Abondance Ski Valley
Abondance Ski Valley is a mid-sized ski area in the Haute-Savoie region of France, near Châtel and La Chapelle d'Abondance. The resort has been open since at least 1964[1] and was closed in 2007, when the local council voted to shut down the area after 15 years of loss-making.[1] The resort was reopened, however, in 2009 when Gregory Lynn Sherwood, an American entrepreneur, made a deal with the local mayor to operate the ski area for the next 12 years.[2]
Abondance Ski Valley | |
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Location | Abondance valley, Haute-Savoie, Rhone-Alpes, France |
Runs | 17 |
Location
Abondance Ski Valley is located in the Abondance Valley, in the Chablais Alps. The resort is one of 12 ski stations in the Portes du Soleil linked ski area,[3] and is open to Portes du Soleil combined ticket holders, however it is not linked to any other resorts and a drive to La Chapelle d'Abondance or Châtel is required in order to access the rest of the Portes du Soleil.
Closure
In 2007, the ski area received media attention after it was reported to have shut down due to global warming, the first ski area in the Alps to become a casualty of climate change.[4] This did not turn out to be the case, however, as the ski area had been suffering from financial losses for a long time, and the notoriously poor 2006-2007 ski season was the last straw; since reopening, Abondance has not had significant issues with snow compared to other low-altitude ski resorts.
References
- "Abondance abandons skiing". pistehors.com. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
- "Abondance Ski resort is reopening after two years". Fun in the Alps. Archived from the original on 20 April 2013.
- "Ski resort french alps : Portes du Soleil, family ski resorts in the French and Swiss Alps". en.portesdusoleil.com. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
- Bland, Alastair. "As the World Warms, the Future of Skiing Looks Bleak". Smithsonian Magazine.