Heavenly Mountain Resort Explained

Heavenly Mountain Resort
Location:El Dorado-Toiyabe National Forests
El Dorado County, California / Douglas County, Nevada/Alpine County, California
Nearest City:South Lake Tahoe, California
Pushpin Map:California#United States
Pushpin Relief:1
Coordinates:38.9353°N -119.94°W
Status:Operating
Owner:Vail Resorts
Vertical:3812feet
Top Elevation:10067feet
Base Elevation:6255feet
Skiable Area:4800acres
Number Trails:97 total
20% beginner
45% intermediate
35% advanced
Longest Run:5.5miles (Olympic downhill)
Liftsystem:30 total: 1 high speed gondola, 1 aerial tram, 2 high speed six passenger chairs, 7 high speed quads, 1 fixed grip quad, 6 triples, 2 doubles, 6 surface, 4 magic carpets
Lift Capacity:52,000 passengers/hr
Terrainparks:2 Groove Park, Remix Terrain Park
Snowfall:360inches
Snowmaking:Yes
Nightskiing:No
External Link:www.SkiHeavenly.com

Heavenly Mountain Resort is a ski resort located on the California–Nevada border in southeastern Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range. It opened for business on December 15, 1955[1] and has 97 runs and 30 lifts that are spread between California and Nevada and four base facilities. The resort has 4800acres within its permit area, with approximately 33% currently developed for skiing, boasting the highest elevation of the Lake Tahoe area resorts with a peak elevation of 10067feet, and a peak lift-service elevation of 10040feet.

Since 2002, Heavenly has been owned by Vail Resorts, which also operates Northstar California and Kirkwood Mountain Resort at Lake Tahoe and multiple other ski resorts in Colorado, British Columbia, Vermont, New Hampshire, Washington, Utah, Minnesota, Michigan, and Wisconsin (Vail, Breckenridge, Okemo, Mount Sunapee, Crested Butte, Stevens Pass, Keystone, Beaver Creek, Park City Resort (Canyons), Afton Alps, Mt. Brighton, and Wilmot Mountain, Whistler Blackcomb).

With an average of 360inches of snow annually, and one of America's largest snowmaking systems, their ski season usually runs from mid November to mid April.

Heavenly is notable as the resort where Congressman and singer Sonny Bono died after hitting a tree on January 5, 1998.[2]

Ski Lifts

The lifts built by Doppelmayr are the Big Easy, Canyon Express, Comet Express, Dipper Express, Galaxy, Gondola, Gunbarrel Express, Mott Canyon, NorthBowl Express, Olympic Express, Powderbowl Express, Sky Express, Stagecoach Express, and Tamarack Express. The lifts built by Yan are Boulder, First Ride, Groove, and Patsy's. SLI built World Cup. The oldest lift is World Cup, having been built in 1969. Heavenly also has seven surface lifts. Mott Canyon also closes at 3:00 during the day thus its trails are closed too. Mostly high-speed detachable quads serve the resort. The longest lift is the Gondola by a significant amount. Two six-packs serve skiers; the Tamarack and Powderbowl Express chairs. Most of the lifts close at 4:00 PM with the exception of the Mott Canyon lift, which closes at 3:00,[3] the Yan and SLI double lifts have a very similar appearance in chairs to lines, to terminals, only the bull wheels are different.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 50 years of Heavenly: A chronicle of skiers' dreams and change on the South Shore. tahoedailytribune.com. November 21, 2005. Jeremy. Evans.
  2. News: Sonny Bono killed in skiing accident . Cable News Network (CNN) . January 6, 1998 . 6 December 2010.
  3. Web site: Hours of Operation. skiheavenly.com. September 20, 2023.