| ognizant Communication Corporation |
Mountain Resort Planning and Development in an Era
of Globalization
Thomas Clark, Alison Gill, and Rudi Hartmann
ISBN: 1-882345-47-9 $74.00 (Softbound)
| Book Contents | List of Figures | List of Tables |
Preface
Chapter 1. Introduction
Thomas Clark
Chapter 2. Cross-Border Cooperation in Tourism Planning the Alps:
Problems and Progress
Friedrich M. Zimmermann
Chapter 6. Trustafarians and Rastafarians: What Mountain Towns Can
Learn From the Development Paths of High-End Caribbean Resorts
Paul Lorah
Chapter 10. Quality of Life Conflict in Banff, Canada: Toward a Framework
for Resolution
Sandy McAndrews and Dianne Draper
Chapter 16. The Evolution of Village Form and Its Relevance as a
Model for Resort Design and Development
Sherry Dorward
Index
2.1 The area of the Alps-Adriatic Working Community
2.2 The area of the ARGEALP
2.3 The CADSES territory
2.4 The leading idea of the European Wellness Project
3.1 The effects of mountain resort cooperation strategies on destinations
4.1 Foreign exchange rates and numbers of Japanese overseas travelers
4.2 Sectoral production linkage map of Japanese tourism production
system at Whistler, British Columbia
5.1 Villard del Lans circa 1920
5.2 Typical stone farmhouse near Villard de Lans
5.3 Section of a typical farmhouse
5.4 Typical hamlet
5.5 Hamlet trail system near Villard de Lans
5.6 Route through the Grade Goulets
5.7 Elevation of Les Gentianes
5.8 Typical modern condominium in Villard de Lans
5.9 Various ski chalet types near Correncon
5.10 Map of Villard de Lans showing incorporation of outlying hamlets
into the village
5.11 Perspective drawing of a converted house-barn
7.1 The relative strengths of the Ruapehu ski area site, 2004
7.2 Potential composition of the Ruapehu ski areas site
8.1 Gunnison County, Colorado
8.2 Gunnison County base income (2001)
8.2 Gunnison County base employment
9.1 Alpen-Adria region: accommodation amenities and size of tourist
resorts
9.2 Alpen-Adria, province of Veneto: type of mountain resort skiing
10.1 Study site location map
10.2 Linking community QOL perspectives and social dilemma
10.3 A public process to resolve social dilemmas
11.1 Population change versus change in the ratio of median gross rent
to median household income, 1990 to 2000
11.2 Median household income versus the percent of all resident workers
in tourist services, 2000
11.3 Persons below the poverty level (1999) versus the percent of all
resident workers in the tourist services industry, 2000
11.4 Critical decision trade-offs for those whose behavior shapes housing
outcomes in resort regions
14.1 Interview locations throughout Colorado
14.2 Reduced water levels in Green Mountain Reservoir
14.3 Consequences of debris flow in aftermath of wildfire near Durango,
Colorado
15.1 Study area with wildfire hazard
15.2 Projected 2030 development in unincorporated areas, Clear Creek
County
15.3 Projected development in unincorporated areas: four-county area
16.1 River Run Village at Keystone Resort, Colorado
16.2 Vail Village pedestrian core
16.3 Beaver Creek Resort, Colorado
16.4 Kagbeni, a remote farming village north of the Annapurnas in north
central Nepal
16.5 Namsu, a Monpa tribal village in the Himalayan foothills of the
northeast Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh
16.6 St. Véran, in the Queyras Mountain of southeastern France
16.7 Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland, is gently nestled in a steep-sided
Alpine valley
16.8 Alpbach, Austria, is a museum-quality village of characteristic
Alpine wooden buildings
16.9 Les Ménuires, an ultramodern postwar French ski resort
in the Trois Vallées
16.10 Phoenix Park, a ski and summer resort near Seoul, South Korea
16.11 Val Morel, a newer resort development in the French Alps
16.12 Colorado Avenue, Telluride's main street, has retained many of
its 19th centure commercial buildings
16.13 The main street of Park City, shown here during the annual arts
fair
16.14 Vail, Colorado
16.15 Lionshead, the secondary portal to Vail Mountain
16.16 Copper Mountain's new pedestrian village core
17.1 Stansfield's seaside resort model (Atlantic City) including a
resort business district (RBD)
17.2 Lavery's (1971) seaside resort model including a resort business
district (RBD)
17.3 S. William's (1998) model of a conventional seaside resort
17.4 Smith's (1991) model of beach resort formation
17.5 Dorward's (1990) generalized layout of two successive types of
Alpine ski resorts
17.6 Dorward's (1990) generalized layout of postwar French ski resorts
17.7 Dorward's (1990) conceptual layout diagram of Vail Village
17.8 Graham, Ashworth, and Tunbridge's (2000) waterfront variant on
the evolutionary model of the tourist-historic city
17.9 Student sketch of "typical" mountain resort/ski resort
17.10 Modeling mountain resorts: core resort areas and down-valleys
18.1 Average east- and west-bound traffic over Teton Pass, January,
February, March 2002
18.2 Hypothetical probability of change for cell in native range to
other land use
18.3 Changes in commuter capacity from 1995 to 2002, Four Corners,
Montana
18.4 Teton County, Idaho study area including the towns of Driggs and
Victor
18.5 Graph showing the percent matching (accuracy) of the model-predicted
1999 map with the observed 1999 land use map
18.6 Graph showing the percent matching (accuracy) of the model-predicted
2004 map with the observed 2001 land use map
18.7 The mean number of map cells (~10 acres) in each land use category
for the observed 2001 map compared to the 2004 predicted map
18.8 Comparison of forecasted map cells in residential land use with
population predictions for Teton County
18.9 Mean number of low-density residential cells forecasted for the
study area
18.10 Mean number of low-density residential cells forecasted for the
study area
18.11 Dispersion of rural residential wells (1990-2003) and distance
from Bozeman to Four Corners, Montana without commuter capacity
18.12 Dispersion of rural residential wells (1990-2003) and distance
from Bozeman to Four Corners, Montana with commuter capacity
18.13 Dispersion of rural wells (1990-2003) in Teton County, Idaho
3.1 Acquisitions of the "big three" mountain resort corporations
3.2 Environmental and social initiatives by Whistler Blackcomb
8.1 Demographic information
8.2 Regression results: Binary probit model
8.3 Effect of commercial and residential development of ranch land
on tourist visitation
8.4 Summary of respondents' trip expenditures in Gunnison County, Colorado
8.5 Spending and confidence interval information
8.6 Estimated annual output impact of hypothetical ranch open space
development
8.7 Estimated annual employment impact of hypothetical ranch open space
development
9.1 Major characteristics of selected Alpen-Adria winter sport resorts
9.2 Motives to visit Slovenian Alpen-Adria winter sport resorts (in
summer)
9.3 The use of natural and human resources in resorts, 2002
9.4 Ecological behavior and standpoint of tourists, 2002
10.1 General indicators of community QOL
10.2 Public participation elements that secure behavioral solutions
11.1 Housing tenure and occupancy rates in the fast-growing resort
regions of the mountain west, by state, 2000
11.2 Tourism and recreation-related workers by place of residence:
resort, residual, and peripheral residential domains, 2000
11.3 Tourist services workers living in peripheral areas, as a percent
of all tourist services workers residing in county, 2000
11.4 Sales and property tax differentials in resort regions, 2001
12.1 Trends in mountain stewardship
15.1 Population growth by county: 2000-2025
15.2 Current and projected development in unincorporated areas of four
central Colorado counties, 2000-2025
15.3 Current and projected development on hazardous lands: 2000-2025
unincorporated areas of four central Colorado counties
15.4 Subdivision regulations by county
15.5 Individual property regulations by county
17.1 Down-valleys and core resort areas: 10 ground rules
18.1 Four LUCCPS models predicting land use change in the Four Corners
area, Montana
18.2 Calibration of the LUCCPS model using 1987 and 1995 land use layers
18.3 Four LUCCPS models predicting land use change in the Four Corners
area, Montana