Resort Market not holding
Bridger Bowl Ski Area Developers Withdraw Resort Plans
By Lucia Stewart, 4-03-08
The application for a large-scale base area development at Bridger Bowl Ski Area, outside of Bozeman, Montana has been withdrawn.
After hundreds of public comments in April and May of 2007, the Bridger Canyon Partners asked the Gallatin County Planning Department to table their Planned Unit Development in order to continue discussion and come to an agreement with the Bridger Canyon Property Owners’ Association (BCPOA).
The Bridger Canyon Neighborhood Zoning, established in the 1970’s by the BCPOA, shaped strict rules and regulations about development in this pristine canyon, particularly when it came to the proposed 452 overnight units, 75 recreational home lots, a commercial village, a recreational lodge and employee housing.
The Bridger Canyon Partners decided the timeline, including reasonable agreement with the BCPOA, water rights and permitting, coupled with housing downturn, makes the project unfeasible at this time and withdrew their application on March 26th.
There are plans for development at the base area, but on a much smaller scale at a later, undetermined date.
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Comments
I am sure Bridger Bowl has an official mission statement formed in the positive, but if they to have a statement formed in the negative it should be this: "Bridger Bowl is NOT a ski resort." Bridger Bowl is local, community, ski hill serving the local area; it is not some destination resort.
I have heard second-hand that there are some at Bridger Bowl who have been using the refrain "we must grow to compete." If that is true I want them to know I consider that refrain as flawed as the " growth is good" mantra that has driven land use in all the West.
I sat on the sidelines as Bridger Bowl expanded its southern and northern boundaries even though I knew it would mean the loss of one of my favorite backcountry ski experiences on Slushman's because I trusted Bridger Bowl to keep the essential character of Bridger the same while providing great skiing to the community. While I don't yet regret my decision not to oppose the Bridger Bowl expansion, I have grown increasingly concerned about the other "improvements" I've heard floated for Bridger Bowl. The thought of a destination resort and more infrastructure at the base of Bridger Bowl and in the canyon makes me want to vomit. IF this is the vision some have for my local community ski hill, I vow to fight them all the way.
Tough choice.
Irreversible also.
And from an environmental/community standpoint, Rob is absolutely right. When I want extravagance, I go to Big Sky. When I want some no-nonsense powder and down-to-earth people, I go to Bridger. Let's keep the community ski areas.
This is just one more thing that saddens me about the demise of the Bozeman area. When is enough...just enough?
It's important to remember that Bridger Bowl is not the developer here (though they do have a small number of development rights of their own). One of the fundamental problems with the original proposal was that it was not well integrated with the ski area, and thus had the potential to worsen traffic, parking, and other problems, rather than contributing to their solution.
You can read about our efforts at
http://bcpoa.net/base.html
Tell us what you think at
http://groups.google.com/group/bridger-canyon-forum