 2010 winter. The main purpose of this lift was to allow construction of a competition grade downhill run, by increasing the lifted vertical available to the resort. General trails are available though. Due to insufficient snow cover this lift did not open for the 2010 season. Stage 2 of the plan was set for the 2011 winter and added snowmaking. The lift has opened every winter from 2011 onwards.

In 2013, New Zealand company Real Journeys purchased Cardrona Alpine Resort.[5]

Captains Basin view looking toward chairlift

References

  1. "Mountain Info - Winter Stats & Facts | Cardrona NZ". www.cardrona.com. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  2. "Cardrona Alpine Resort". Latitude. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  3. Lovelock, Brent. "Tourist-Created Attractions: The Emergence of a Unique Form of Tourist Attraction in Southern New Zealand". Tourism Geographies: 410–433 via Taylor and Francis Online.
  4. Cook, Marjorie (16 October 2011). "Retirement time for hearty, happy Lees". Otago Daily Times Online News. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  5. Editor, Online (16 November 2013). "Cardrona back in NZ ownership". Otago Daily Times Online News. Retrieved 23 April 2020.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)

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