Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Defunct ski areas and resorts in New York (state) (2 P) P. Defunct ski areas and resorts in Pennsylvania (2 P) V. Defunct ski areas and resorts in Vermont (4 P) W.
Fort Rapids Indoor Waterpark Resort; General information; Location: 4560 Hilton Corporate Drive Columbus, Ohio: Opening: May 22, 2006: Closed: February 21, 2016
A 2006 view of the ski resort on Brodie Mountain in Massachusetts, which closed in 2002. New England Lost Ski Areas Project (NELSAP) is an organization that concerns the history of downhill skiing areas, mostly in the northeastern United States. Started as a website in 1998, it has also organized hikes, research projects, and lectures in recent ...
A resort on Irondequoit Bay. A hill was flattened into a swamp to build the amusement park by the hotel. The owners announced in September 1910 that amusement operators from Chicago would be making big changes to the park to make it similar to White City. The plans never materialized and the park was shuttered. Fairyland Amusement Park Elmhurst ...
Of the 503 ski areas, 390 are "public U.S. ski areas that run chairlifts" and "113 either run only surface lifts, or are not open to the general public", says to Storm Skiing. [5] Of the 390 public, chairlift areas, 233 or 60% have joined one or more United States–based, international multi-mountain ski pass , according to Storm Skiing.
Chacaltaya ski resort once enticed wealthy travelers, but in 2009, the mountain's glacier completely melted, leaving behind a ghost town.
Mad River Mountain is a ski and snowboard resort in Valley Hi, Ohio, United States.The elevation of Mad River Mountain is 1,460 feet (450 m) with a vertical drop of 300 ft (91 m), and it has a ski season that runs from approximately mid-December through mid-March.
Telemark added a large facility, the Colosseum, in December 1980, that provided indoor tennis and new facilities for the ski hill and the cross country ski area, [2] which was "partially dismantled" by 1998. [3] The lodge was a cross country ski destination through the 1980s, but declined along with U.S. cross country skiing.