Saturday, May 30, 2009

Birthday Bash for Park City

 birthday bash for Park City, with Sam Bush as entertainment

Main Street party is scheduled to mark the 125th anniversary of city's founding

Click photo to enlarge
Sam Bush, with his 'Newgrass' style of playing, has long been a favorite of bluegrass fans. He is...

It's going to be some birthday celebration next month.

Park City will throw itself a party to mark the 125th anniversary of the incorporation of the municipality. Settlers arrived a little while before then, but the local government did not begin operating until 1884.

And plenty of Parkites will likely be interested in the entertainment: bluegrass legend Sam Bush.

The Park City Council recently approved a daylong celebration on Main Street on June 13, culminating with a concert by Bush, long a top-shelf figure in bluegrass and the newfangled musical style known as 'Newgrass.'

There was little discussion as the City Councilors approved a permit for the Park City Chamber/Bureau for the celebration. The organizers have been planning an event to mark the 125th anniversary for some time, but details had not been finalized until recently.

The Bush performance is scheduled from 7:30 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. on lower Main Street, a popular location for bigger public concerts. The concert is free and open to the public. Bob Kollar, a Park City Chamber/Bureau official who is helping organize the event, said he expects up to 5,000 people to attend the Bush concert.

"That was the idea, to get a headline band to make it more than just your traditional free concert," Kollar said.

The performance will be part of a tour that starts in Ohio on June 6. He is scheduled to play in Richmond, Va., two days before the Park City concert and will leave Park City for a planned show on June 20 at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival in Telluride, Colo., according to Bush's Web site.

Brian Richards, the executive director of Mountain Town Stages, a not-for-profit organization that puts on local concerts and was involved with booking Bush, said the concert matches well with Park City's tastes. Bush is "Americana, mountain town," Richards said.

"He's a man of the mountains, got the mountain music going," Richards said, adding that he hopes the celebration on lower Main Street will "epitomize what Park City is all about."

The concert will end a day of events on lower Main Street that will start with a breakfast and a motorcycle ride, the organizers said. Max Paap, who directs special events for City Hall, said Main Street will be closed to traffic between Heber Avenue and the trolley turnaround at the bottom of the street for most of the day.

Some of the entertainment scheduled for the celebration includes:

A walking parade of civic organizations and businesses at about 11:30 a.m. The parade will descend from upper Main Street to Miners Park. The parade will include entries celebrating the city's history, including the silver-mining era and the 2002 Winter Olympics, a schedule submitted to the elected officials before they approved the permit indicates.

Concerts start at Miners Park at noon and run until 5:30 p.m. Scheduled performers are Lash Larue, Swagger and Fat Paw.

On the main stage, where Bush will play, performers are scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m. The Park City High School jazz band has a timeslot, as do people who practice tai chi, a troupe of Irish dancers and a mariachi band.

From 7 p.m. until 7:30 p.m., City Hall officials are scheduled to give short remarks about the 125th anniversary and Summit County leaders will give the city a birthday gift. Summit County Councilman David Ure, who once represented Park City in the Utah House of Representatives, will choose the gift from the county.

Park City officials in early March, coinciding more closely with the actual date of the incorporation, endorsed a resolution commemorating the anniversary. The resolution spoke of a terrible 1898 fire that destroyed much of Park City and mentioned the rise of Park City into a resort community decades later.

The celebration is scheduled on the eve of the opening of a Western Governors' Association meeting in Deer Valley that is expected to draw a roster of high-profile politicians. Paap said some of them might attend the event. He said he hopes Gov. Jon M. Huntsman Jr. or Gary Herbert, the lieutenant governor, will address the crowd if they attend.

"I just envision Park City coming together, you're seeing all your neighbors in the street," Richards said.


New Trails Map Released

The map details new routes


Click photo to enlarge
Alex Hemb, left, and sons Steffen and Christian catch their breath Saturday before a ride a Park...
Jason Cyr, an expert biker with White Pine Touring, would be lost without one. So would Carol Potter, the executive director of Mountain Trails Foundation.

The new trails map, released early last week, details more than 400 miles of trails in the Snyderville Basin. The map identifies a network of new routes branching out from Quinn's Junction, Summit Park and Park City Moutain Resort.

A joint project of Park City Municipal, Synderville Basin Recreation and Mountain Trails, the map is available in 22 bike shops, outdoor outlets and grocery stores in Summit County for $2. It is also available at Park City Mountain Resort, Deer Valley Resort, The Canyons and the Park City Visitors Center.

The $2 price tag is a donation. Proceeds from the 20,000 double-sided maps go toward trails upkeep. Crews from Basin Recreation and Mountain Trails spend hundreds of hours each year cutting and sweeping away vegetation and fighting the ongoing battle against erosion.

Bikers, hikers, walkers and horseback riders have flocked to retailers to snatch copies of the trails map, now calibrated with distances thanks to the use of Global Positioning trackers. "The map is so huge and so many people use it," Potter said. "It's a labor of love and the first sign of spring. This is the trail map of all trail maps."

The map displays new trails, such as the Flying Dog near Guardsman's Pass as well as old favorites such as Shadow Lake and Spiro. Cartographers flipped the map for Park City Mountain to read from the bottom up, like ski maps of the mountain, for greater ease, said Rick Fournier, who helps maintain trails for Mountain Trails.

"I think it's a lot cleaner, and the Round Valley section is cleaner" on the 2009 trail map compared to previous years, he said.

Potter is partial to the map's new cover, which pictures a racer from the 2008 International Mountain Biking Association.

Despite years experience biking around Summit County, Cyr almost always carries a trail map in his pack. Some of his favorite excursions on the Wasatch Crest Trail, Lost Prospector and the Round Valley Loop take him far afield to places hard to reach by foot.

Founded in 1992, Mountain Trails releases a new map every year, and it is difficult to estimate how many trails are in the area. "It's a massive spider-web system," Potter said. Some trails have been marked for years. Others, relatively new, remain unnamed.

Nearly all trails in Summit County are open to "non-motorized" traffic," Potter said. Sharing trails requires etiquette. Bikers should yield to hikers, and they should yield to horses. Uphill riders have the right of way. Dogs should be leashed (though most admit this rule is followed sporadically at best) and people should park at trailheads to avoid obstructing private property.

"We haven't had too many problems," Potter said. "Everyone's polite."

Cyr urged patrons to abide signs indicating closed trails. Wet, muddy trails are susceptible to erosion, he said. To avoid mud and snow, Potter advised sticking to lower elevations for the next week or so. Riders and walkers should check out moutaintrails.org for trail updates and recommendations.

Cyr is excited for the summer season. "Park City is a real hidden gem for bike riding," he said. "And the trail map is one of the best in the country."


Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Deer Valley: the next big project

The resort holds development rights from long ago


Deer Valley Resort has longstanding rights to develop real estate on the parking lots outside Snow Park Lodge, shown toward the end of the last ski season. Under Deer Valley's blueprints, a garage would be built to replace the lost spots and add more parking spaces. David Ryder/Park Record

Harvey LaPointe moved into his condominium on the 500 block of Deer Valley Drive in 1993, toward the beginning of Park City's boom years of the decade.

Sitting between Old Town and Snow Park, the place is situated well, giving him easy access to the Snow Park area of Deer Valley Resort, with its vast parking lots, and the shopping, dining and entertainment options of Main Street.

Someday, though, the parking lots outside of Snow Park Lodge, just down the street from where LaPointe and scores of other Park City people live, will likely be developed with real estate. Deer Valley Resort holds long-standing rights to build on the Snow Park lots as part of the overall approval of the resort years ago.

"Frankly, when I moved here I had

Some people walk to their cars in the parking lot outside Snow Park Lodge instead of taking Deer Valley's tram. Deer Valley next year might start talks with City Hall about a major development on the land where the lot is now located, an official with the resort says. David Ryder/Park Record
no clue what could take place on Deer Valley's parking lots," LaPointe says, describing that he has since become aware of the development prospects of Snow Park parking lots through media coverage.

Many people who live along Deer Valley Drive likely are unaware of the development rights Deer Valley holds, as LaPointe was when he bought his place. The corridor between the Old Town roundabout and Snow Park has grown substantially over the years, and neighborhoods have been built off the main road that will be affected by development at Snow Park as well.

It is a situation that is similar to what is unfolding across Park City with the Sweeney family's Treasure development proposal close to Old Town. City Hall officials in the 1980s granted an overall approval for Treasure and several smaller nearby projects. The Sweeneys are now seeking an approval for Treasure, which would be built on the slopes of Park City Mountain Resort. Treasure is the most significant portion of the earlier approval.

The Sweeneys are facing opposition from neighbors and from people who live elsewhere who are displeased with the Treasure plans. Critics from streets like Lowell Avenue and Empire Avenue say Treasure, as it was approved in the 1980s, no longer fits in the neighborhood. They are especially worried about the traffic Treasure is expected to attract.

Many of the critics arrived well after Park City officials granted Treasure's overall approval, and some were unaware when they moved in of the development rights the Sweeneys held.

At Deer Valley, the resort's forefathers in the late 1970s secured the overall development plans for much of what is now built at the resort. Under that approval, Deer Valley is allowed to develop the Snow Park parking lots, one of the last major development parcels inside Park City.

According to Bob Wells, the vice president at Deer Valley and the official who leads the resort's development efforts, city leaders at the time allowed approximately 420,000 square feet of residential development on the parking-lot site. The number of units has not been determined, however, and that figure will depend on the square footage of the individual places. Wells says Deer Valley is allowed to build another approximately 22,000 square feet of commercial space under the earlier approval.

Deer Valley would build a huge parking garage, partly underground, to replace the Snow Park spots that are lost as the land is developed. He says the garage would contain approximately 2,100 spaces, significantly more than the 1,200 to 1,250 cars that the Snow Park lots now hold.

Deer Valley refers to the project as Snow Park Village. There has been occasional chatter over the years that Deer Valley is preparing its submittals, but they have never materialized.

Wells, though, says Deer Valley is "consistently working on planning." At the earliest, he says, Deer Valley would file paperwork with City Hall in early 2010. Once that occurs, the resort would discuss the project with City Hall planners and then the Planning Commission. The Park City Council sometimes is involved with larger developments like Snow Park Village.

City officials will be deciding whether Deer Valley's blueprints are acceptable, not whether there should be development outside Snow Park Lodge. The decision to allow development at the site was made during the earlier era.

Wells says Deer Valley Drive, the road primarily used to drive to Snow Park, could handle the additional traffic Snow Park Village would bring. He says a study of traffic patterns, though, will be done. Wells expects that Snow Park Village would cut the outbound afternoon traffic, when Deer Valley Drive is frequently clogged with skiers leaving the resort, by keeping some of the skiers at Deer Valley later with after-ski draws like restaurants and, possibly, an ice rink.

There is likely to be opposition, though, particularly from people who live along the Deer Valley Drive corridor and those who live or have properties close to the parking lots. Traffic will probably be of great concern to the Deer Valley Drive residents. The proposed height of buildings at Snow Park Village will likely be closely scrutinized by the people closest to the site.

Still, Wells says Snow Park Village will have supporters as well. He says many people with places close to Snow Park will benefit from what will be built there. He says Deer Valley officials have kept them apprised of the plans.

"Adjoining developments, property owners, look at the ultimate completion of the village there as an asset," he says.

Official: project not well known

Charlie Winzter, a member of the Park City Planning Commission who lives on a street off Deer Valley Drive, says he is unsure if many people who live close by are aware Deer Valley Resort holds long-standing rights to develop real estate on the parking lots outside of Snow Park Lodge.

Wintzer, a longtime Park City resident who is in the construction business, says he understands Deer Valley will one day develop the parking lots, but others who live on or near Deer Valley Drive do not.

"I know that because I've been paying attention to development," he says. "I don't know if the other people do."

A Deer Valley official says the resort could file submittals for what is known as Snow Park Village in early 2010, at the earliest. The project would have residential and commercial space, and a huge parking garage.

Wintzer's current term on the Planning Commission expires in July. He has submitted an application for another term.

Wintzer, who lives on McHenry Avenue, says the Planning Commission would look closely at the amount of traffic driving to and from Snow Park Village and the designs of the buildings. Perhaps, he says, city officials could discourage people from driving to the development.

"At five o'clock at night, it's crowded now," he says about traffic on Deer Valley Drive, adding, "It's not just Deer Valley Drive, it's the whole corridor."

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Deer Valley Resort Operations To Now Include Property Management

Deer Valley Resort Lodging and Reservations

 

Deer Valley Resort is expanding our operation to include a property management division. The Resort will pursue management of properties within the Deer Valley area, allowing us to extend our services beyond the slopes. Offering luxurious amenities such as ski valets, groomed-to-perfection slopes, on-site child care, gourmet dining in three elegant day lodges and now accommodations operated by the Resort, we look forward to being able to offer our guests the 'Deer Valley Difference' beginning with lodging check-in.

 

We are very excited about the opportunity to run our own property management division. This will give us the ability to be hands-on through every step of our guests' vacation experience. Deer Valley Resort's distinguished reputation was built by our staff's commitment to excellence in service, as evidenced by our four #1 rankings by the readers of SKI Magazine. We are looking forward to expanding upon the offerings and prestige of our established brand.

Deer Valley's Central Reservation's wholesale lodging department began in 1981 and is currently the only resort reservation center able to book everything from airfare, ground transportation, ski rentals, lessons and restaurant reservations. In addition to offering lodging managed by the Resort, Central Reservations will continue its relationship with several select property management companies and properties while operating under their new name, Deer Valley Resort Lodging and Reservations. Our guests will have access to the largest lodging inventory in the Deer Valley area.

 

For more information on Deer Valley Resort or its property management division, please email marketing@deervalley.com or call 435-645-6510.