Alpine Meadows (ski resort)
Alpine Meadows is a ski resort in the western United States, located in Alpine Meadows, California. Near the northwest shore of Lake Tahoe, it offers of skiable terrain, 13 different lifts, and a vertical drop of.
In 2018, Alpine Meadows was merged into the Alterra Mountain Company. Today, the two resorts operate as one with a single-season pass as Palisades Tahoe with a gondola connecting the two base areas.
History
Alpine Meadows opened in 1961. John Reily developed it initially as the Ward Peak Ski Resort, and had a vision to develop the terrain into a ski resort as an alternative to Squaw Valley. With the help of Peter Klaussen and a number of families who pooled resources to develop the area, Alpine Meadows was founded in 1958 and opened in 1961. The idea for the resort was to focus more on the pleasure of skiing than business profit. It was thought that the idea for the resort came about after the resort's founders visited Squaw Valley during the 1960 Olympics and noticed the potential of the adjacent terrain. Alpine Meadows opened for the 1961–62 season with three lifts.JMA Ventures, owner of the Homewood Mountain Resort on the west shore of Lake Tahoe, purchased Alpine Meadows from Powdr Corporation in July 2007. In 2011, Alpine Meadows merged with the well-known neighboring ski resort and 1960 Olympic site, Squaw Valley. Ownership transferred largely to the umbrella company Squaw Valley Ski Holdings, LLC.
1982 Avalanche
A major avalanche occurred at the Alpine Meadows Resort in the early spring of 1982 after days of intense storms. The avalanche impacted the base area of the resort in the late afternoon of March 31 resulting in the deaths of seven individuals. One person, Alpine Meadows employee Anna Conrad, was successfully extracted from the debris by search and rescue teams after being trapped for five days inside a collapsed resort building. Conrad was found in part due to the use of search and rescue dogs, making her the first avalanche survivor to be rescued using search dogs in the United States.The resort and avalanche are featured in a documentary titled Buried: The 1982 Alpine Meadows Avalanche.