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Deer Valley Planning Four-Stage Gondola System, Parking Revamp to Complement Enormous Expansion
Does Deer Valley Know What It's Doing With Its New Gondola Project?
Deer Valley Planning Four-Stage Gondola System, Parking Revamp to Complement Enormous Expansion (Vol. 13)
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Deer Valleyâs Snow Park base area will see a revamp to focus less on parking, with a new gondola providing access to lots in a new area of the resort.
The Scoop đ
Deer Valleyâs massive 182% terrain expansion isnât the only major project on the resortâs horizon.
The skier-only resort recently announced a collaborative partnership with Park City Municipal to shift traffic away from the resortâs popular Snow Park base, with several lift, parking, and base area impacts resulting from the project.
As part of this project, the resort plans to completely redesign its Snow Park base into a pedestrian-oriented base village, with several new hotels, restaurants, and condos. Deer Valley intends to shrink the number of Snow Park parking spaces by approximately 10-15%, but to make up for this, the resort plans a new base portal on US 40ânear the bottom of the current Jordanelle baseâwith an additional 1,200 parking spaces.

A rendering of the proposed Snow Park base village revamp. The developments on the bottom right will take the place of parking lots.
Perhaps most importantly, to link the Snow Park base with this new parking portal, Deer Valley plans to implement a four-stage gondola system covering over five miles. Rather than directly transporting guests between the two bases, this system will service a new upper mountain areaâspecifically, the proposed Park Peak expansionâalong the way.
Two stages of this gondola route will run mostly along already existing terrain, connecting the Snow Park base with the top of Park Peak; the other two stages will run from Park Peak to the new access portal, involving a slightly modified line for a 10-passenger gondola already proposed in Deer Valleyâs August expansion announcement. The system would comprise two separate two-stage gondolas, with the Park Peak summit providing the transfer point.
This project still needs to receive full approval from the Park City City Council, but should it move forward, the full suite of upgrades will likely take the rest of the decade, with the rest of Deer Valleyâs expansion initiatives taking precedence. Everything is expected to be done by the 2034 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics.
The full suite of changes can be found here.

A terrain map showing the full Deer Valley expansion plan, with the proposed four-stage gondola system highlighted in red.
What This Means For You đż
Since so much of this project is expected to be finished after Deer Valley nearly triples its terrain footprint, itâs hard to estimate exactly the impact this project will have. But regardless, itâs clear this development is going to heavily incentivize parking at the new Jordanelle portal, rather than driving through downtown Park City to get to Snow Park.
New Gondola System đĄ
The most standout facet about this proposed gondola system is just how complex it is both in design and routeâthe proposed lift would have four different stages across over five miles, and rather than providing a direct link between the Jordanelle portal and the Snow Park base, it would transport guests by way of the resort summit.
Given that Deer Valley mentions that linking the Snow Park base with the new Jordanelle portal is a critical goal of this new gondola system, itâs interesting to see how out of the way it is in providing that link. With an estimated ride time of 25 minutes from base to base, the four-stage ride doesnât seem like a desirable transportation option to get between these two areasâespecially with some parking still existing at the Snow Park base. Rather, it seems like this gondola systemâwhich, as proposed, will be two separate lifts meeting at the topâwill most effectively function as comfortable base-to-summit transportation for skiers at Deer Valley.
New Parking Experience đ
As far as Deer Valleyâs overall mountain experience, deliberately shifting parking over to the new US 40 Jordanelle portal may be somewhat of a gambleâwe donât know whether guests will like the terrain near the new parking lots, whether these low-elevation slopes will be reliable, or how long it will reasonably take to get to other parts of the mountain.
But itâs nearly impossible to avoid the congestion of downtown Park City with the current Snow Park base, so by rerouting resort traffic to US 40, Deer Valley should provide extremely important relief here. Deer Valley chooses to limit ticket sales and pass reservations on a daily basis, so the overall impact will likely also depend on how much capacity the resort chooses to add with its expanded footprint.
Considering a trip to Deer Valley, Park City, or any ski destination in North America? Let us make the trip decisions for you âď¸
Thinking of visiting Deer Valleyâand not sure how these investments will impact your trip? Try out PeakRankings Trips, our new trip-planning service. We can plan every aspect of your trip, whether it be to Deer Valley, Park City, or over 90 destination ski resorts across North America!
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