Quicksilver Gondola
Overview
StatusOperational
CountryUnited States of America
Built byDoppelmayr
Operation
OperatorPark City
Trip duration~~8.5 minutes
Technical features
Line length1.5 miles
Operating speed8.10 meters per second

40°38′28″N 111°31′42″W / 40.64117482868444°N 111.52830351284183°W / 40.64117482868444; -111.52830351284183

Quicksilver Gondola is a gondola located in Park City, Utah. Constructed by Doppelmayr in 2015, the gondola carries eight people per cabin and has a length of roughly 1.5 miles.[1] It was part of a $50 million expansion program that merged the once-separate Park City Mountain and Canyons Resorts under Vail Resorts.[2] The merger made Park City the largest lift-service ski resort in the United States.[3]

History

Before 2015, Park City Mountain Resort and the Canyons Resort were separate, with Powdr Corporation and Vail Resorts owning the two resorts respectively. However, after Powdr failing to renew its lease on Park City Mountain and a legal battle with Vail and Talisker Corporation (The entity that owned the land that Park City Mountain was operating on), Vail acquired Park City Mountain for $182.5 million.[4] The company then developed plans for a $50 million renovation project of Park City Mountain, that, among other upgrades would merge Park City Mountain and the Canyons via the Quicksilver Gondola.[5] After construction by Doppelmayr completed in 2015, Park City transformed into the largest lift-serviced ski resort in the United States.[5]


References

  1. "Quicksilver Gondola (Park City-Canyons)". www.skiresort.info. Retrieved 2023-12-26.
  2. "Park City and Canyons 2015 Expansion and New Connection". www.enjoyparkcity.com. Retrieved 2023-12-26.
  3. "Top 15 Largest Ski Resorts in the US [Update 2023]". 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-12-26.
  4. Hamburger, Jay (2019-12-31). "Analysis: PCMR lawsuit, arrival of Vail Resorts defined a decade of change in Park City". www.parkrecord.com. Retrieved 2023-12-26.
  5. 1 2 "Quicksilver Gondola at Park City: Everything You Need to Know". Retrieved 2023-12-26.
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