Lake Tahoe ski resorts splurging on upgrades and expansions

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The view out to the slopes from the Olympic House in Squaw Valley. The Olympic House is undergoing a renovation with new and expanded seating, part of a 5-year, 70-million improvement project. (MCT News Service)
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Across the lake, Heavenly ski resort completed building a similar on-mountain lodge, Tamarack, in 2010.

The ski resorts are not alone in spending in Lake Tahoe.

In 2009, the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Co. invested $300 million to open a six-story, 170 guest-room luxury hotel at the Northstar resort, the only five-diamond, AAA-rated hotel around the lake.

“Lake Tahoe is in the backyard of the San Francisco Bay Area and only a two-hour flight from Southern California,” said Steven Holt, a spokesman for the Ritz-Carlton, Lake Tahoe. “There is a huge population of ski and snowboard enthusiasts, and this creates a luxury resort in their backyard.”

Not everyone is happy about the big-money investments. Some longtime skiers fear the resort upgrades will lead to higher lift ticket and season pass prices. Those prices have already increased $5 to $50, depending on the mountain.

Steve Grevstad, a Grass Valley resident and former president of the Bota Bagger Ski Club in Truckee, Calif., said he worries that higher lift ticket prices will make it too expensive for families to ski.

“If you have a family with two kids, you are going to come up there and kiss a $1,000 bill goodbye,” he said. “They are not going to have the discount tickets in the future the way they had in the past.”

But other skiers welcome the investments, saying the changes will entice them to visit the resorts more often.

“As an outsider who skis there, I welcome the improvements,” said Ann Lawson, a veteran skier and trip organizer for the Pasadena-based Grindelwald Ski Club. Because of the improvements proposed at Northstar, she said she is tempted to visit the resort this spring.

“I feel Vail Resorts is one of the top-notch owners in the United States.”

Ski resorts across the country are also doling out more on capital improvements, but not to the same degree as the Lake Tahoe resort owners.

In the 2011-12 season, the nation’s resorts invested a combined $300 million on capital improvements, an 8 percent increase over the $277 million spent the previous year, according to the National Ski Areas Assn.

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