Little Cottonwood Canyon Gondola Controversy Reignites With DOT Recommendation

This article originally appeared on Ski Mag

SLC skiers, the end of your traffic woes may be on the horizon. The Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) has made another step toward its goal of reducing congestion on State Route 210, which provides SLC residents access to both Alta and Snowbird via Little Cottonwood Canyon. UDOT's solution? A gondola.

The proposed gondola will sit at the mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon and carry passengers to stations located at the base areas of Alta and Snowbird. Each cabin is slated to carry 32 passengers and arrive every two minutes. A 2,500-car lot will provide parking for those making use of the gondola. The ride will take 30 minutes to Snowbird, and 36 to Alta. UDOT hopes that the gondola will alleviate traffic in the canyon.

LCC Gondola
The gondola ride would take about a half-hour and carry 32 passengers per cabin. Photo: Courtesy of GondolaWorks

Other transportation improvement alternatives on the table included improved bus access, the widening of State Route 210, and a train. According to UDOT, the gondola won out because it was the "most reliable mode of public transit in variable weather conditions and best meets the reliability goal of the project’s purpose, while taking into consideration environmental impacts, public input, and overall life-cycle cost in comparison to the other four alternatives."

The gondola initiative is not yet set in stone. The project will enter a public review phase on September 2, ending on October 17. If you'd like to make thoughts or concerns about the gondola known, you can do so here.

For a Laugh: Utah and Colorado Have the World's Worst Ski Traffic, But I Know How to Fix It.

UDOT plans to make its final decision sometime this winter, as this week's announcement only indicates that the gondola is their preferred choice.

Via a press release, the Department noted that "it may take years to secure federal, state and/or private funding for full implementation [of the gondola]." In the meantime, they intend to bolster bus access to reduce traffic. Tolling on State Route 210 is another solution under consideration.

The announcement comes after years of deliberation. In 2017, Utah's state legislature passed Highway General Obligation Bonds Authorization, a bill that contained additional funding for state transportation projects. The Commission in charge of deploying the bill identified ski traffic in Little Cottonwood Canyon as an area of high priority. In 2018, UDOT began investigating the potential environmental impacts of transportation improvement alternatives. Four years later, the Department arrived at its current gondola-oriented opinion.

The Highway General Obligation Bonds Authorization commission isn't alone in noticing Little Cottonwood Canyon's seasonal gridlock. If you ask any SLC resident about the Canyon's traffic situation, they'll likely tell you the same story.

One skier, who chose to remain anonymous, grew up skiing Alta by commuting from SLC. He saw firsthand as Little Cottonwood Canyon's two-lane highway failed to keep up with increasing skier demand, succumbing to frequent traffic jams, particularly on busy weekends.

The skier estimates that the drive to Alta, which once took roughly 25 minutes from his home in Cottonwood Heights, can now take up to two hours when the snow starts to stack up. His anecdotal experience aligns with the data--Utah had a record year for ski-resort visitation this past season. He feel that the gondola presents the most efficient solution.

"There's no going back to Alta in 2000," he said. "The fact of the matter is that the demand [for skiing] is so high now, and we don’t have the infrastructure to support it."

The gondola isn't without controversy. Several local organizations, including the Wasatch Backcountry Alliance (WBA), oppose the proposal. In May of 2022, the WBA ran an article entitled "Gondola Misinformation: WBA Clears the Air With Facts." The article denies the veracity of many of the proposal’s supposed benefits, including the reduction of carbon emissions.

The Backstory: Utah Considers Building the World's Longest Gondola to Alleviate Ski Traffic

Brad Rutledge, WBA board member and co-founder, stands with his organization in viewing the gondola as a potential misstep. He believes that the gondola will be less convenient than driving, carpooling, or taking the bus. "It's hard for me to imagine from a convenience standpoint people doing it [riding the gondola]," he said. If the gondola proves to be an undesirable option for skiers, Rutledge worries that the project will be an enormous waste.

Another of Rutledge's critiques revolves around the visual impact of the gondola. "When you look around, you truly feel solitude," he says, citing the experience of backcountry skiing in the Little Cottonwood Canyon area. In his eyes, the presence of a large artificial structure would damage one of the Canyon's greatest resources, its natural beauty.

A 2021 poll from Deseret News indicates that Rutledge and the WBA's position isn't isolated. The poll stated that roughly 60 percent of SLC residents oppose the installation of a gondola, preferring an improved bus system instead. Another 20 percent of respondents favored the gondola, and the remaining 20 percent opted for "another option" or no change.

Most SLC skiers seem to agree on one thing: The traffic problem in Little Cottonwood Canyon needs to be addressed. For Rutledge and the WBA, that looks like an increased emphasis on community carpooling and bussing initiatives. Gondola proponents see it differently, hoping the Swiss approach could distribute skiers more evenly throughout the canyon.

Watch this space for updates on this evolving story.

For exclusive access to all of our fitness, gear, adventure, and travel stories, plus discounts on trips, events, and gear, sign up for Outside+ today.