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Vail developer Frampton doubts Colorado’s ‘political will’ to fund I-70 rail fix

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March 17, 2014, 11:46 pm
Harry Frampton

Harry Frampton

Harry Frampton, the Vail-based developer whose company revamped Denver’s iconic Union Station, is a skeptic when it comes to the concept of passenger rail connecting Colorado’s Front Range cities to the state’s mountain resorts.

Frampton doubts funding can be found either for a new rail line along the congested Interstate 70 corridor into the mountains or for a revived ski train along existing rail lines in the mountains, pointing out that even Denver billionaire Phil Anschutz couldn’t make the Winter Park Ski Train work, selling it in 2009.

And Frampton says that even a successful Colorado bid for the Winter Olympics likely wouldn’t provide the impetus for fixing the I-70 bottleneck that’s been particularly bad this ski season.

“I doubt that people in Colorado and the U.S. have the willingness to invest the amount of money that would be required to six-lane [I-70] or put in a train,” Frampton said. “It’s a staggering amount of money, and my guess is that the political will, for the lack of a better word, is not there to do that.”

The Colorado Department of Transportation last month estimated it would cost $16.5 billion to build a 155-mile Advanced Guideway System rail connection between Denver International Airport and the Eagle County Regional Airport.

By comparison, the short, 30-mile rail line between the “Coastal Cluster” along the Black Sea at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics and the “Mountain Cluster” at Krasnaya Polyana reportedly cost nearly $9 billion.

Frampton, who attended the Sochi Games, said that proximity to the mountains – just a half-hour train ride away –made Sochi the best Olympic Games he’s ever been to.

“You could easily get up to the Mountain Cluster and then you could get back down to the Coastal Cluster, and that was a unique aspect,” Frampton said. “If we ended up getting [the Olympics in Colorado], it would be more like Vancouver in that you wouldn’t have the interconnectivity of the two villages, which was what was so nice about Russia. It was so close.”

At the 2010 Vancouver Olympics it was 78 miles between the city and mountain venues in Whistler, and the Sea-to-Sky Highway was shut down to private vehicle traffic. Train service between Vancouver and Whistler was shut down several years before the Olympics.

Vail and Beaver Creek are a little over 100 miles from Denver, also with no trains, and that distance between the mountains and the city was one of the drawbacks when Denver was awarded the Olympics in 1976 only to see voters later reject taxpayer funding and give the Games back to the International Olympic Committee.

Former Colorado Gov. Dick Lamm, who led the charge to reject the 1976 Olympics, recently said he might support a future Colorado Olympic bid if it’s a means of providing an I-70 rail fix. But Frampton doesn’t see that happening, and instead suggests Colorado could find other ways to successfully host the Games.

“That’s a little bit of a weakness, but we have a lot of great strengths, too,” Frampton said. “There’s no such thing as a perfect Olympic site, but what we’ve got is a great culture of sports, dramatic mountains and great snow, and we’d have to devise an Olympics based on those assets. We can do that.”

Frampton says he’s been to five Summer and Winter Olympics, including highly acclaimed Games in Los Angeles in 1984, Beijing in 2008 and Salt Lake City in 2002, and it’s really no contest: Sochi was “the best of the five.”

“Maybe it was because Sochi was a little bit more of an adventure for me and I’ve been to Salt Lake many times, but I thought [Sochi] was better,” Frampton said. “I thought Salt Lake was terrific, but the newness of all the facilities [in Sochi], the transportation was extraordinary and easy, and the venues and the volunteers were fabulous.”

As chairman of the board of the Vail Valley Foundation, which in less than a year will host the Vail Valley’s third World Alpine Ski Championships, Frampton went to Russia to see what worked and what didn’t last month. Most everything worked very well, said Frampton, who’s also president and CEO of East West Partners, a leading national resort development company.

“What’s amazing to me and different from all the other Olympics is they built it all from scratch,” said Frampton, who was inducted into the Colorado Ski and Snowboard Museum Hall of Fame in 2010. “I have to admit I went over there putting on my developer hat. I wore it to get some comprehension of how they could do it all. It’s like building Vail in three years.”

Frampton was president of Vail Associates from 1982 to 1986 when Beaver Creek was brand-new and struggling to get traction in a brutal regional recession. He formed East West and a real estate firm that later became Slifer Smith & Frampton and helped propel the fledgling ski area – originally conceived as a venue for the 1976 Denver Olympics — to world-class resort status.

He thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin’s $51 billion investment in Sochi may one day pay the same dividends.

“A lot of people live in Russia and they’re starting to make more money and become more connected,” Frampton said. “They don’t have a big summer and winter resort there, and I would think that [Sochi] has the potential to be extraordinarily successful as a primarily Russian resort.”

A member in 2011 of the Denver Exploratory Committee for the 2022 Winter Olympics, which the United States Olympic Committee later ultimately decided not to pursue, Frampton left Sochi even more convinced Colorado should someday host the Games.

“There’s no question that Colorado could put on a great event,” Frampton said. “It would be different than what they did in Russia, there’s no question about that, but I came away from [Sochi] hoping even more that the USOC would sometime in the near future decide to start again with the Winter Olympics and that Colorado would be able to be the winner of that process.”

The USOC appears to be more focused on a 2024 Summer Games bid in the United States than the 2026 Winter Games, but Frampton is convinced Colorado “would be simply extraordinary” as an Olympic venue. “We’ve got a long history of building resorts and they’re beautiful and we’ve got great weather and snow.”

This story was produced for the Colorado Ski & Snowboard Museum and a version first ran in the Vail Daily. The museum is located on the third level of the Vail Village parking structure, adjacent to Vail Village Covered Bridge. It is open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, call 970-476-1876 or go to www.skimuseum.net.

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David O. Williams

Managing Editor at RealVail
David O. Williams is the editor and co-founder of RealVail.com and has had his awarding-winning work (see About Us) published in more than 75 newspapers and magazines around the world, including 5280 Magazine, American Way Magazine (American Airlines), the Anchorage Daily News (Alaska), the Anchorage Daily Press (Alaska), Aspen Daily News, Aspen Journalism, the Aspen Times, Beaver Creek Magazine, the Boulder Daily Camera, the Casper Star Tribune (Wyoming), the Chicago Tribune, Colorado Central Magazine, the Colorado Independent (formerly Colorado Confidential), Colorado Newsline, Colorado Politics (formerly the Colorado Statesman), Colorado Public News, the Colorado Springs Gazette, the Colorado Springs Independent, the Colorado Statesman (now Colorado Politics), the Colorado Times Recorder, the Cortez Journal, the Craig Daily Press, the Curry Coastal Pilot (Oregon), the Daily Trail (Vail), the Del Norte Triplicate (California), the Denver Daily News, the Denver Gazette, the Denver Post, the Durango Herald, the Eagle Valley Enterprise, the Eastside Journal (Bellevue, Washington), ESPN.com, Explore Big Sky (Mont.), the Fort Morgan Times (Colorado), the Glenwood Springs Post-Independent, the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, the Greeley Tribune, the Huffington Post, the King County Journal (Seattle, Washington), the Kingman Daily Miner (Arizona), KUNC.org (northern Colorado), LA Weekly, the Las Vegas Sun, the Leadville Herald-Democrat, the London Daily Mirror, the Moab Times Independent (Utah), the Montgomery Journal (Maryland), the Montrose Daily Press, The New York Times, the Parent’s Handbook, Peaks Magazine (now Epic Life), People Magazine, Powder Magazine, the Pueblo Chieftain, PT Magazine, the Rio Blanco Herald Times (Colorado), Rocky Mountain Golf Magazine, the Rocky Mountain News, RouteFifty.com (formerly Government Executive State and Local), the Salt Lake Tribune, SKI Magazine, Ski Area Management, SKIING Magazine, the Sky-Hi News, the Steamboat Pilot & Today, the Sterling Journal Advocate (Colorado), the Summit Daily News, United Hemispheres (United Airlines), Vail/Beaver Creek Magazine, Vail en Español, Vail Health Magazine, Vail Valley Magazine, the Vail Daily, the Vail Trail, Westword (Denver), Writers on the Range and the Wyoming Tribune Eagle. Williams is also the founder, publisher and editor of RealVail.com and RockyMountainPost.com.

3 Responses to Vail developer Frampton doubts Colorado’s ‘political will’ to fund I-70 rail fix

  1. Stan wagon Reply

    March 24, 2014 at 7:25 am

    Olympic Nordic skiing requires thAt elevation be under about 5500 ft. This is impossible in colo unless snow is trucked down. That is surely unacceptable. So why do people talk as if there is some hope of a Colorado Olympics?

  2. David O. Williams Reply

    March 24, 2014 at 9:57 am

    Good point, Stan. The cross-country events at the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics in 2002 were held at Soldier Hollow (base elevation 5,463 feet) so they can be held more than a mile above sea level. Denver’s winning 1976 bid originally had cross-country near Evergreen, right above the city, but local organizers realized there wasn’t enough natural snow or snowmaking to make that happen so they moved them to Steamboat Springs (base elevation 6,732 feet and 160 miles from Denver). That was a concern for the IOC but ultimately it was moot point because Colorado voters rejected taxpayer funding. Snowmaking systems are better today so a venue in the Front Range near Denver might be feasible, but it would still be above 5,500 feet.

  3. stan wagon Reply

    April 8, 2014 at 6:05 pm

    Thanks for reply. The ecological unsoundness of using artificial snow or trucked-in snow for such a high-profile event seems as if it would destroy any proposal. I know I myself would argue against it. Certainly it would be nice if the winter Olympics returned to the US sometime, and I’m sure they will. But it won’t be in Colorado (in my opinion), and I hope money is not spent on a proposal. But doing something about the I-70 issue, surely seems worthwhile….

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