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Snowbird,
located twenty miles southeast of Salt Lake City and approximately
two miles west of Alta in Little Cottonwood Canyon, is
one of the major ski areas in Utah and the United States.
Its establishment was the fulfillment of George Theodore
Johnson's dream. Johnson, a California native, bought
fourteen undeveloped acres in Little Cottonwood Canyon
in the mid-1960s. He then began acquiring options on 800
acres surrounding the property, consisting mostly of abandoned
mining claims which included the well-known Snowbird mine.
He established a limited partnership, Snowbird Corporation,
to finance the project; obtained land-use permits from
the Forest Service; and began devising development plans.
While preliminary plans were modest, looking to serve
3,000 day skiers with three or four chairlifts, park 800
vehicles, and house 250 vacation skiers, the project quickly
grew in scope, and Johnson's dream of Snowbird was on
its way to becoming reality.
In
1969 a crucial event in Snowbird's development took place:
Ted Johnson met Richard Bass, a partner in Colorado's
Vail Associates. Johnson told Bass of his plans for the
resort and Bass, a wealthy businessman, became the major
financial backer of the endeavor and eventually bought
out Ted Johnson in 1974. By March 1971, a 160-room residential
condominium inn (Iron Blosam Lodge) was under construction.
Plans
for a November 1971 opening, with a 120-passenger tram
and three chairlifts, were well under way. Although the
resort failed to meet the November deadline, due to avalanches
and tram failure, Snowbird did open its doors in early
January 1972 and has become a popular, year-round resort.
Yet,
the history of Snowbird has not always been easy. Snowbird's
plans for expansion into the adjacent White Pine Wilderness
Area have been challenged; the resort was rejected in
its attempts to secure permission to construct a tram
to the top of Twin Peaks; it is carefully monitored to
insure that the quality of Salt Lake City's watershed
is maintained; and Snowbird has been criticized for its
lavish use of concrete and the mammoth structures that
have been constructed.
Also,
in its relatively short lifetime Snowbird Corporation
has seen several presidents assume control of its helm.
After five years, Ray L. Hixson replaced Peter Arceneau,
who had temporarily been president of Snowbird for Dick
Bass. On 1 July 1979 the controls of Snowbird Corporation
were passed to Swiss-born Rene Meyer. He served as president
until his resignation in 1988 when Thurman Taylor assumed
control.
Since
1988, Snowbird has continued to expand. It is not only
a center of winter activities, but is also a resource
for year-round recreation. The summer months at Snowbird
are filled with various activities such as the Snowbird
Hill Climb, summer concerts, Oktoberfest, Jazz and Blues
Festival, and others.
Winter
activities continue to center on skiing. The resort has
an average snowfall of more than 500 inches a year (633
inches in 1992-93). Snowbird has forty-eight ski trails
with a total of 1,572 acres of skiable terrain serviced
by seven double chairlifts and one of the largest and
most powerful aerial trams in the world--it can carry
120 passengers from the 8,100-foot base to the top of
Hidden Peak at 11,000 feet. The total uphill capacity
is 9,200 skiers per hour. The resort's four lodges and
hotels have over 900 sleeping rooms, with the Cliff Lodge
(532 rooms) the largest.
Jodi
Hullinger
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