Breckenridge Ski Resort
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Breckenridge | |
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Location: | Colorado, USA |
Nearest city: | Breckenridge, Colorado |
Coordinates: | |
Top elevation: | 12998 ft (3962 m) |
Base elevation: | 9600 ft (2926 m) |
Skiable area: | 2,208 acres (8.94 km²) |
Runs: | 147 total 15% beginner 33% intermediate 20% advanced 32% expert |
Longest run: | "Four O'Clock" - 3.5 miles (5.6 km) |
Lift system: | 29 total (1 gondola, 2 high-speed 6-passenger Superchairs, 7 high-speed quad chairs, 1 triple chair, 6 double chairs, 12 surface) |
Terrain parks: | 25 acres |
Snow fall: | 300 in/year (7.62 m/year) |
Web page: | http://breckenridge.snow.com/ |
Breckenridge Ski Resort, or just Breckenridge or Breck, is a ski resort located in Summit County, Colorado near the town of Breckenridge. The resort is owned and operated by Vail Resorts which also operates three other resorts in the state, Vail, Beaver Creek, and Keystone.
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[edit] Ski area information
Peak 10 is the southernmost part of Breckenridge, servicing mainly difficult and a substantial amount of intermediate terrain. Peak 9 services mostly intermediate terrain, with a significant number of beginner runs on the lower part of the mountain, though it can also access expert runs such as Devil's Crotch and the Windows hike to terrain that leads down to E-chair on the north side of Peak 9. Peak 8 is accessed from the Colorado Superchair, Rocky Mountain Superchair and the Peak 8 Superconnect. The lower part of Peak 8 accesses mostly intermediate runs with some advanced runs. The back bowl on Peak 8 can be accessed via 6 chair or the T-Bar, both can be used to access the Imperial Express lift and the northernmost (Peak 7) and westernmost bowls (Lake Chutes), which include some very difficult terrain with slopes up to 55 degrees. The lower part of Peak 7 can also accessed from the Independence Superchair which accesses intermediate terrain.
[edit] Imperial Lift
On August 2, 2005, construction began on the Imperial Express Superchair, which opened in time for the 2005-2006 ski season. It is the highest lift in North America, reaching a peak elevation of 12,840 feet[1]. It can be accessed from lift 6 and the T-Bar.
Hiking from the top of the Imperial lift allows access to the peak of Breckenridge (Peak 8) and some of the best terrain on the mountain, including some cornices with very nice, soft landings. It gets very windy and cold at the top, and in poor visibility conditions the peak will usually be closed.
[edit] Gondola
Construction of a new 8-person gondola was announced on March 12, 2006 with a projected completion date in December of the same year. The gondola will run from the downtown Breckenridge transportation center to Peak 7 and 8 base areas. It will serve as a base transportation system designed to reduce dependence on buses to get between the town and the northern two peaks. The lift will have a maximum capacity of 3,000 people and will take 7 and a half minutes to reach the Peak 8 base area from the transportation center and another 2 and a half minutes to reach the Peak 7 base area. There will also be a mid-way stop at the Shock Hill development [2].
On September 13, 2006, the town and ski resort announced the name and logo of the new gondola as the BreckConnect [3].
[edit] Lifts
- 29 total
- 2 high-speed 6-passenger SuperChairs
- 7 high-speed quad lifts
- 1 triple lift
- 6 double lifts
- 4 surface lifts
- 8 carpet lifts
- 1 Gondola (under-construction, completion expected December 2006)
[edit] 2006-2007 ski season
Breckenridge ski resort will be open from November 10, 2006 until April 22, 2007[4].
[edit] References
- ^ http://breckenridge.snow.com/info/winter/mtn.info.asp
- ^ http://breckenridge.snow.com/breckAssets/files/winter/gondola-bsr-tofb.pdf
- ^ http://www.skinet.com/skinet/news/article/0,26908,1534591,00.html New Breckenridge Gondola Gets Name, Identity
- ^ http://www.snow.com/info/conditions.asp