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The "Sugarbush Thread"

Lotso

Well-known member
Joined
May 27, 2021
Messages
838
Points
93
They will follow their history and close early with no warning after selling spring pass
With ME closing the last weekend in March each year, I doubt the spring pass will be an issue. Just hope it happend.

For lift folks: Could the tower footings and other concrete be reused (ie- no new pours/delays/costs due to blasting and pouring)? Or is it SOP to start with all new if a lift/footings are that old? Obviously I am not a concrete expert, ad I have not read the application.
 

Blurski

Active member
Joined
Sep 17, 2020
Messages
236
Points
43
There is erosion control set up. It’s on the downhill side (right side) visible on the right hand corner of the image. Sediment/dirt can’t erode up hill FFS.
Logic would tell you that, the VT EPSC regulations would tell you otherwise, no worries for me, not one of my projects.
 

jimmywilson69

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 18, 2010
Messages
3,867
Points
113
Location
Dillsburg, PA
With ME closing the last weekend in March each year, I doubt the spring pass will be an issue. Just hope it happend.

For lift folks: Could the tower footings and other concrete be reused (ie- no new pours/delays/costs due to blasting and pouring)? Or is it SOP to start with all new if a lift/footings are that old? Obviously I am not a concrete expert, ad I have not read the application.
new tower footings for sure then you dont have to worry about the footings rotting out in the future before the end of the lift life.
 

fulgoreXC

Active member
Joined
Nov 5, 2025
Messages
110
Points
28
Location
Somewhere in the East
With ME closing the last weekend in March each year, I doubt the spring pass will be an issue. Just hope it happend.

For lift folks: Could the tower footings and other concrete be reused (ie- no new pours/delays/costs due to blasting and pouring)? Or is it SOP to start with all new if a lift/footings are that old? Obviously I am not a concrete expert, ad I have not read the application.
The concrete tower bases are beyond their design life. If you've ever seen them in the summer, you'd see the evidence of the severe environment they experience. So new bases will need to be cast. Reinforced concrete design philosophy has changed since that lift was installed so they will be a bit beefier with more reinforcing.

Regarding construction and material costs, in general the costs have increased significantly since the late teens. Mostly due to the escalation that occurred during COVID. The sharp spike that happened hasn't come down regardless on whether the market is trading higher or lower. $10M is a bargain when compared to the 6 for HG which was shorter and a fixed grip.
 
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