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Powder Mountain | |
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Location in the United States Location in Utah | |
Location | Cache, Weber counties, Utah, United States |
Nearest major city | Ogden, Utah 19 miles (31 km) southwest |
Coordinates | 41°22′48″N 111°46′49″W / 41.38000°N 111.78028°W |
Vertical | 2,205 ft (672 m) lift-served 2,522 ft (769 m) via hiking |
Top elevation | 8,900 ft (2,713 m) lift-served 9,422 ft (2,872 m) via hiking |
Base elevation | 6,900 ft (2,103 m) |
Skiable area | 8,000 acres (32.4 km2) 4,200 acres (17.0 km2) lift-served |
Trails | 162; 25% beginner 40% intermediate 35% advanced |
Longest run | 3 miles (5 km) |
Lift system | 6 chairs, 3 surface lifts |
Lift capacity | 6,350 skiers per hour |
Terrain parks | 2 |
Snowfall | 360 in (30 ft; 9.1 m) per year |
Snowmaking | Sundown |
Night skiing | 1 chair, 1 surface lift |
Website | https://www.powdermountain.com |
Powder Mountain is a ski resort located in the western United States east of Eden, Utah, stretching between Weber and Cache counties in the Wasatch Range which covers 12,000 acres (18.8 sq mi; 48.6 km2), and is one of the largest ski resorts in the U.S..[1][2] The resort was established in 1972, and has 162 trails, nine lifts, and two terrain parks;[3] it is 55 miles (90 km) northeast of the Salt Lake City International Airport.
Powder Mountain is a multi-season mountain destination, home to an expansive public ski resort, an open-air museum of land art and sculpture, and a unique residential neighborhood with dedicated access to private ski lifts, premium amenities, and elevated alpine living.