ski_resort_observer
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Will any of us actually be alive if/when this ever gets completed?
Jets win Super Bowl? Or Killington Village? Which one first? hmmmmm......
I'd take the village, the interconnect and pigs flying......
Nice. More McSkiing. I think that's exactly what VT needs. It didn't ruin Stowe at all
Should take about 4/5 years, most of you should be alive, technically. It has nothing to do with the mountain so I don't get your McSkiing comment. It will add more people/beds but with kmart's skier visits down 25% from 20 years ago I don't see it ruining anything other than you will find it harder to find a parking space when you get there at the crack of noon. :wink: Actually more parking is in the plan. Personally I don't see the inter-connect ever happening. The cost/benefit analysis is way negetive in my view.
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The interconnect could cost between $5-10 million and massively boost skier visits and profits, they'd have it paid off in 5 years.
Will any of us actually be alive if/when this ever gets completed?
It'll happen. Current management is normally rather reticent about long-term plans, and Nyberg has said quite openly that he expects to build it, and they continue to renew the permits. There are very few ski areas in the Northeast that can add terrain, which makes the Interconnect uniquely valuable. And Killington very much wants to retain its "biggest in the East" title. They would easily make back the investment.Personally I don't see the inter-connect ever happening. The cost/benefit analysis is way negative in my view.
I have no idea whether it WILL happen, but you should certainly WANT it to happen. If you like skiing, anything that attracts more people to the sport is to your benefit. Contraction or non-growth of the sport is to your detriment.Ick, More condos.uke:
If you are a ski snob (which I am guessing you are), there are probably some types of skiers that you don't like. Unfortunately, you need them, even if you don't realize it. The people who will stay in those condos will spend money at the mountain, which allows the resort to thrive.
I don't know when "condo" became a four-letter word. People who visit the mountain gotta stay somewhere, unless you only want day-trippers, which is awfully limiting.
There is a difference between second/third sale second homes off mountain and brand new premium slopeside real estate. These are two different markets. And while the economy is still suspect for those that could afford to purchase a second home off mountain, the economy is doing really well right now for the upper class high roller crowd.LOL. Really? If anything the village is a huge waste of time and money with little chance of recovering the costs. They are talking over $500/sqft for the real estate......good luck with that!!!! ROFL. Chances are they will NEVER build it, and if they do they'll end up firesaling most of it...there just isn't any real premium market at Killington, and there is a glut of properties. Even with an overall recovery in the economy and the real estate market, Killington has WAY too much housing stock since they are down on skier visits by about 40% over the past decade, and prices will be some of the cheapest. They are like the Detroit of the ski industry.
I think they are looking at a 20-25 year horizon, a time period that will no doubt see numerous boom/recession cycles. I think they realize that the economy right now is just barely above water.There is a difference between second/third sale second homes off mountain and brand new premium slopeside real estate. These are two different markets. And while the economy is still suspect for those that could afford to purchase a second home off mountain, the economy is doing really well right now for the upper class high roller crowd.
Killington is quite a bit closer for the NY/Mass./Conn. market than Stowe or Sugarbush, and Haystack will remain a thimble-sized resort compared to Killington. They all have their charms, but Killington will always be the 800 pound gorilla if it's intelligently marketed. I also think you may be mistaken in the assumption that the "uber rich high rollers" are the target market segment.I see a different problem and that is over saturation of offerings. Claybrook went up a while back and now Sugarbush is building another slopeside development. Spruce Peak at Stowe just went up a few years ago. Haystack is reemerging as a private ski resort offering, and Killington is going to build on top of those already established plans? There are only so many uber rich high rollers to go after. Eventually, the market will be saturated.