Vail planning new lifts, gondolas over next decade

The flagship of the Vail Resorts ski empire has big plans for the next decade, according to a new master development document filed with the White River National Forest.

The proposed improvements on Vail Mountain include the construction of a third gondola, the replacement of the Eagle Bahn Gondola, adding several new lifts and upgrading or replacing others. Also on the drawing boards are two new restaurants and a small base in West Lionshead.

The point of many of the upgrades (see below for more details) would be to help ease congestion on trails and at Vail’s two main bases, Vail Village and Lionshead, according to the master development plan. More specifically, Vail wants to “improve circulation, ease congestion, spread skiers out, more fully utilize under-utilized terrain and keep wait times at lifts at a comfortable level and, therefore, maintain a high-level ski experience for guests,” the plan says.

Ski areas are required by the U.S. Forest Service to file master development plans every 10 years or so. Vail’s latest MDP, which runs 157 pages, was accepted by White River National Forest superintendent Scott Fitzwilliams in January.

That doesn’t mean every project in the plan will happen, though. For example, a new lift at West Lionshead and a new restaurant in Blue Sky Basin were previously approved by the forest service. Neither were built. Both are listed again in the new MDP.

Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton/The Denver Post

The entrance to Vail Mountain’s Back Bowls on Jan. 22, 2023. (Staff photo/Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton/The Denver Post)

“Vail Mountain is always assessing guest flow, circulation, terrain utilization, among many other inputs, which informs potential future lift projects outlined in the MDP,” said Vail spokesman John Plack. “These plans help the ski areas articulate their long range vision for the use of public lands, and they help the forest service anticipate future use. The MDP is an articulation of possible projects and improvements, but these projects are not currently approved.”

No new lifts are planned for the 2024-25 season

White River National Forest spokesman David Boyd said any new lifts, new runs or new development needs to go through an environmental analysis before being approved. “Those are going to be project by project.”

Ski areas operate on national forest land through special-use permits issued by the agency. White River has the highest visitation of any national forest, running about 18 million annually, in large part because it is home to 12 ski areas stretching from Arapahoe Basin to Aspen. According to the MDP, Vail has averaged 1.6 million skier visits annually over the past eight years.

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