The Colorado-based company will acquire the Stowe, Vt., resort, adding to the company’s network of 10 resorts and marking its first East Coast property. Vail has no immediate plans for changes at Stowe Mountain, and is expected to retain the property’s year-round staff.
Colorado-based Vail Resorts will pay $50 million to acquire Stowe Mountain Resort in Stowe, Vt., the companies announced on February 21, the Associated Press (AP) reported.
The deal would be the first East Coast property for Vail, and Stowe would be added to the company’s network of 10 resorts. Vail would acquire all of Stowe resort’s mountain operations, including skier services, such as food-and-beverage facilities and rental and lift offices on Mount Mansfield and nearby Spruce Peak, the AP reported.
The Stowe resort, now owned by the Mount Mansfield Co., a wholly owned subsidiary of the American International Group, Inc., would retain ownership of several other facilities, including the Stowe Mountain Lodge, the Stowe Mountain Club, the Stowe Country Club and other real estate, the AP reported.
C&RB featured the property as its cover story in the February 2009 issue (“A Place for All Seasons”).
Vail has no immediate plans for changes at Stowe. In its release announcing the sale, Vail said it expected to retain most of Stowe’s year-round staff, the AP reported.
“I think it’s going to be a great development for Stowe and for the region and the state,” said state Rep. Heidi Scheuermann, a Stowe Republican who owns a property management and development business in the community. “I think this was a business decision that they really wanted to make, and they did it responsibly with a real world-class resort.”
“The missing piece for us was having a good quality resort in the East. And Stowe is certainly that,” said Blaise Carrig, senior adviser to the mountain division of Vail. “It’s got a great history, it’s got a terrific brand with both the mountain experience and the town experience, it’s the perfect fit for us. We think it’s the premier resort in the East.”
There are local and regional differences in skiing experiences across the country and the world, he said. “We’re not bringing a western feel to Stowe,” Carrig said. “The reason we bought a resort in the East is to have that experience in our portfolio. The value of our network is each of these resorts is iconic and different, and that’s the value to our customer.”
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