Western View
Golden Dreams
Alert readers will recall my chronicling
of the Kicking Horse story since it
began as a glimmer in the eye of
Vancouver skier-visionary Oberto Oberti. I was an
instant convert on the late spring day in 1998
when Oberti and local heli-skiing operator Rudi
Gertsch flew me onto a peak thousands of feet
above the Columbia River valley at Golden, B.C.
We skied lovely alpine bowls, steep chutes and
rippling mid-mountain treed slopes before
shooting out onto perfectly smooth corn snow
on the closed Whitetooth ski hill’s trails.
Oberti explained that he wanted people to
be able to ski an entire mountain—peak to
valley. This was an Alps-style concept, violating
the computerized, digitized, consultant-driven
North American approach that forces skiers
to turn laps in generic terrain “pods.” With
exactly one lift, Oberti would gain the highest
lift-serviced point in B.C., creating a simply
enormous amount of skiing with one of the
highest vertical drops in North America.
Goldenites rallied to the idea—giving
a Saddam-sized 90+ per cent “yea” vote.
Oberti rounded up multi-billion-dollar Dutch
infrastructure concern Ballast Nedam to fund and
operate the project. Miraculously ducking B.C.’s
routinely decade-long environmental process,
Kicking Horse opened a mere five years after the
idea was hatched.
With its intricate big-mountain terrain, huge
vertical, excellent dry snow (amid plenty of
sunshine), iconic gondola and splashy opening,
Kicking Horse generated major buzz and
instant cred amid the worldwide freeride-skiing
revolution. Construction of two condo-hotels,
B&Bs and residential clusters followed. But after
the initial euphoria, the momentum faltered.
Several winters were weirdly snow-poor. Much
of the rugged, thinly covered terrain was feisty
skiing—made worse by neglectful grooming.
While early visitors all loved the alpine bowls,
many despised the burly mid-mountain, which
offered ice bumps or a flat zigzag trail.
Ultimately there’ll be 13 lifts plus
snowmaking. The already vast overall resort
area—including the village, golf course and
residential zones—will grow only modestly,
from 2,750 acres to 4,186 acres. Certain parties
had dreamed of driving a truly huge terrain
expansion—putting runs and lifts down into
Canyon Creek on the mountain’s backside,
and maybe even up the next range, creating
a gigantic multi-mountain skiing experience
akin to the Alps. But that would have imposed
enormous operating costs—and seriously
impinged on Gertsch’s heli-skiing tenure. “We
already have a big-mountain experience,”
explains Paccagnan. “Now we need to change
the perception and reality by providing that
intermediate and beginner terrain also.”
One annoyance is the scheme to relocate
day skiers’ vehicles to parking below the main
mountain lifts. Currently the day lots enjoy
fantastic ski-in, ski-out positioning adjoining the
gondola base. But this valuable real estate is to
be built over and the parking moved downhill,
forcing day visitors to ride a people-mover lift
or even a shuttle bus. It may make sense to real
estate planners, but it doesn’t seem like savvy
public relations to turn Golden’s residents and
visitors who use the town’s establishments into
second-class skiers.
In total, the plan envisions growing Kicking
Horse to about 600,000 skier-visits—four times
the current level—elevating it to the first tier
of Canada’s resorts. The first new hotel is to be
built as soon as possible, and the first new lift
in three or possibly two seasons. The first phase
would extend over 10 years and add a planned
4,000 new beds, with estimated investment of
$800 million.
Paccagnan and Oberti fulsomely praise
Ballast Nedam’s vision and long-term
commitment, creating the corporate stability
needed to generate confidence among the
many other players involved in such a dramatic
plan. In fact, these largely non-skiing Dutch
investors have grasped the mountain’s
possibilities far more than some North American
experts. Ballast Nedam, Paccagnan believes,
recognized that Kicking Horse’s long-term
success demanded that it grow: “You can’t save
your way to prosperity.”
Ringed by six national parks, Kicking Horse is
the only resort with major growth potential in an
enormous region—a 360-degree arc extending
100+ km. The other big driver is Golden’s
evolution into a more sophisticated, tourism-oriented
area. This is supported by improved
access such as the (glacial) upgrading of the
Trans-Canada Highway, the expanded airport at
Cranbrook and possible airstrip improvement at
Golden itself.
“This is the perfect timing,” says Paccagnan.
“We have an exciting and differentiated product
and we aim to create a vibrant community. We
want to be known as one of the great, iconic
resorts of North America, the hub for tourism
for a pretty large region.” Judging from their
reaction so far, Goldenites are as jazzed as
Paccagnan.
Kicking Horse Resort
BC Resort Development