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Introducing Deer Valley East Village ® , the most exciting new resort destination in North America to live, stay and play.
Experience an elevated standard of style, luxury and lifestyle with over 3,700 acres of additional skiable terrain and more than 50 miles of hiking and biking trails to explore. A legacy of excellence enters a new era across an array of condominiums, private villas, townhomes and premium ski-accessible homesites. Developed by Extell and Reef Capital, these are homes designed to be appreciated for generations.
For more information, visit DeerValleyEastVillage.com






The 4C Group seamlessly integrates Architecture, Interior Design, and Construction to create exceptional homes in Park City and the Wasatch back. Situated between The Colony, Promontory, Tuhaye, Victory Ranch, Marcella, and others, our 12,000 square-foot Collaboration Center offers a proven, all-inclusive experience - where vision meets execution, and luxury comes to life.









You’ve followed your sense of adventure to Park City. Now, all you need is a guide. Here, you’ll find the locals quite forthcoming when it comes to offering friendly advice from trails to fishing holes, or lending a hand on your next project. For everything else, all you’ll need is your phone.
Our online guide is packed with nearly 1,000 local businesses, searchable by name or type, with direct links to most websites. Just point, shoot, and explore hundreds of experts eager to help with your next home improvement project — provide a much-needed massage treatment or training program for the upcoming season — tune your bike or skis or point you to trustworthy banking and financial advice.
Finding your way in Park City has never been easier. The Mountainkind deserve nothing less.
For the Mountainkind.TM














What if you didn’t have to cringe the moment you began to think about moving? What if you could anticipate a level of service beyond expectation so that you could focus on what’s next?
I pride myself on extraordinary service, and over the last 20 years I have gained a specialized and unique skill set. As an Associate Broker my training goes beyond what is required for a standard real estate license. I served as President of the Park City Board of REALTORS ® and my continuing involvement with the Park City Board of Realtors and the Utah Association of Realtors gives me more visibility and a broader reach throughout the state of Utah.
Our local real estate market is constantly shifting. With prior experience as an Executive for a public company, and today as an established Broker with Utah’s market leader, I’ve developed advanced negotiation skills and a thorough understanding of today’s competitive real estate industry.
Let’s connect; scan the QR code to request a customized market report for your property or community today.









For those who savor the finest things in life, travel isn’t just a means to reach a destination; it’s an experience in itself. At Aero, travel is treated as an art form, hospitality is our passion, FBO terminals replace crowded airports, and the in-flight amenities are endless—Starlink Wi-Fi, top-shelf open bar, dining from Erewhon, and much more.
Our new home at Heber Valley Airport (HCR) will help you access Park City and Deer Valley faster than ever before. Avoid the traffic from Salt Lake City and get from tarmac to trails in 30 minutes.
Scan the QR code and tell us where else you’d like to jet.








JASMINE ROTH, host of HGTV’s Help!
I Wrecked My House, moves to Park City


Get the latest scoop from Park City, Deer Valley and Sundance ski resorts.
Indulge in a powder buffet at six ski areas on a one-day Utah Interconnect Tour.

Third time’s a Park City charm for SIA President Nick Sargent.
Sweet new spas, upgrades and treatments promote pure relaxation.
Wolf Creek Ranch offers homeowners privacy and year-round adventure on 13,200 protected acres.
INTRODUCING THE SMART WAY TO OWN Ameyalli introduces vacation home co-ownership within a wellness community.
COOKIE CUTTERS
Customized gear rooms, garages and wellness features are trending for mountain homes.
Caroline Gleich and Rob Lea’s marriage is built on summits, swims and shared purpose.
Three Utah artisans craft envy-inspiring dinnerware, wall coverings and furniture.
Baldhead Cabinets artfully melds form and function


130
HAPPINESS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
HGTV personality Jasmine Roth relocates her family, show and business to Park City.
138
LIFE IN FULL BLOOM
The art and life of Susan Swartz reflect gratitude.
144
FAREWELL TO SUNDANCE
Park City says goodbye to Sundance Film Festival after a run of more than 40 years.
150
FITTING FINESSE
Put your best ski boot forward when hitting the slopes.
155 THEN & NOW
Explore ski fashion trends throughout the ages.
160
STEPLADDER OF SUCCESS
Christian Center of Park City celebrates 25 years of meeting people at their points of need.
164
GATEWAY TO PARK CITY

Explore Kimball Junction, a favorite locals’ place for dining, shopping and wellness.
179
GEAR GUIDE
Products to elevate your days on the slopes.




206
FOOD FORECAST
Two local photographers capture Utah wildlife in wonderful wintery habitats.
196
GALLERY VIEW
Discover creative expression on display.
GALLERY CALENDAR
Find inspiration at winter and spring art events and exhibitions.
Executive chefs at foodsaavy resorts share fresh perspectives, plus winter culinary events.
211
ELEVATED APRÈS SKI
Try nine places to cap off a wintery day, the Park City way.
217 GOOD MORNING SUNSHINE
An exceptional day starts with a satisfying breakfast or brunch. 222
Check out where to dig into delicious cuisine in the Park City area.

WINTER/SPRING 2026
THE PREMIER GUIDE TO PARK CITY
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Beth Buehler
ART DIRECTOR Christine Bower-Wright
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Brittni Dye



PRODUCTION COORDINATORS Lisa Stone, Mimi Coz
COPY EDITOR Laura Jackson
PROJECT MANAGER Tyra Ericson
GROUP PUBLISHER Susan Isay
DIRECTORS OF SALES Wendy Halliday, Laura Osborne
Jill Adler, Brandi Christoffersen, Bianca Dumas, Tyra Ericson, Cindy Hirschfeld, Scout Petersen, Deanna Rhodes, Megan Rule, Morgan Tilton, Jenny Willden, Leigh Wilson
CIRCULATION & DISTRIBUTION Dan Sharp
PRESIDENT Pete Burgeson

WINNER BEST OF STATE 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
“BEST VISUAL ARTS” 2024, 2025
“BEST LITERARY ARTS” 2024, 2025 “BEST OF UTAH PUBLICATION” 2023


FINALIST MAGGIE AWARD
“BEST VISITOR GUIDE”
FINALIST MAGGIE AWARD
“BEST EDITORIAL PHOTO”

It’s that time of year when we scramble to figure out ways to clear schedules for a few hours or a full-on powder day. If you’re lucky, the white gold shows up on a day that is free from commitments or is part of a perfectly timed vacation in Park City.
Winter magic is real, whether swooshing down local slopes, meandering through a forest on snowshoes or getting a workout on Nordic skis at Soldier Hollow. It also can be experienced strolling Main Street Park City or downtown Midway with your favorite people, seeing good cheer at restaurants and the appeal of carefully placed merchandise through windows ... scenes that beckon you to come inside, get warm and savor the moment.
We hope you will spend sweet time with Mountain as well, flipping through our newly designed pages with
beautiful images, stunning artwork and thoughtfully penned articles. Our lead story is about HGTV personality Jasmine Roth, who relocated her family, business and show Help! I Wrecked My House to Park City from California. Glimpse the changes Roth and her team have made inside area homes and a ski lodge at Park City Mountain Resort during season five (page 130).
Susan Swartz is a familiar name in Park City as a talented artist who has shown her work in the U.S. and Europe and is cofounder of the Christian Center of Park City (CCPC) with her husband, Jim. Read about how Swartz joyfully transformed her artwork in response to healing from a severe auto-immune disease (page 138) and how CCPC has grown while meeting the needs of hundreds of locals (page 160).
We say farewell to Sundance Film Festival with writer Deanna Rhodes using the Portuguese word saudade

to describe the melancholy feeling and sharing the thoughts of staff and volunteers from over the years. Herself a past volunteer, Rhodes salutes this longtime event as it relocates to Boulder, Colorado (page 144).
Also be on the lookout for our new The Park City Pocket Guide that launched in November. The guide offers an overview of where to eat, play, shop, stay and more in Park City and the Heber Valley. With both publications, we celebrate living an authentic alpine experience. Enjoy!


SPEAKEASY ANTIQUES is bringing life back to an old shoe-repair business on Kamas’ Main Street. The shop has been renovated but retains a charming Western storefront. “I [was] looking for antiques [in Park City] and had difficulty finding any. So, I decided to take the plunge to buy the
building, renovate it and open my own antiques shop. At this point, I believe I am the only antiques shop in Summit County,” says owner Marilee Ward, who has been an antiques dealer for more than 30 years. “I have several lovely old pieces of furniture, vintage lamps, transferware, sterling silver pieces, Native American jewelry, paintings, copper molds, bronze animal sculptures and old crocks among other things.”

WHAT DO STEVEN NYMAN , an alpine ski racer and three-time Olympian, and Lindsey Van, a leader in women’s ski jumping, have in common? Both Park City athletes were inducted into the Will and Jean Pickett Intermountain Ski Hall of Fame at Alf Engen Ski Museum in August. People who have high achievements from competing, or contributed to the promotion of skiing within Utah, Idaho and Wyoming, are honored. Earl A. Miller, Brigham Young University ski coach, founder of the Miller Ski Company and designer of the original Sundance Mountain Resort, was posthumously inducted at the August 28 ceremony held at Chateau Deer Valley.
RUNWAY IN THE ROCKIES

You’ve heard of borrowing books from the library, but what about seeds?
This summer, a handful of Summit County Libraries completed their first season operating a Seed Library, where community members can take their desired seeds, grow their plants and then refill the packet with the crop’s new seeds before returning to the library for the next user. So far, the initiative has seen success, but the sprouting program hopes to bloom even more this summer.
Park City based premium cocoa brand LOCOCO recently launched its newest flavor, Lux Vanilla, a rich hot chocolate with vanilla notes and a dash of Utah salt. The new blend was created in collaboration with the executive pastry chef of Montage Deer Valley, Romie Fisher, and is sold in single-serve to-go packets online and at select area retailers. All the brand’s products are made with functional mushrooms and are adaptogenic and vegan, providing a healthier but no less delicious alternative to the popular wintertime drink.

Park City Fashion Week is back for its sixth year, showcasing both established and emerging designers in a runway show at The Marquis on Main Street, January 26. Since its birth, the style event has taken place alongside the famed Sundance Film Festival with a goal of keeping fashion in the spotlight during the high-profile celebration. Founder Kim Kienow hopes to expand to a multiday format in the future, despite Sundance’s departure from town.




• JOURNEY THROUGH NUMEROUS TRAILS LEADING UP TO 11,000 FEET IN ELEVATION AND VIEW WILD LIFE SIGHTINGS ALONG THE WAY.
• BREATHTAKING VIEWS
• LARGEST FLEET IN THE AREA
• CATERING TO SMALL & LARGE GROUPS ALL GROUPS OF 6+ MACHINES ARE PRIVATE
• FAMILY & BEGINNER FRIENDLY







NEW TERRAIN, NEW LODGES, NEW CONVENIENCES TRANSFORM PARK CITY, DEER VALLEY AND SUNDANCE BY
CINDY HIRSCHFELD
As sure as snow falls in the mountains, ski areas ramp up for the winter ahead with upgrades that can run the gamut from new runs and lifts to tweaks in ski school programs or on-mountain restaurant menus. This season, Park City skiers have a lot to enjoy including Deer Valley’s muchanticipated expansion and a welcomed new gondola at Park City Mountain Resort. Look for new runs and a new hotel at nearby Sundance Mountain Resort. Read on to find out the biggest news.

MOST ANTICIPATED NEW SLOPES
Since opening in 1981, skiers-only Deer Valley has consistently earned accolades for its luxurious amenities, impeccable grooming and top-notch guest service. But more recently the buzz has been about “Expanded Excel-
lence,” the largest expansion in the resort’s history with ultimately 3,700 more acres of skiable terrain and a new base village on the east side. Last winter, the resort teased the ambitious plan by opening three new lifts and 20 runs on more than 300 acres, along with access through the in-progress East Village. This season, seven more lifts will debut, including a gondola and a six-person bubble chair with heated seats, as well
as some 80 runs on 2,000 additional acres. Next winter, plans call for yet another lift and seven more runs with the remaining new terrain slated for the near future, along a timeline yet to be set. At completion, the project will have more than doubled Deer Valley’s terrain, for a total of more than 5,700 acres across 10 peaks.
Mountain talked to Deer Valley Ski Patrol Manager Mark Chytka, who also over-
sees avalanche mitigation, for recommendations on skiing the new runs. Beginner skiers can find high alpine, yet gentle, terrain on the west side of Park Peak; reach it via the new East Village Express gondola or the new Pinyon Express six-pack. Intermediates will want to unload off East Village Express at its mid-station to hit the runs on the peak known as Big Dutch, with about a thousand feet of vertical.

“It’s comparable to skiing on Flagstaff,” says Chytka, “with lots of aspen glades.”
The expansion area’s expert terrain “is going to be something the regular Deer Valley guest hasn’t seen before,” he says. Look for long, sustained pitches off Park Peak, including ample glades and slopes broken up by cool rock features. And don’t miss skiing down the ridge to Redemption, a steep groomer that Chytka describes as “Stein’s Way on steroids” and double that iconic run’s length. That same ridge off Park Peak also drops into a series of black trails that provide both open runs and tree skiing.
Access Deer Valley’s East Village — which has 1,200 new parking spots — directly off Highway 40 near Jordanelle Reservoir, eliminating the need to navigate traffic backups in Park City proper. There’s lodging, too. Last winter, Grand Hyatt Deer Valley opened, and Four Seasons Resort and Residences Deer Valley is under construction, soon to be joined by Hilton’s first slopeside Canopy hotel. Development company Extell has partnered with Deer Valley to construct the village, which will eventually include additional
BY THE NUMBERS
1,400
CHAIRLIFT
142 CABINS
40 TOWERS
15 MINUTE RIDE
10 PASSENGERS IN EACH CAR
hotels, residences, restaurants, shops and more. This winter look for East Village Lodge, an 8,000-square-foot temporary structure that houses cafeteria-style dining, ski rentals, the ski school, restrooms and a ski patrol base.
Reserve a spot at Chute Eleven, the slopeside yurt next to Empire Canyon Lodge that opened in January 2025. Sip champagne and nosh on elevated snacks like lobster and caviar grilled cheese, and sought-after DJs will be spinning to amp up the vibe a few days each week so watch the schedule.
At North America’s largest ski resort, there’s always something afoot. This winter, the biggest news is on the resort’s Canyons side. The 10-passenger Sunrise Gondola replaces the old two-seater Sunrise chairlift, not only whisking you up from Canyons Village that much faster, but also traveling higher up the mountain all the way to Red Pine Lodge. Another bonus: The gondola’s alignment has been designed to better withstand the high winds that can blow through the base area, so it will keep running when other lifts may temporarily close. Additionally, the first two levels of the new Canyons Village parking garage, at the bottom of the Cabriolet lift, open this winter, providing more spaces for all the gondola riders.
The Red Pine Ski and Ride School Zone offers a reinvented learning experience for newbies. Accessed from the Sunrise gondola — so even never-evers can get higher up on the mountain — these slopes have been sculpted with a variety of pitches and terrain features designed to help new skiers and snowboarders taking lessons to progress along the learning curve. Two magic carpets, one of them new, give learners the opportunity to easily lap the zone for practice. For kids, there’s also a new lunchroom at the nearby Red Pine Lodge.
The resort’s oldest lodge,
Summit House atop the Bonanza Express lift, received a modern facelift from celebrity designer Jasmine Roth, who hosts the HGTV show Help! I Wrecked My House. Roth usually rescues homeowners who got in over their heads, fixing renovations gone awry. For this project, she started on solid ground. Originally a boarding house for miners, Summit House was converted into an on-mountain restaurant in 1963, when the ski area first opened as Treasure Mountains. It’s fun to speculate on the process: How many “lost” fries did Roth uncover during the remodel? Errant ketchup packets? Did any ghosts of miners show up, ready to go to work with a pickax? The redesign was revealed during


BY THE NUMBERS
3 p.m.
SERVING TIME IN THE CANYONS VILLAGE FORUM
3 PRIMARY
FLAVORS: ORANGE, ROSEMARY, HONEY GLAZE
500 BITES BAKED DAILY
1 ORANGE COWBOY HAT WORN BY EACH PERSON GIVING OUT THESE COMPLIMENTARY TREATS 1/2 second TO POP THE DELICIOUS DONUT HOLE IN YOUR MOUTH
during a season five episode of the show.
Want to ski with a friend who doesn’t have an Epic Pass? The new Epic Friend Tickets will give your adventure buddy half off the price of a daily lift ticket at Park City Mountain Resort and the other 36 Vail Resorts ski areas in North America. Depending on when you bought your Epic Pass, you’ll receive either 10 or six Epic Friend Tickets for the season. And if your friend decides to spring for a pass next year, the cost of one redeemed ticket can be applied to that Epic Pass purchase.
Founded in 1969 by the late Robert Redford, Sundance Mountain Resort, 45 minutes from Park City, has quietly chugged along in the shadow of Utah’s larger ski areas, attracting families from Provo and skiers in the know with a blend of charm, emphasis on the natural environment, and some of the best views in the state. The resort’s modest profile is about to change. Redford sold the ski area in 2020, and the new owners have sunk more than $40 million into upgrades. “It’s a continuation

The new 63-room Inn at Sundance; 60 more acres of skiing have been added at Sundance
of Redford’s vision but with an investment level that has been unprecedented in Sundance’s history,” says Vice President of Marketing Nick Como.
Over the past four years, improvements have included the Outlaw Express chairlift at the base area, new Wildwood lift, 10 additional runs, expanded snowmaking, parking improvements, a trio of outdoor soaking pools for overnight guests and a new day lodge. This winter, some 60 additional acres with intermediate and expert terrain come on line, accessed from the top of the resort. One new groomed run starts steep and narrow from the top of Bearclaw Summit, then opens up as it
descends along a ridgeline some 1,800 vertical feet to the base of the Wildwood chair. Other runs include chutes and tree shots. For the 2026–27 season, a new high-speed quad, Electric Horseman Express (named for Redford’s hit film of 1979), will access another 100-plus acres of terrain in an area adjacent to Bishop’s Bowl. For a ski area with just 540 acres, 165 more acres from the expansion is significant, upping Sundance’s terrain by 32%.
Until now, Sundance guests could only stay in cottages around the ski area base. That will change in January,
BY THE NUMBERS
$99 FOR EACH SUBSEQUENT DAY OF SKIING AT SUNDANCE
$60 FOR NIGHT SKIING ONLY (4:30–9 P.M. ON MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY) 1 FULL DAY OF SKIING INCLUDED WITH CARD PURCHASE
when the 63-room Inn at Sundance opens, the resort’s first hotel. The building spans North Fork Creek via a covered bridge that connects two wings of guest rooms. Book a room here, and you’ll literally be a snowball’s throw away from the Outlaw Express lift (Como made that test throw).
The interiors will blend western decor — think ample wood — with a seventies retro vibe that’s a nod to the resort’s earliest days. And keep an eye out for a large painting of bighorn sheep commissioned for the inn, inspired by Redford’s conservation ethos. He bought the ski area and surrounding land from the Stewart family, Scottish immigrants who had homesteaded the land and grazed domestic sheep. Once Redford worked to reclaim the lands around the resort, wild animals began to return, including bighorn sheep.

Opened last January, Mountain Camp Day Lodge includes everything you want for a day on the slopes within walking distance of your car. Previously, skiers had to ride a shuttle bus or take a lift and ski down to access base-area services. In addition to ticket sales, gear rentals, ski school, lockers and more, hit up the cafe, which offers a $10 daily lunch special and $5 PBRs for après ski.





A trek up Alta Ski Area near the Supreme lift
EPIC ADVENTURES

THERE IS NOTHING in the ski world quite like the cluster of resorts tucked into the snow-blessed valleys just east of Salt Lake City. Here, six ski areas are close together yet extraordinarily varied, each highlighting different facets of the sport — groomers to glades to gulleys, and all in their own way glorious. For many visitors, skiing any one of the resorts can be a bucket-list experience. But the ultimate in alpine gluttony, the grandest powder buffet on Earth, is to try and ski all six areas in one day.
Early last April, at 8:15 on a snowy morning, I met my group at a lodge in Deer Valley’s Silver Lake base area to attempt the Ski Utah Interconnect Tour, as the adventure is called. This is a guide-mandatory trip — there are multiple crossings of ski-area boundaries — available exclusively through Ski Utah, a nonprofit marketing and membership association representing Utah’s ski and snowboard industry. Our team included two veteran guides, Luke Ratto and Matt Meinhold, and five skiers from Utah, California and Washington, D.C., all of us buzzing with anticipation. Luke and Matt handed out backpacks and avalanche transceivers and conducted a safety briefing, then we rolled out the door as the lifts opened. We began the day with a high-speed romp down Bird’s Eye, one of Deer Valley Resort's impeccably manicured, wide-open runs.
You don’t need prior backcountry experience to join the Interconnect Tour, but you do have to be an advanced skier (no snowboards are permitted) with plenty of energy. The trip is a splurge; the price this season is $575 per person, which includes lunch, lift tickets and transportation back to the starting point. And the tour, as with all things skiing, is unpredictable. New snow had fallen overnight, which seemed like great news, though it also meant that avalanche conditions could be worrisome. Our guides were in radio contact with ski patrollers at several areas, but by the time we reached the far edge of Deer Valley, atop the Lady Morgan lift, we were uncertain if clearance to complete the tour would be granted.
Despite the uncertainty and the cost, the Interconnect, which has been running since 1984, is unique. There isn’t a comparable ski tour anywhere in North America, and even similar journeys in the European Alps don’t have the terrain variety. I’d been wanting to try the Interconnect, no kidding, for over 20 years, and had finally run out of excuses. Raquel, the skier from D.C., had changed her plane flight to fit the trip in. None of us knew if we’d picked a good day.
BY MICHAEL FINKEL
The first test of our fortunes was upon us: the out-of-bounds ski between Deer Valley and Park City Mountain Resort. A patroller lifted the boundary rope and we slipped beneath. An untracked meadow lay before us, the surface flashing in the partial sun, a field of diamonds. One turn was all it took. The powder was dry and billowy, bottomless-feeling, and we each floated in the little snow clouds created by our skis, whooping
and grinning, porpoising through the pristine Wasatch snow. We had hit it just right.
Park City Mountain Resort is immense, with almost a big-city vibe — each lift is like its own neighborhood demanding to be explored — and our group skied to the funkiest of these districts, the beatnik, out-of-the-way Jupiter lift. At the top, we learned from the guides that the avalanche threat had been deemed minimal. We’d been permitted to continue the Interconnect. And with this good news, we passed under another boundary line and danced giddily through more powder, weaving through well-spaced trees — aspens, spruce and subalpine fir — until descending to the bottom of Big Cottonwood Canyon and the base of Solitude Mountain.
Solitude is friendly and unpretentious, with a locals feel that is precious and increasingly rare among ski resorts. We skied a few meditative runs as a snow squall passed through; fat, lazy flakes drifted around us snow-globe style. The Interconnect Tour has many variations — the journey, the guides said, is never quite the same twice — but the route we were on, starting at Deer Valley, is the classic. The day is extremely ambitious, and our group had been savoring each run, unhurried, taking extra time on the short uphill pushes at the bottom of the backcountry shots. Raquel from D.C. mentioned that her home was exactly six feet


We had skied more than a marathon — 29.5 miles to be exact — and 14,777 vertical feet.
above sea level, some 10,000 feet lower than much of the tour, and she needed to nurse her stamina.
Our group had bonded well as we were in it together, on the same team, which is one of the beauties of skiing: everyone can win. We decided, upon consultation with the guides, that rather than picking up the pace and risk a mad rush, we would skip the other resort in Big Cottonwood Canyon: Brighton, the oldest ski area in Utah, established in 1936, a true, down-home classic. For us, Brighton was the fish that got away.
We needed the time because the canyon-hop from Big Cottonwood to Little Cottonwood required a slog up the Highway to Heaven, a steep, dramatic route beneath the ramparts of Mount
Superior. Twenty minutes of tricky, strenuous side steps brought us to the lip of Little Cottonwood Canyon, the meteorological phenomenon, practically mythic in stature — one of the snowiest places on Earth. We rested, slouched over our poles, then rewarded ourselves with more untracked powder down Grizzly Gulch and into Alta Ski Area.
Alta is wild, free-spirited, majestic. The better the skier you are, the better Alta becomes. Here, we finally stopped for a late lunch, followed by a couple of exceptional runs, highlighted by a waltz down Ballroom, embraced by Alta’s awesome rock walls.
Our legs were heavy but there was no stopping now. We passed through the Mineral Basin gate with only seconds to spare before it
Skiing glorious untracked powder; author Michael Finkel's grin says it all
was shut and into the skiing wonderland of Snowbird, stocked with enormously long runs and daunting steeps. We ended, sapping the remainder of our energy and then some, by navigating the vertiginous chutes of double-black- diamond
Upper Silver Fox. By the time we reached the base, the lifts were no longer loading. The van to take us back to Deer Valley was waiting, and we piled in a little after 5 p.m. Our guides, consulting their watches, announced that we had skied more than a marathon — 29.5 miles to be exact — and 14,777 vertical feet. With our ski boots finally off, our feet freed, we rumbled down the canyon, exhausted and euphoric at once, the ultimate in alpine bliss at the end of a one-of-akind day.


















THIRD TIME’S A PARK CITY CHARM FOR SIA PRESIDENT NICK SARGENT
BY CINDY HIRSCHFELD
Like many mountain towns, Park City has a boomerang effect. People live here, discover the magic and leave for other opportunities, then find themselves once again waking up to a view of Jupiter Peak or driving by the White Barn. Nick Sargent is one of those people.
The Vermont native discovered Park City in 1992, when he moved to town to tune skis at Rennstall, now known as Jans Rennstall.
After two years, he left for another job, then returned for six months in 1999. Since 2016, Sargent is on his third go-round as a Parkite, living
a block from the Town Lift and leading the Snowsports Industries America (SIA) trade association from a Prospector Avenue office.
A lifelong skier, Sargent has both the passion and the knowledge to serve as president of SIA, which provides research, education and other tools to businesses in the winter outdoor recreation industry. Now 55, he learned to alpine ski as a youngster at Vermont’s Stowe Mountain Resort in Vermont and became a racer. He also cross-country skied to his elementary school. “It was a real pain in the ass back in the day,” he admits, “but, in hindsight, it was a real treat.”
When he moved to Park City the first time, after graduating from Western State College (now Western Colorado University) in Gunnison, Colorado, “I really honed in on elite ski tuning,” Sargent says. That dedication to World Cup–worthy bases and razor-sharp edges earned Sargent a job with Dynastar and Lange. He spent the next four years working in Europe, tuning skis for the female World Cup athletes that Dynastar sponsored. “I was on the road for 300 days a year,” he recalls.
A marketing and promotions gig with Adidas Salomon (then one company) brought Sargent back to Park City for half a year before settling in Denver. “I had a knack for marketing and knew a lot of people in the ski industry,” he says.
He demonstrated that knack during the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics, when he helped Adidas Salomon transform the former Miners Hospital in Park City into a temporary brand showcase and hospitality hub for entertaining VIPs. But the company ran afoul of the International Olympic Committee’s strict promotional standards. “Today, in the IOC handbook, there’s a section on what you can’t do based on what we did with that [building],” Sargent says. “We got away with what we did because guerilla marketing was new at the time.”
For 11 years, Sargent oversaw global alliances for Burton Snowboards,
in Burlington, Vermont. It wasn’t his first experience with snowboarding — as a kid, he’d hike up with a Burton Backhill board, as riding wasn’t yet allowed at Stowe — but he was very much a novice.
His moment of reckoning came early on during a company marketing trip to Breckenridge, Colorado. Taking advantage of his colleagues’ late bedtimes, Sargent awoke early the first morning and spent a couple of hours in a snowboarding lesson.
The ruse worked, sort of. “I went up with Jake [Burton] on the chairlift later that day, and he said, ‘You don’t know how to ride, do you?’” recalls Sargent. “I said, ‘I just learned this morning!’”
Below: Nick in Europe working on the World Cup circuit and more recently with his kids

Best thing about Park City: My favorite part is the proximity to the Salt Lake City International Airport, because I travel a lot. Also, the access to outdoor activity is amazing. I can Nordic ski or mountain bike from my office, and Park City Mountain Resort is right in front of the office, so I can walk to the lifts.
Go-to place: My favorite hangout is the Viking Yurt at Park City Mountain Resort. It’s a family-owned restaurant halfway up the mountain [at the top of the Crescent Express lift]. I love getting a coffee and a chocolate-chip cookie; they bake them there fresh every day. In the spring, I’ll have a glass of wine and a sandwich.
Guest service: I like to take visiting friends to Yuki Yama on Main Street for good sushi or Sammy’s Bistro in Prospector Square, which has a little bit of everything and is an easy crowd pleaser. And the Twisted Fern [on Snow Creek Drive] has an amazing burger and the best fries in town.
Cowboy up: The Kemo Sabe shop at the top of Main Street has a speakeasy on the first floor. A door that looks like part of a wall opens into it, and there’s a one-way mirror so you can see everyone outside trying on their hats. It’s fun to have a whiskey sour or a mule there.
Hidden gem: Goldener Hirsch in Deer Valley has a coffee shop at the back of the hotel. I have a lot of morning meetings there. You go in, take your boots off, and they’ll deliver coffee to your table. Amid a resort that’s always busy, it’s a little less busy.
Favorite nonprofit: The Park City Community Foundation. They raise a ton of money for local nonprofits. It helps keep the vibrancy of town alive.

When Sargent was recruited to lead SIA, challenges other than learning how to snowboard awaited. The board of the Washington, D.C.–based trade association had decided to move it closer to a western ski hub, with Park City as the first choice.
“It made a lot of sense,” says Sargent, who is only the third leader in the association’s 75-year history. In addition to its ski resorts, Park City is also home to U.S. Ski and Snowboard, which oversees competition, and brands like Rossignol and Backcountry. But the move also required Sargent to lay off employees, eliminate operational redundancies and rein in the budget. And he sold SIA’s annual Snow Show trade event, once a key revenue driver, amid a changing business landscape. Now, the association helps stage the consumer-oriented Snowbound Expo in Boston each November.
When he’s not helping SIA’s members decipher shifting tariffs and new sustainability regulations, or touting the benefits of snowsports participation, Sargent practices what he preaches. “I love ripping groomers at Deer Valley or skiing Pinecone Ridge at Park City.”
Though the Park City that Sargent lived in during the mid-1990s differs drastically from today’s growing, busy ski mecca, he’s not planning on leaving anytime soon. Seems like the third time’s the charm.
Soak in the Warmth of the Utah Crater
Slip into the naturally heated waters of a geothermal wonder tucked beneath ancient stone. The mineral-rich water and gentle steam create a tranquil retreat from winter’s chill.
Stroll & Shop Midway’s Boutiques
Wander along charming streets lined with handpicked treasures — from cozy mountain fashions to artisan-crafted gifts.
Savor Local Dining
Indulge in cuisine inspired by the Wasatch landscape. Fireside tables and intimate settings make every meal a sensory journey.
Ski the Trails of Olympians
Experience cross-country skiing at Soldier Hollow, where the legacy of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games endures.
Tube Down Soldier Hollow’s Slopes
Enjoy effortless winter thrills on Utah’s longest tubing lanes. With lift access and perfectly groomed runs, it’s an exhilarating adventure for all ages.
Ice Skate Beneath the Mountain Sky
Lace up at Midway’s outdoor rink. The scene is pure winter magic — sparkling ice, starry skies and timeless memories.
Tour the Local Chocolate Factory
Step inside Ritual Chocolate and witness the art of bean-to-bar creation — the perfect complement to a day on the slopes.
Taste Tradition at Heber Valley Artisan Cheese
Visit the farm, meet the cows, and sample rich cheeses made on-site that embody the heritage of Heber Valley.





Advanced Aesthetic Medicine by
Dr. Stephanie Singer


At Park City Medesthetix, Dr Stephanie Singer and her staff deliver advanced, personalized aesthetic treatments to help you look and feel exceptional, at any age.
Dr. Singer blends medical precision with artistic

vision to deliver real, regenerative results, without surgery. Whether you’re looking to elevate your confidence, optimize your health, or enhance your appearance, we provide trusted expertise tailored to your goals.
Dr. Stephanie Singer is an Associate Fellow of the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery, a boardcertified obstetrician and gynecologist and certified age management physician. Dr. Singer and her Park City Med team offer a full range of treatments in their convenient North Park City location:
Botox & Fillers
Skin Rejuvenation
• Laser Hair Removal • Hydrafacial • Advanced Laser Therapies
O-Shot® for Women • P-Shot® for Men • Personalized Hormone Therapy • Age Management Programs
DEXA and VO2 Max


The planned subterranean mineral pool for Ameyalli Park City by Appellation.

H52 FITNESS 2.0: TECH, TECHNIQUE AND RECOVERY
56 LOVE AT FULL ALTITUDE
63 ALPINE SERENITY
NO MATTER how old you are, when you live in the Wasatch, life becomes a pursuit of three things: strength, stamina and perseverance. We strive to live a life of mountain adventure without injury, pain and timidity as we hunt for that elusive flow state where body and terrain become one. While in the past we relied on ski conditioning classes, yoga and meditation to find our slope Zen, there are now high-tech bio tools that are evolving faster than Deer Valley East Village.
Gone are the days of vague and confusing coaching tips shouted over the wind. Today’s skiers and riders are turning to artificial intelligence-driven apps, biohacking labs, high-tech facilities and at-home gadgets that promise not just better turns, but a full-body upgrade. From digital coaches clipped to your boots to recovery plunges that mimic Nordic rituals, these innovations propose to take cutting-edge science to the slopes and trails. Every descent comes with data, turning everyday winter enthusiasts into focused athletes training for that “perfect” run.
This surge in “New Agey” ski tech isn’t just hype. It’s a response to the progression of a sport that demands long physical days thanks to high-speed lifts and impeccable grooming, as well as high-dollar lift tickets and lessons. We can’t help milking every minute to make sure we get our money’s worth out of a very expensive seven-hour day. After all, it’s no fun spending more than $300 on a ticket, then quitting after three hours.
Skiing and snowboarding tax our legs like few activities, begging us to blend explosive power with aerobic stamina, all while delicately navigating variable snow, crowds and high altitude. Traditional training — endless squats or stairs — often falls short on the hill. But what if you could upload a video to ChatGPT and ask for ski tips? Or perhaps a personalized training program? What if you could wear a sensor for real-time dynamic feedback? And after that, instead of a massage and hot tub, you lie on a table while a giant inflatable suit squeezes toxins from your system? Instead of beer, we down IVs of B vitamins, electrolytes and amino acids?
With so many businesses popping up in Park City to ride that wave of bio-fitness chatter, how do you even know what will work for you and where to go?



B Strong Training helps trigger muscle growth using inflatable BFR cuffs; Carv is a digital ski coach that clips onto boots
Nothing transforms skiing like instant, unbiased feedback. Remember when testosterone-filled guys on the lift would pull out their iPhone 4s or glance at some clunky smart watch, obsessing over their vertical and speed and pushing harder to break their personal best before the lifts closed? The go-to apps like Ski Tracks and Snocru were all about using your phone’s built-in GPS and altimeter (or barometer on newer models) to spit out real-time stats. While Snocru is no longer, Ski ranked Ski Tracks as one of the five best ski-tracking apps in 2025. In the 2010s, the tech was still pretty raw but a market for stats was there. These apps turned skiing into a quantifiable quest. But GPS on phones was hit or miss (especially in cold weather or trees) and battery life was a nightmare. Then in the 2020s, apps would still log your runs, lifts, speed and vertical, but fine-tuned tech like Slopes took a deeper dive, replaying your day in 3D maps and keeping a seasonal diary of lift versus run time, distance, calories burned and heart rate. You can now see exactly how you’re improving season over season. Finally, with artificial intelligence (AI), fitness apps have evolved from tracking to training.

While in the past we relied on ski conditioning classes, yoga and meditation to find our slope Zen, there are now hightech bio tools.

Clockwise from lower left: Tonal 2’s deadlift bar; red and infrared LED light bed at Upgrade Labs; 3D motion capture at Intermountain Health/ Park City Hospital’s Sports Medicine and Performance Center
As long as you understand the basics of skiing mechanics, apps and wearables now deliver personalized coaching mid-run, turning data into progress. Leading the charge is Carv, the digital ski coach that clips onto any boot, packing 48 pressure sensors and a motion gyroscope to
analyze your every carve. As you ski, Carv tracks metrics like edge angle, pressure distribution and turn completion, scoring your performance with Ski:IQ (think IQ but for edging with about 100 for casual cruisers to 140-plus for pros). Real-time audio

cues you via earbuds such as, “Shift weight to your outside ski.” As if skiing wasn’t a fun game to begin with, the app produces gamified drills, like Carve Challenges that reward smoother lines with badges. Progression for tech geeks becomes addictive.
Skiing exposes muscles you didn’t know existed. Enter home and studio setups that use AI and resistance hacks to mimic slope demands efficiently, without hours running stairs or lunging. Tonal is the sci-fi embodiment of those 90s Bowflex and Total Gym machines. The wall-mounted smart home gym is a game changer for space-strapped skiers and uses electromagnetic resistance — up to 200 pounds per arm — to auto adjust weights in 1-pound increments, guided by AI that learns your strength curve.
The system uses built-in cameras to drop resistance if your form falters. Tonal programs like Ski Endurance blend squats, lunges and core twists with on-screen trainers, tracking progress to ensure you’re powering through moguls like Jonny Moseley.
For those preferring studios, The Smart Fit Method in Park City is a science-backed gym that uses AI-driven resistance machines for 30-minute, full-body circuits. Sessions target ski essentials like quad strength and hip mobility with low-impact loads that build power without joint strain. Their new partnership with Lumati adds a recharge station with 15 minutes of red-light therapy, compression, vibration and oxygen flow to accelerate recovery. Blood flow restriction (BFR) isn’t just for rehab anymore. Using inflatable cuffs — like those offered from Park City’s B Strong Training — to partially restrict blood flow during
low-weight lifts, BFR triggers muscle growth with 30% less load, sparing knees and hips. Work with a trainer at Athletic Republic or Resilience to craft your own program and pair it with transcutaneous electricical nerve stimulation (TENS) devices for pain management as electric pulses block knee twinges and improve circulation for quicker healing.
The downside of snow sports comes when inflammation creeps in and energy dips. Park City’s wellness scene is exploding with businesses offering to take your pain away without needing a physical therapist. Upgrade Labs founded by biohacking pioneer Dave Asprey is ground zero. Some of the options include cryotherapy (-150°F chambers for endorphin rushes), PEMF mats (pulsed fields to reduce soreness), red light booths for skin-deep repair and AI bikes that tailor cardio to your VO2 max. Using scans customized for skiers, Upgrade Labs promises to boost mitochondria for altitude resilience.
If you want to get hot instead of cold, however, Hotworx flips the script with infrared saunas doubling as studios. Virtual classes (yoga, cycle and Pilates) in 125°F pods torch calories while sweating out
the toxins. It’s affordable cross-training for ski flexibility. If you love both hot and cold therapy, there’s Avanto Cold Plunge and Spa. Alternate 200°F saunas with 45°F plunges. Science says it spikes norepinephrine for mood lifts and cuts inflammation by 20%.
Intermountain Health/ Park City Hospital’s Sports Medicine and Performance Center’s 2025 remodel created a state-of-the-art blending of tech and wellness. High-speed treadmills simulate slope inclines, 3D motion capture analyzes body mechanics and a ceiling track aids neuro-rehab for injury-prone skiers. You may even get your insurance to cover it!
As these tools proliferate, the line between tech and technique blurs. Carv’s AI whispers corrections, Tonal’s magnets build strength and Avanto’s plunges erase the ache. There will always be the doubters, especially in Park City, where half the population sports “Earn Your Turns” bumper stickers. But perhaps there’s room for acceptance the way we ultimately adopted Buffs and boot heaters. These tools may become necessities for longevity on the hill. If only AI could figure out how to make every day a powder day.

CAROLINE GLEICH AND ROB LEA HAVE BUILT THEIR MARRIAGE ON SUMMITS, SWIMS AND SHARED PURPOSE.
BY MORGAN TILTON
On the windswept summit of Cho Oyu, the sixth-highest mountain in the world, Caroline Gleich dropped to one knee. At nearly 27,000 feet, with Everest looming on the horizon, she proposed to her partner, Rob Lea. Eight months later, the Park City couple stood together on the summit of Everest, cementing a chapter in their story that blends love, endurance and shared ambition at the very highest levels.
For Rob, the mountains are home in the most literal sense. Born and raised in Park City, he grew up in the shadow of the Wasatch Range. His parents moved here in the mid-1970s, long before the ski town was a global destination. Rob spent his youth swimming competitively, running and pushing himself outdoors, trying to keep up with his older brother. “If you weren’t into the outdoors here, you’d probably be pretty bored,” he says with a laugh. His competitive streak came early — he was named “Most Athletic” in his high school yearbook — and
it carried him to UC Davis in California, where he swam at the collegiate level.
After college and travels, Rob returned to Park City, where he joined his father, Jim Lea, in the family real estate business. Two decades later, Rob is still a realtor with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Utah Properties, continuing the legacy his father began in the late 1970s.
Caroline’s story begins in Minnesota, where she grew up one of seven siblings. Her family would travel west to Utah each year, skiing in the winter and hiking
in the summer. Tragedy struck when she was 15: her half-brother was killed in an avalanche. That loss deepened her relationship with the mountains. By 2001, the Gleich family relocated to Utah, where Caroline finished high school and attended University of Utah.
Those early trips and the eventual move west were pivotal. “Traveling out to the mountains just captured my imagination,” she recalls. “I loved the snow, I loved the time together as a family, and I knew I wanted to make skiing my life.”
Her parents, both healthcare professionals — her father an immunologist, her
mother a dermatologist — eventually settled in Salt Lake City, while Caroline carved her own path in professional ski mountaineering.
Today, Caroline is one of the most recognized ski mountaineers in the world. She has been a Patagonia ambassador since 2011 and has built a career not only on technical climbs and ski descents but also on advocacy. Among her proudest achievements was becoming the first woman (and fourth person) to ski all 90 steep lines described in The Chuting Gallery, a Wasatch classic written by Parkite Andrew McClean. She also skied Mount Vinson, the highest peak in Antarctica, and Cho Oyu, which she skied from top to bottom with one short rappel on the Yellow Band, a steep section of metamorphic rock and mixed terrain that isn’t skiable.
In 2021, Gleich raised $15,000 for Utah Clean
Energy by “Everesting” on skis, logging 30,000 vertical feet in a single day. It makes the suffering meaningful.
“For me, the most rewarding accomplishments are the ones where I can merge advocacy and athletics,” she says. Her tenacity is perhaps best embodied on Everest. Just
high altitude doctor to help us make good decisions,” Rob explains. Plus, Gleich was determined.
Rob’s endurance feats parallel Caroline’s alpine accomplishments. After years competing in Ironman triathlons, he

he linked his passions in what he dubbed the “Ultimate World Triathlon” by climbing Everest, swimming the English Channel and biking across the United States — all within six months, with the couple’s wedding in the middle.
Now, Rob has set his sights

him. The genesis came from the doctor’s table after ankle surgery in 2017. Rob knew he needed a goal to train for during rehab. “I had found blogs comparing what’s harder, the English Channel or climbing Everest? I also wanted to bike across the country, so as a triathlete, I

" For me , the most rewarding accomplishments are the ones where I can merge advocacy and athletics. "
—CAROLINE GLEICH
seven weeks before departing, she tore her ACL. Instead of canceling, she climbed the mountain wearing a brace, summiting without the stabilizing ligament. “It was a calculated, mitigated risk, and we had a good team with our expedition leadership and
pursued long-distance, open-water swimming, completing iconic crossings of the English Channel between England and France, Catalina Channel in California, New Zealand’s Cook Strait and the North Channel between Ireland and Scotland. In 2019,
on a world first: to complete both the Seven Summits and the Oceans Seven, the mountaineering and extreme swimming equivalents of the planet’s most challenging endurance lists. He is well on his way, with six summits and four channels behind
decided to make a triathlon out of it.”
Together, Caroline and Rob have summited hundreds of peaks worldwide, visiting nearly 40 countries along the
way. Locally, they return to favorites like Mount Superior’s south ridge, Wasatch Crest and Heber Valley’s Timpanogos, which they’ve hiked and skied many different lines. They love the backyard ridgelines of Park City and training days at Jordanelle Reservoir, where

support crew at home. “He would steam my clothes and pack my lunch every day. All those little things are the most important — they’re the big things,” she says. “He’s a really good ally for women’s leadership. He understands how to support and lift up people and me.”
when you have to go 110% on that thing and not worry about balance,” Caroline explains. “If we don’t have time to climb a mountain together, we schedule fun ‘little snacks’ — like playing a game of badminton at sunset, a hot tub night or walking the dog to the pond.

Rob swims and water-skis. They share their adventures with their dog, Lila, whom they adopted several years ago. “She’s 5 years old and has been to 55 summits,” Caroline says. “We’re working on getting Lila to the summit of 100 unique peaks.”
Caroline and Rob’s partnership extends well beyond the mountains. During her 2024 U.S. Senate campaign, Rob took on the role of
For Rob’s channel swims, Caroline has crewed for hours on end, ensuring he has food, hydration and moral support. “We’re each other’s biggest cheerleaders,” Rob says. They also work on the everyday rhythms of life. Each Sunday, they sit down to map out the week ahead, aligning training, work and shared time. “Sometimes it’s about the big objectives,
same practices guide their life together in Park City.
“The mountain will always be there, and these things we do are risky,” Caroline says. “You need to listen to your intuition, communicate with your team and be willing to turn around, no matter how much you’ve invested.

It doesn’t always have to be epic and all encompassing.”
Whether on an 8,000-meter peak (26,247 feet) or walking the trails near their home, Caroline and Rob see synergy between adventures and marriage. In the mountains, they’ve learned to be adaptable, communicate clearly and find moments of levity, even in suffering. Those
I’m still learning that in my regular life, but that applies to so many things.”
In Park City and the surrounding Heber Valley, they’ve found the perfect place to build a life together: a community that shares their love of adventure, the outdoors and the mix of work and play. For Caroline and Rob, this landscape isn’t just where they test themselves. These mountains are home.
Discover a new era of health. Our state-of-the-art facility offers a wide range of services designed to meet the diverse needs of our community and take your health to the next level.
› Lifestyle Medicine and Wellness
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› Concierge Health
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Discover a new era of health. Our state-of-the-art facility offers a wide range of services designed to meet the diverse needs of our community and take your health to the next level.
› Lifestyle Medicine and Wellness
› Sports Medicine and Performance


› Concierge Health
› Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation
› Massage Therapy and Acupuncture
› Nutrition Services
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Scan the QR code to learn more about services available in your area


















255 main street park city • 435-640-7965 • alpenandhyde.com







SWEET NEW SPAS, UPGRADES AND TREATMENTS FOR PURE RELAXATION AT AREA HOTELS BY JENNY WILLDEN

Park City is lauded for its legendary ski slopes. But what happens after a long ski day, when your quads and feet are aching from powder turns in tight boots or perhaps a tumble while cruising down a favorite run? That’s where the area’s hotel spas come in, elevating your restoration beyond basic massages by adding Himalayan salt saunas, quartz beds, eucalyptus steam rooms and natural mineral hot spring pools. Upgrade your après ski routine with an indulgent spa visit this winter, or in some cases lazily dream about what’s to come.

While Grand Hyatt Deer Valley in East Village initially opened without a spa, its treatment rooms are now available for a blissful range of massages, facials and body wraps. A relaxation room will be added in the future.
“What we wanted to do is create a sanctuary that’s designed to balance modern luxury with timeless wellness traditions,” says Spa Director Jocylene Codrington. “All the services and treatments we’re offering are rooted in the belief that wellness is not a trend, it’s a lifestyle practice that should be accessible for our guests.”
Agaci’s menu of unique treatments is worth browsing, and guests receive access to the outdoor pool deck and hot tubs. For example, the Altitude Adjustment Massage is designed to help your body quickly establish

equilibrium at high altitude. Codrington’s personal favorite, Elemental Balancing, is a massage inspired by Ayurvedic rituals that brings balance to your energy meridians while stimulating the lymphatic system.
In the evening, guests can unwind with Serene Sunset, which includes aromatherapy, warm towels and a blanket cocoon, followed by a calming full-body massage infused with CBD oil. The experience ends with warm stones and grounding foot and scalp massages to help you drift into deep sleep.
The new thermal hot springs retreat and wellness center in Midway, designed and built in collaboration with Deepak Chopra and the Chopra Foundation, is planning a
2027 opening date. “Ameyalli Park City by Appellation’s Wellbeing Center, spa and hotel are all on track to open in early 2027, as we continue to bring our vision of blending wellness, luxury and community to life,” shares Christopher Hunsberger, COO and cofounder of Appellation. Sales for the Ameyalli Residence Club homes are already underway.
The long-awaited attraction, situated on the site of historic hot springs, will feature a 50,000-square-foot indoor and outdoor Wellbeing Center, complete with a subterranean mineral pool, outdoor sauna, geothermal water circuit, spa with 14 treatment rooms and more.
What makes this spa experience unique is “how it unites nature, wellness and culinary experiences in one setting,” says Charlie
Palmer, CEO and cofounder of Appellation. “Anchored by 28 natural hot springs and a preserved granite dome, the property preserves 55 acres of open space while drawing on the land’s healing heritage.”
Using Chopra’s Seven Pillars of Wellbeing, Ameyalli combines ancient healing traditions with modern approaches to promote longevity. Guests will enjoy mineral pools surrounded by gardens in a holistic environment designed to restore and revitalize, and two will be open to the public free of charge. While some areas are reserved for residents and guests, Ameyalli is ultimately designed as a destination for both travelers and the local community, including the Wellbeing Center, spa and dining outlets. “Our restaurants, bar and poolside dining will be open to locals,”

says Palmer. “The goal is to create a gathering place that welcomes everyone.”
A luxury alpine mountain village is underway in Heber. The Slope will feature an 86-room hotel, 200 hotel-branded residences, a spa and other wellness facilities. While details are not available about the spa quite yet, The Slope is just minutes from Deer Valley Resort’s East Village and also is slated to have retail, restaurants, a year-round tubing hill and other recreational amenities connected by waterways and pedestrian paths.
THE SPA AT STEIN ERIKSEN LODGE
Treat yourself to a luxuri-

ous day at the Spa at Stein Eriksen Lodge, recipient of the prestigious Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star designation. Treatments are open to the public and include access to a Himalayan salt sauna, steam room, outdoor heated pools, a cold plunge pool and hot tubs. A curated menu of massages, facials, body treatments, and nail and salon services are available, along with new wellness options designed to enhance both emotional and physical well-being.
For instance, Energy Reset is a one-on-one session with a gifted intuitive who uses gentle frequency techniques, while Inner Wisdom Connection focuses on reflection, release and realignment. Mountain Reset utilizes quartz crystal to increase blood flow and promote detoxification.
“The well-being treatments all have one thing in common,” says Breanna Samek, director of spa services for
the Stein Collection. “They provide balance and healing to guests who are looking for a more meaningful connection beyond what a traditional spa treatment provides.”
This luxurious mountain hotel is renowned for its spa, which features a relaxation room, serene meditation area, fireplace, steam showers, saunas, and indoor and outdoor pools and hot tubs. The spa’s new treatments include Altitude Revitalization, which combines hyperbaric oxygen therapy with a custom IV infusion to restore hydration and nutrients and to enhance performance at altitude. Personalized drip hydration IVs tailored to boost immunity, enhance beauty and promote recovery also are available separately.
For guests undergoing or recovering from oncology care, Montage therapists
have completed advanced oncology skincare training, enabling them to tailor treatments to meet the needs of sensitive skin while promoting comfort.
Waldorf Astoria’s spa menu has been completely refreshed this year, introducing new treatments that blend innovation with holistic wellness.
“One of my personal favorites of our new treatments is Time Ritual,” says Spa Director LaChell Talley. “It’s inspired by the body’s natural circadian rhythm, so no two treatments are the same. Our therapists tailor it in the moment, with essential oil blends for morning or evening, therapeutic massage, craniosacral holds and reflexology to clear blocked energy pathways. It’s an incredibly grounding reset, and our guests often say they leave not just relaxed, but truly balanced.”
The public can book treatments, which include access to the fireside lounge, relaxation areas, pools and hot tubs. “The spa embodies a philosophy deeply attuned to nature’s rhythms, crafting wellness experiences that transcend traditional boundaries,” says Talley. “Treatments are thoughtfully designed to honor the changing seasons and the natural world, offering guests a sanctuary where rejuvenation extends well beyond the treatment room.”

ALISHA STATEN
Owner, Maven Park City Master-Planned Community Specialist
KALI QUICK Luxury Sales Executive PGA Professional Turned Advisor
BROOKE BAILEY Luxury Sales Executive Western Lifestyle Specialist
Whether you’re selling a luxury home, buying your next Park City retreat, or showcasing a local business, Maven Park City, delivers a true concierge real estate experience.
We don’t just market spaces - we capture the lifestyle behind them. Through curated visuals, compelling storytelling, and strategic guidance, we ensure every property and every client shines with authenticity and sophistication.
For sellers, we craft unforgettable presentations that make your home magazine ready and capture an international audience through our media platform. For buyers, we guide you to the right home with the insider knowledge, access and a seamless white-glove approach.
Let’s create something unforgettable - in every step of your real estate journey.







Encompassing 13,200 protected acres, Wolf Creek Ranch offers privacy and year-round adventure. By Scout Petersen

Stand on a parcel at Wolf Creek Ranch in the winter and you’ll hear nothing but the wind and the crunch of boots on freshly packed snow. The 8,000-foot-high development spans 13,200 acres, offering a private lifestyle enveloped by stunning natural landscapes. Mount Timpanogos owns the western sky while views of the Uinta Mountains stretch to the east. For home and landowners on the 80-parcel ranch, the grounds feel deceptively secluded — world-class skiing at Deer Valley Resort is only 20 minutes east and Heber Valley Airport just beyond the south gate. It’s a getaway without having to truly get away.
No two residences at Wolf Creek Ranch look alike. Some are rustic timber lodges while others lean modern or minimalist. Some parcels feature a single livable yurt, and others hold sprawling multi-structure compounds. “The architecture is as varied as the owners themselves. No two properties are the same at Wolf Creek Ranch; each tells a story and holds memories and history that vary between each owner,” says Katy Patterson, owner of Mullin Real Estate and realtor at BHHS Utah Properties. Each parcel measures at least 160 acres with 10 acres reserved for building. Owners may construct up to three structures — main house, guest house and barn — the
ideal set up for any legacy estate. Several local builders, including Cameo Homes, Magleby Construction and Evergreene Construction work within the community. Some parcels are sold with predesigned architectural concepts for turn-key convenience, while others allow owners to bring in their own teams. The result is a varied design style where all pay homage to the land.
Founded in 1997, Wolf Creek Ranch was envisioned as a place where wide-open space and mountain heritage would endure. The ranch border shares approximately 7 miles of a common border with the 2.2 million-acre Uinta National Forest that
stretches east to Wyoming. A conservation easement managed by Utah Open Lands safeguards much of the wildlife habitat and alpine meadows, and development guidelines emphasize view corridors and materials that blend with the surrounding terrain. “Enjoying the ranch while still preserving it, is key to maintaining the ranch’s desirable characteristics,” says Patterson.
Wildlife is woven into daily life at the ranch. In autumn, elk bugle across the valleys during rutting season. Red foxes and coyotes dart through groves of Gambel oak as golden eagles ride thermals above. While some folks go to national parks to
see nature in its element, it’s found in the back and front yards at Wolf Creek Ranch. The property straddles two ecoregions: the semiarid foothills, home to sagebrush and mountain mahogany, and the Wasatch Montane Zone, where aspen groves and conifers dominate. More than 60 miles of private trails meander through these landscapes, serving as a haven for hikers, horseback riders and birders. Anglers can cast for fish in stocked ponds, many of which feed the Provo River watershed, a critical habitat for Bonneville cutthroat trout. Homeowners also enjoy private access to over a mile of the Upper Provo River just outside the ranch gates. “The Dipper Yurt


Trail is my favorite on the property,” says Matt Mullin, owner of Mullin Real Estate and realtor at BHHS Utah Properties.
Come winter, the trails convert for snowshoeing, snowmobiling and Nordic skiing. For peak enjoyment, the homeowners association (HOA) grooms 48 kilometers of trails for Nordic skiers. The nearby Deer Valley Resort expansion, which recently added seven lifts, has made access to pristine mountain skiing even more accessible for ranch homeowners.
Though privacy is paramount, Wolf Creek Ranch cultivates a quiet sense of community. Homeowners share access to a 1,500-square-foot guest lodge with three bedrooms, three and a half baths and a full kitchen for entertaining visiting friends and family. A


showstopping fireplace built from locally harvested stone anchors the guest lodge. Three off-road yurts are available for day or overnight use. “Homeowners have the ability to rent out the yurts with friends and family, it’s such a unique way to connect with others and
nature,” says Sarah Tilley, operations and marketing director for Mullin Real Estate.
For those who prefer to stay connected, the ranch center has fuel, snacks, bathrooms and a cozy lounge to regroup before heading back into the woods. The onsite fuel station
means snowmobilers and ATV riders don’t need to run into Kamas or Heber City to gas up mid-adventure. Doubling as an event space, the ranch center hosts weddings and family reunions and serves as a space for community events.

Equestrians will find everything they need at the centrally located Wolf Creek Ranch stables. An arena and well-appointed tack room make caring for horses effortless. In summer, homeowners can board their own animals or saddle up
for guided rides on mounts maintained by the HOA.
Wolf Creek Ranch occupies a sweet spot between untamed terrain and thoughtful stewardship. Owners can step from their porches onto
a snow-dusted trail, catch trout in the afternoon or meet neighbors for wine at the ranch center. They can explore thousands of acres of public forest out their back door before driving 20 minutes to world-class dining in Park City.
SPONSORED
13,200 acres and 80 homesteads, each with 160 acres
60 miles of private trails
48 kilometers of groomed Nordic skiing
7 miles of a common border with Uinta National Forest
1+ miles of private fishing on the Upper Provo River
1,500-square-foot guest lodge
wolfcreekranch realestate.com mullinrealestate.com
In an era when mountain real estate often means crowded slopes or cookie-cutter builds, Wolf Creek Ranch offers something rarer: room to roam and the freedom to build what suits a homeowner. “It’s an extraordinary place, there’s really nothing else like it out there,” says Mullin. “People come here because they want privacy and adventure, but also because they value the land itself. That’s what makes Wolf Creek Ranch so special.”
























































































HEBER 55+ COMMUNITY, STARTING IN THE LOW $600,000 S


Heber Valley’s newest 55+ community!
Luxury living at its finest! Located near countless outdoor activities; world class skiing, deer creek reservoir, four renowned golf courses, dining, shopping & more!
Easy living that features all main floor living with no step entries & roll-in showers (villas only), Spacious open floor plans with plenty of storage space.

Amenities include: Clubhouse with a gym, kitchen, gathering space, dining room; outdoor plunge pool/ hot tub & pickleball court!

















For more than 25 years, Mark Sletten of Engel & Völkers Park City has represented buyers and sellers of iconic mountain, luxury and ski properties in Park City. His reputation for delivering exceptional service and possessing unrivaled expertise of the Park City real estate market is second to none.
For up-to-date real estate market information & trends, call or text me today.




BY BIANCA DUMAS
Kathleen Royster talks about the beauty of multiples. A single shape might not catch your eye, but when that shape is reiterated, it takes on a certain elegance. In her younger, adventurous years as a commercial fisherman in Alaska, Royster was taken by the sight of fish piled in the hold of the boat. “Any one
shape repeated over and over becomes a pattern, a rhythm,” Royster says. “I saw the beauty in it.”
During the decade she spent working in Alaska, traveling and backcountry skiing all over the world, Royster developed her character and aesthetic as an artist. At the close of that season of life, Royster earned an MFA in ceramics at University of Utah. She then worked as an art professor at Metropolitan State University of Denver

Home is a place for personal connection. It’s a sanctuary from the world and the place for cozy, intimate gatherings. In keeping with the spirit of home, the belongings you welcome into this sacred space should make you feel comfortable and cared for. Meet a ceramicist, a wallpaper designer and a furniture maker whose thoughtfully crafted goods provide a sense of warmth and authenticity.
in Colorado and Scripps College in California and began creating in earnest, rising to the top of the art world. Her ceramic sculptures are now in prestigious permanent collections such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. Today, Royster makes functional ceramic tableware that is sold online, during Park Silly

Sunday Market, and at her Main Street studio and showroom in Helper. The beauty of multiples is made evident in Royster’s subtly patterned ceramic plates, bowls and serving ware, which feature repeating lines and organic shapes. The indigo-on-white look is her adaptation of a 12th-century Korean decorating technique called mishima. This is achieved by carving a design into leather-hard clay and filling the carved lines with a contrasting color slip before firing.
Serving ware can be overlooked as an art form, but its prominence in everyday activities gives it an inherent value. “Pots are for sharing and presenting food,” Royster says. “We use them in our daily rituals, at gatherings and celebrations, and for nourishing our bodies and our souls. You add beauty to those vessels, and that deepens the experience.” HOME + MOUNTAIN


Somer Gardiner is a wallpaper designer in Midway who paints her own series of multiples with an eye toward print. “My focus right now is on honoring and telling the story of high mountain living,” says Gardiner. Her patterns capture the beauty of aspen trees, the grittiness of ranching and mining towns, the granite peaks and the high meadow wildflowers and mixes all that with the send-it lifestyle of ski towns. An avid snowboarder, biker and hiker, Gardiner has made her Alpenhaus Design line a complete reflection of the mountain modern lifestyle. Her designs are high end, clean and refined. For example, geometric marks can be earthy and subtle and in sync with more

bold patterns made from a herringbone sheet of hand-drawn skis. Hunter greens and deep blues provide the backdrop to these downhill drifters, while bright pops of orange come from the colored binding on the skis. Through another of her brands, Willow and Wild Design, Gardiner sells her artisan wallpaper in designs that go beyond the ski chalet. All of Gardiner’s work is available in four types of wallpaper and her designs are entirely produced in her studio, made in small


batches on an in-house wallpaper printer. She also offers wallpaper by other designers and sells artisan-made tile and brick to complement her curated collection. Styles range from refined to fun and from serene to bold. Gardiner is known to Park City as the founder
of Olive and Tweed and Timbre Art Loft on Main Street, where she sold her work alongside that of artists and designers from around the country. That popular shop, which she sold in 2021, led her to transform her painted designs into textiles and wallpaper.
With furniture designer Greg Burns, we move from the beauty of multiples to the value of the unique. Burns is a third-generation craftsman offering custom-designed furniture through his company, Park City Custom Wood Design. He makes heirloomquality dining room tables, kitchen islands and office furniture for private homes and distinctive dining and conference tables for business clients.
The woodworker comes from a long line of craftsmen. Grandfathers on both sides were in construction. One worked on a huge scale, building temples for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the South Pacific, while the other worked on a more intimate scope as a carpenter and woodcarver. These ancestors’ passion for woodworking carried on to their sons and grandsons, many of whom have worked in the construction trade.

As an artisan furniture maker, Burns builds each custom piece in his Park City woodshop, where his kids might also be making lemonade stands or bedside tables under their father’s tutelage. Burns believes in bringing clients into the family fold. Clients meet Burns right in the woodshop, where they can discuss their vision for a piece of bespoke furniture made from premium hardwoods like walnut, oak and maple. Wood slabs are sourced from all over the country, and clients are welcome to inspect each one, noting their distinctions and character. Once the wood slab is selected, Burns removes the bark and flattens and smooths the slab. He can add bowtie joinery and artfully fill voids and knots, bringing the wood to life. Burns’ favorite finish is

an oil rub to enhance natural tones in the wood, and custom table bases are made by a metal fabricator.
Burns began making custom furniture in 2016 and bought Park City Custom Wood Design in 2021 to expand his ability to serve more clients. After having constructed close to 100 homes, he
was thrilled to make the full-time transition to handmade furniture. “I love the wood, the grain — I feel like it tells the story of the tree,” says Burns, noting that he finds furniture made with live, or natural, edges the most fascinating. “You can get really intimate with the piece you’re doing.”



Ameyalli Residence Club delivers advantages of vacation home co-ownership in world-class wellness community
of living the Park City lifestyle but don’t want to commit to the responsibilities and expense of a vacation home? Then consider the exclusive Ameyalli Residence Club. The area’s newest luxury co-ownership opportunity lies within the Ameyalli wellness community, located in Midway just minutes from Deer Valley Resort’s East Village.
“Ameyalli Residence Club eliminates the high cost and single-location anchor that comes with traditional whole ownership,” explains Rob Goodyear, president of Elite Alliance Hospitality, Ameyalli Residence Club’s management company. “We manage residence clubs around the globe, and our owners tell us repeatedly how much they appreciate this rational, hassle-free way to own a luxury vacation home.”
The residence club is ensconced in the new Ameyalli community that will include an impressive Wellness Center that is being built in partnership with Deepak Chopra and his Chopra Foundation. Residence Club owners and their guests will have full use of the facility, including the natural hot springs, spa, restaurants and more.
“The Wellness Center will have 12 or 13 treatment rooms, plus an underground water grotto system that is like a Roman bath,” says Ameyalli developer Chuck Heath. “It’s going to be a European-style, alpine spa unlike anything else in the United States.”
In addition to the future amenities of the Ameyalli
community, Residence Club owners enjoy their own private pool, clubhouse and fitness center.
Research shows vacation homes are typically used just 30 to 35 days a year, leaving the residences unused by owners for the balance of the year. This doesn’t make sense for those who value sustainability and look for smart investments.
Ameyalli Residence Club owners receive a one-eighth deeded real estate interest in one of the club’s 24 beautiful modern homes and enjoy it six weeks a year. Owners can use their lodging personally, send unaccompanied family and friends, make their residence available for rental or exchange vacations through the ThirdHome global exchange program. The deeded club ownership interests can be bought and sold like any real estate, independent of other club owners.
Midway is a charming, Swiss-influenced mountain village that is gaining national recognition. Its scenic and peaceful setting is ideal for those who want to get away from it all while still enjoying easy access to Park City’s restaurants, shops and mountain recreation. It’s an easy, nine-minute drive to Deer Valley Resort’s new East Village via the Club shuttle in winter (eliminating parking hassles), 25 minutes to Park City’s historic Main Street, and only 50 minutes to Salt Lake City


International Airport.
Each of the Ameyalli Residence Club’s 24 homes and two larger family lodges come fully furnished, feature four bedrooms and fourand-a-half bathrooms, and boast expansive outdoor terraces with breathtaking mountain views.
Currently, Ameyalli Residence Club buyers are taking advantage of pre-amenity pricing that is available prior to completion of the Wellness Center facilities. These early adopters are benefiting from a purchase price that is “about half off the expected future price when the Wellness Center is finished,” says
Heath, who notes that there are other Park City area co-ownerships selling for as much as $1.5 million.
“It is interesting to note that the luxury fractional vacation home industry started in Deer Valley Resort 35 years ago,” Goodyear says. “Since then, residence clubs have spread around the world due to their obvious logic. Almost all our club owners could afford their own vacation home, but they couldn’t rationalize it.”
Goodyear concludes, “Owners tell us, ‘It’s just like buying a vacation home with friends, only you find our new friends for for us.’”
For more information, visit ameyalliliving.com or call 888-377-1803.

BY MEGAN RULE
Mountain homes are shaped by both the natural landscape and personal tastes and preferences. Customizing a residence to fit an owner’s lifestyle means more than choosing finishes and curtain colors, it’s about designing an environment that supports their sense of adventure, comfort and connection.
Ben Akers, operating officer for Black Dog Builders Inc., emphasizes the in-depth process they use to understand how a client and their family lives and likes to entertain. This includes what activities they enjoy, what gear is already owned and what items will be added to their collection. This shapes how things like gear rooms are placed in the home, the number of lockers needed and the layout of racks to accommodate multi-season sporting goods.
“Mountain lifestyle is about balance and being connected to nature while having a home that supports comfort, relaxation and your hobbies,” says Amanda Evans, the firm’s CEO and principal designer. “We want to build something that’s built to handle all the seasons, maximize views and
serve as a retreat and a base camp all in one.”
Ski gear rooms, gear dryers, individual locker systems (for both gear and school supplies), benches, heated garages, custom cabinetry, fly-tying tables and waterproof spaces are among the most common customizations requested, Evans notes. An especially memorable project is one where the homeowner’s son’s old racing skis became the backsplash tile for his bathroom.
“The homeowner saw a wall of skis at Park City Library, which sparked the idea,” Evans says. “After cutting them into tiles and adjusting the size and thickness, we made it into the backsplash.”
Just like backsplash tile, cabinetry for gear rooms, garages and more doesn’t have to be basic and found in hundreds of other residenc-

Right: Bathroom backsplash tile made from skis for a Black Dog Builders project
es, especially when Baldhead Cabinets is involved. The Bend, Oregon-based company is opening a showroom in Park City in late 2025 and promises to change any pre-conceived notion of metal cabinets. Baldhead’s product line is

made in the U.S. and crafted to be durable, functional and eye-catching.
For example, Baldhead helped one client outfit his new mancave/car condo with royal blue cabinets with black trim and light gray handles to keep gear and tools organized and workspace clutter-free. Another customer wanted help organizing a new garage with cabinets that maximized
the space for his growing car collection and Baldhead helped transform it into an appealing place to spend time. The dark gray and red color palette incorporated cabinets, an integrated TV, a sink, and plenty of counter space and electrical outlets.
“We love dreaming with our clients on what their space can become. Working with them from design through installation ensures
“We love dreaming with our clients on what their space can become. "
BALDHEAD CABINETS CEO PETER FLEMING
a result that exceeds expectations,” says Baldhead Cabinets CEO Peter Fleming. While being connected to nature and outdoor sports is one aspect of mountain living, being connected to one’s health and overall wellness is another. Mountain living and healthy living go hand in hand, especially at Velvaere Park City, a real estate development adjacent to Deer Valley Resort’s East Village.

“All of our architecture we like to call nudge-based-architecture, meaning we’re trying to get you to go outside and be a part of nature,” says Dayson Johnson, chief revenue officer for Bonfire Collective and development partner for Velvaere. The desire to construct a well-being community came from trends in luxury products and custom homes, a shift to where the buyer is focused on the philosophy that wellness and health is the new wealth. For example, Velvaere partnered with the International Well Being Institute and Delos to create residences that all have advanced air purification, water filtration, circadian lighting solutions and enhanced sleep systems. The best part? Homes are curated for whatever
wellness and recovery practices support the owners. Some of the model homes already completed feature customizable “synergistic sanctuaries” with in-home light therapy, cold plunge pools, saunas, steam rooms and massage rooms among the various choices.
Tom Whatcott, CEO and co-founder of DivFit, also believes that mountain living means taking care of yourself off the slopes, trails, waterways and golf courses. DivFit specializes in custom home gyms versus simply placing a squat rack and some dumbbells in a leftover room. DivFit works with the intention of making gyms “one-of-one” spaces unique to a client. Whether it’s the colors used, logos on the flooring, materials, storage solutions
or anything in between, the space is 100% custom.
The main goal is for the client to feel like they are leaving for the gym but keep it part of the overall flow of the house. “I think gyms are always an afterthought,” Whatcott says. “Builders don’t work on the gym, designers don’t work on the gym, so we try to step in and be part of the design process from the beginning. I think the more established we’re getting, the earlier on we’re included, which is really nice because we can tell clients to make the room bigger or take out storage or take out doorways to help the layouts.”
He adds, “We can come in from the beginning or help you in whatever phase you’re in; you just need to be willing to work with us and trust us to make your masterpiece.”

Baldhead Cabinets enters Park City market with products that artfully meld form and function By
Beth Buehler
MOST PEOPLE are passionate about the interior style of their home, but those high standards are often left at the garage door. Why not extend refined mountain living to where cars, outdoor toys, airplanes and more are kept out of the elements and where tinkering happens?
Baldhead Cabinets can assist with bespoke metal cabinet solutions that are purposeful, elegant and available in a dazzling array of colors. They transform mundane spaces into appealing places to spend time or stroll through during daily life.
In late 2025, the Bend, Oregon–based manufacturer is opening a Park City showroom at 4123 North Forestdale Drive, bringing a national reputation for cabinetry that marries durability and visual appeal to the mountains of Utah. It’s the 41-year-old company’s first showroom outside of Oregon, and the location was very intentionally selected.
“From the beginning, we’ve focused on the higher end of the market,” says CEO Peter Fleming. “Our clients want something extraordinary, and we’re happy


staying small and serving that niche. It allows us to perfect our craft and build lasting relationships.”
The first chapter of Baldhead Cabinets’ story began in 2000, when Peter’s parents, Bobbie and Eric, remodeled
their home and were unimpressed with the garage storage options available. With a background in metal manufacturing that dates to 1985, they enlisted engineer Andy Simonji to help create a solution. The result was
cabinetry that combined precision engineering with timeless style.
Before long, the garage project led to establishing what has become a national brand. “The garage turned out beautifully, and people couldn’t stop talking about it,” recalls Eric. “We placed an ad in Coast Magazine in Southern California, and before long, we had our first real order. From there, the company grew organically.”
The company’s name also has sparked curiosity. While brainstorming, the obvious choice, Fleming Cabinets, felt uninspired. Inspiration struck when the family looked across the table at Andy, their bald engineer. “Baldhead Cabinets just had a fun, memorable ring to it,” Peter says. “It was silly at the time, but it stuck — and now, people never forget it.”
While the meticulous craftsmanship has defined the product, the company’s superpower is its people. “We love what we do, and we love who we do it with. Our colleagues aren’t employees, they’re family,” emphasizes Peter.
Juan Hernandez, Baldhead’s longest-tenured
craftsman, joined the company fresh out of high school. “When I came in for my interview, the Flemings welcomed me like I already belonged,” he recalls. “The work is fulfilling, but what’s kept me here is the family atmosphere and the opportunities to grow.”
While developing a business beyond the startup phase can be a rollercoaster ride, Eric describes the Baldhead Cabinets journey as “a wonderful experience.” He says, “We’ve met incredible customers, architects and designers along the way. There’s such joy in starting with a conversation and ending with a space that takes someone’s breath away.”
The Park City area aligns seamlessly with Baldhead’s aesthetic and clientele as homeowners treat every detail of their residences as an expression of taste and lifestyle. Whether Baldhead cabinetry is for a garage, workshop, man cave or car collection, it’s a statement as well as a storage solution. Options include storage, trash bins, utility drawers, mini refrigerators, sink cabinets and options for mounting televisions.
“This is a community that values craftsmanship, individuality and design. We’re excited to bring our work here,” Peter says. “We’re not chasing growth for its own sake but instead want to stay true to ourselves: make an exceptional product, enjoy a good lifestyle and treat our colleagues well. So far, so good.” baldheadcabinets.com











THE “EASY BUTTON” FOR YOUR DREAM HOME ACTUALLY EXISTS. A SMARTER, FASTER PATH TO A CUSTOM MONTAIN HOME.
Red Ledges is much more than a 2,000-acre, four-season luxury community. It’s a genuine place with the people, passion, and purpose that bring a community to life. A place that feels like home. Set against Mount Timpanogos, foreverwild landscapes and the striking red rock formations that inspired its name, this is legacy land. For more than 15 years, it’s been shaped by thoughtful stewardship, exceptional homes, and unforgettable experiences. Through longstanding partnerships with Jack Nicklaus, Jim McLean, and Cliff Drysdale, Red Ledges has become known for its meaningful and active mountain lifestyle. It’s an authentic gathering place where families come to live well and create lifelong memories.
For many buyers, the primary barrier to their ideal home is time.
Traditional custom building often takes 12-18 months—just to produce plans. It’s a process that can be marked by emotional highs and lows, countless decisions, unpredictable costs, and the ripple effects of tariffs and material delays. Builders unfamiliar with the Wasatch Back’s unique terrain and climate can encounter surprises that disrupt schedules even further. It’s no wonder today’s buyers want thoughtfully designed homes without the multiyear process or decision fatigue.

LADERA RESIDENCE–ARTISAN SERIES
The Artisan Series by Red Ledges is a smart, streamlined, design-forward alternative to traditional custom. Born from 15 years of experience building exclusively within the gates of Red Ledges, the Artisan approach is grounded in craftsmanship, expertise, and complete accountability.
“It’s like pushing the easy button—but with a custom feel,” says Andy Welch, Vice President of Red Ledges Construction. Engineered plans and curated selections dramatically reduce decision fatigue while preserving personalization. With Red Ledges Construction, you’ll still have plenty of choices— all aligned with high design, high quality, and zero overwhelm.
Every step of the Artisan process is intentionally designed for efficiency. Homes can be completed





SOLARA RESIDENCE ARTISAN SERIES
up to 16 months faster than traditional custom builds. Fixed pricing and deep knowledge of the terrain mean fewer surprises, fewer delays, and a more predictable experience from day one.
Buyers can select from the series of thoughtfully engineered plans, each offering standout architectural moments—from circular staircases to pivoting atrium doors. And while most builders are still preparing to break ground, Artisan owners already have plans in hand and timelines underway.
Faster doesn’t mean rushed. Red Ledges Construction takes pride even in the unseen details: immaculate job sites, precise excavation, and framing and finishes that evoke luxury you can feel the moment you step inside. Floors don’t squeak, craftsmanship is meticulous, and views are framed with intention.

The communication process is just as thorough. Owners receive daily photo updates, weekly video check-ins, monthly financial reports, and guided walk-throughs at significant milestones along the build.
“The most important tool in our custom build are our ears,” Welch says. “We listen closely and communicate every step of the way.”
The greatest benefit of the Artisan Series is time—time to live the life you came here for. More après around the firepit after a long day of skiing. More sunsets on the deck. More earlymorning rounds. More memories around the dining table.
At Red Ledges, your dream home isn’t years away. It’s within reach. And so is all the time you’ll gain back to enjoy it.







7665 Sterling Drive, The Cottages–Upper Deer Valley
5 Bd | 6 Ba | $6,100,000
Tucked into the quiet pines above Silver Lake Village, this timeless Deer Valley retreat offers ski access, sweeping views from Jupiter Peak to Park City, and nearly 5,000 sq ft of refined mountain living with a grand great room, primary suite, and four guest suites.
Dena Fleming (435) 640-0500 / dena@deervalleyrealestate.com
Justin Fleming (435) 640-1384 / justin@deervalleyrealestate.com
7846 Aster Lane, Knoll Estates–Upper Deer Valley
5 Bd | 7 Ba | $8,850,000
Nestled in the heart of Silver Lake Village, this Deer Valley retreat offers walk-to access to slopes, shops, dining, and après-ski. Five ensuite bedrooms with fireplaces ensure comfort and privacy. A chef’s kitchen, spacious dining area, and warm great room overlook wooded surroundings. The walk-out lower level features a game room with wrap-around bar, theater, and outdoor hot tub for relaxing after a day on the mountain.
Dena Fleming (435) 640-0500 / dena@deervalleyrealestate.com
Penthouse Residence 1102, The St. Regis Deer Valley
5 Bd | 7 Ba | $19,800,000
Stunning 6,468 sq ft St. Regis Deer Valley penthouse with vaulted ceilings, panoramic mountain and ski slope views, 1,500+ sq ft rooftop deck, 5 balconies, chef’s kitchen, bar, wine room, billiards, luxe primary suite, ski-in/ski-out access, and private Deer Crest gate.
Jacquelyn Harris Grayson (435) 640-0783 / jacquelyn@deervalleyrealestate.com
Dena Fleming (435) 640-0500 / dena@deervalleyrealestate.com
23 Sandstone Cove, Park Meadows
7 Bd | 9 Ba | 9.8 Ac | $17,700,000
Former 49ers QB Steve Young’s legacy estate in Sandstone Cove spans 9.8 acres with panoramic views. This 14,000 sq ft HONKA log home offers 7 beds, 9 baths, bunk room, fireplaces, and exceptional outdoor living, minutes from skiing, golf, trails, and Main Street.
Steve Chin (435) 640-3200 / steve@deervalleyrealestate.com
Cameron Chin (435) 640-8743 / cameron@deervalleyrealestate.com




Stein Eriksen Residences 412, Upper Deer Valley 2 Bd | 3 Ba | $6,900,000
Experience luxury and privacy in this 2-bed, 2.5-bath, 2,233 sq ft Stein Eriksen Residence with panoramic views up Last Chance Ski Run. Designer-furnished by Vivian Miller Designs, it boasts 10-ft ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows, and an open gourmet kitchen. Enjoy ski-in/out access, infinity pool, spa, concierge, dining, and 5-Star Stein Eriksen Lodge amenities.
Cameron Chin (435) 640-8743 / cameron@deervalleyrealestate.com
St. Regis Deer Valley, Ski-in/Ski-out Residences
Residence 903–$9,400,000 | Residence 902–$13,950,000
Residence 903 (3 bed, 5 bath, 3,000 sq ft) & Residence 902 (4 bed, 5 bath, 5,000 sq ft) offer refined mountain luxury with designerappointed interiors, panoramic ski-run views, and access to 5-Star amenities including ski valet, concierge, spa, fitness, and fine dining.
Suzanne Harris (435) 640-1868 / suzanne@deervalleyrealestate.com
Jacquelyn Harris Grayson (435) 640-0783 / jacquelyn@deervalleyrealestate.com
1404 Ursa Way, SkyRidge
5 Bd | 7 Ba | $6,200,000
Designed by JSARC, built by MW Watts, with interiors by Bassman Blaine, this 5-bed, 7-bath masterpiece offers a private office, 8-seat theater, 1,200+ sq ft garage, 2,000+ sq ft heated patios, and panoramic Deer Valley and Jordanelle views—your ultimate mountain retreat.
Jacquelyn Harris Grayson (435) 640-0783 / jacquelyn@deervalleyrealestate.com
Justin Fleming (435) 640-1384 / justin@deervalleyrealestate.com
1911 Evening Star Drive, Park Meadows
3 Bd | 3 Ba | $3,180,000
Exceptional single-level home in the heart of Park Meadows. The layout offers two living areas, a breakfast nook, formal dining, three bedrooms, an office, and a two-car garage. Enjoy a private yard with great patio space. Steps from the MARC, golf course, schools, trails, and minutes from ski resorts. Updated in 2022–23 with new stone countertops, lighting, Sub-Zero fridge, Bosch range, sinks, and more. A must-see home in an unbeatable location.
Jacquelyn Harris Grayson (435) 640-0783 / jacquelyn@deervalleyrealestate.com










Designed to blend in with its natural landscape, Lionsback Resort offers an unrivaled launchpad for all the adventure, exploration and relaxation Moab has to offer, all while treading lightly on the land.
Introducing the Resort Pool, a refreshing desert haven complete with spa and cold plunge, so you can relax, recharge, and enjoy.


Now Offering 2 & 3 Bedroom Casitas and the 4 Bedroom Spire. Furnished & Move-in Ready. Short-Term Rental Zoning.

They have created a powerhouse team of impassioned professionals seasoned in sales, marketing, development, investment, and technology.
When one looks beyond the heritage of the brand, the decades of involvement in the community, and the many successful real estate transactions over the years, one can see the next generation of real estate rising at CFH.
Their processes are tested, and their methods are informed by extensive and ongoing research and meaningful life experiences from a diverse group of professionals committed to driving the industry forward.
Whether they are effortlessly navigating the ever-changing landscape of social media or producing high-definition cinematic listing videos and content curation, selling a home in today’s environment requires more than simple solutions.
It requires a deep understanding of industry microtrends, a commitment to providing exceptional client services through a variety of digital and in-person channels, and a commanding knowledge of current and future marketing best practices.
CFH is grounded in like-minded interests, mutual respect, and a passion for the profession and giving back to the community. Their reputation is impeccable in real estate ethics, standards, practices, and client services. CFH is happy to provide contact information for past and present customers and clients who have offered recommendations.
If their experience has taught them anything, it is to invest in the future. They are continuously learning and adapting to exceed clients’ high expectations.
At CFH, one will find the right team with the right people, ready to use every available tool and resource to help clients make the best possible decisions for their future.
Discover the balance between deep-rooted experience and state-of-the-art digital expertise in your next sale or purchase. Scan the QR code to visit the website today













































































For 46 years, Michael LaPay and The LaPay Group have been a true tour de force in Park City real estate. As one of Sotheby’s International Realty’s top-performing teams for decades, their experience, service, and results have set the benchmark for excellence in the Park City market. With deep local insight and over a billion dollars in recorded sales, The LaPay Group delivers an unmatched level of professionalism and proven performance. Whether you are buying, selling, or simply exploring the mountain lifestyle, partnering with The LaPay Group ensures a seamless, rewarding experience tailored to your unique real estate goals.
• Michael LaPay is ranked among the Top 100 Sotheby’s International Realty Agents Worldwide — a distinction earned from a network of 27,000 Sotheby's International Realty Agents.
• Year After Year, A Top Performer — Ranked #1 Summit Sotheby's International Realty Agent in 4 of the Last 6 Years.
• Sales portfolio of over $1B in Sales, in the past 7 years
• The LaPay Group brings a combined 92 Years of real estate sales experience











2555 s 3600 W, Ch AR leston, utAh Listed






Mike McGurl
Global Real Estate Advisor
435.901.9300
mike.mcgurl@sothebysrealty.com
Miriam Noel
As local real estate advisors and committed community leaders, Mike McGurl & Miriam Noel believe that where you live should do more than meet your needs-it should elevate your life.
Mike is a long-time Park City resident and Board Member & Executive Director of Stay Park City Cycling Club, a 500+ member organization that supports a vibrant, healthy cycling community. Miriam serves as a Board Member & Business Development Member of the Wasatch Trails Foundation, helping to maintain and grow the trail systems that connect our neighborhoods, families, and friends.
Together, they bring deep market knowledge, negotiation experience, and a shared passion for our mountain lifestyle to every transactionwhether you're buying, selling, or investing. Their work on the trails and in the cycling community reflects the same values they bring to real estate: connection, integrity, and long-term vision.
If you're considering a move in Park City or the Heber Valley, let community-minded advisors guide your next chapter.

Brand new construction
A Berg architect and Anne-Marie Barton interior design masterpiece
Phase 1 release at $6.5-7M that includes the coveted full Talisker Club membership
Perched above the entire gated Tuhaye community with million dollar views
15 month build process
Scan QR Code to view MLS listings






In a market as dynamic as Summit County, clarity— not noise—is what matters most. With the Olympics returning and Deer Valley® expanding, our region is entering a once-in-a-generation phase of growth. For buyers and sellers alike, this is the moment to think strategically about timing, value and long-term opportunity.
My background spans decades of hands-on work in landscape design, land use and residential development throughout Park City.
That experience allows me to help clients see the full picture: how neighborhoods are evolving, how development affects property value and where the smartest moves can be made. I focus on practical insight, straightforward advice and strategies tailored entirely to your goals.
Whether you’re exploring selling your current Park City property, seeking a mountain destination home of your own, considering an investment property or simply just gathering information, I’m here to make sure the focus is on your goals and dreams. Though strategy, clarity, collaboration and strong communication, my goal is for the process to remain as frictionless as possible.
If you’re wondering how ongoing and upcoming regional changes affect the value of your property or could instruct any future plans, let’s talk.
Even a brief conversation can help bring clarity, and cut through the noise!



307 West Lazy Acres Lane, Kamas, UT
2 BD | 3 BA | 3,915 SF | 7.2 AC
Listed at $6,650,000

A boutique farm offering a blend of rural and cosmopolitan perfection, this gated home is just 25 minutes from Park City. It features a chef’s kitchen, radiant in-floor heating, smart systems, backup power, water rights and horse-ready land. A separate garage provides additional living space.

1717 W Centaur Court, Heber City, UT
6 BD | 8 BA | 5,361 SF | 0.24 AC
Listed at $5,500,000

1855 N Chimney Rock Road, Heber City, UT
5 BD | 6 BA | 5,300 SF | 0.97 AC
Listed at $4,695,000





























6 BEDROOM | 6.5 BATH | 3 CAR GARAGE | 7315 SF | .46-ACRE LOT
Located about 500 yards from Silver Lake Lodge in the heart of Deer Valley, this coveted neighborhood offers rare proximity to world-class skiing, with walk-through access to the Silver Lake lifts and a private ski-out easement toward Snow Park Base.
Beautifully maintained and appointed, this 7,315 SF retreat features 6 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, and generous indoor/outdoor living. Floor-to-ceiling windows capture panoramic mountain views, while the open main level includes a chef’s kitchen, warm great room with stone fireplace, and elegant dining area.
Two primary suites offer fireplaces and spa-style baths with soaking tubs, one with an en-suite workout room. The lower level includes a media room with foosball, a pool table and arcade area, and an adjoining wine room. Outdoors, enjoy an 8-person hot tub, private patio with fireplace, dining area, and seasonal waterfall.
Additional features include a 3-car garage, ample storage, and a location moments from Stein Eriksen Lodge, Goldener Hirsch, The Chateaux, The Montage, and St. Regis—a rare opportunity in one of Deer Valley’s most desirable enclaves.

SEAN RAILTON
(435) 640-2835
sean@homesparkcity.com
ALI NORTH
(801) 598-1160
ali@homesparkcity.com


With more than 30 years of real estate experience in Park City and Deer Valley combined with their unique focus on mountain luxury real estate, Sean Railton and Ali North's insight and expertise are unparalleled.
Client experience is front of mind while working with this pair. Their clients benefit from their high-level of knowledge regarding the luxury real estate market coming from their background in appraising and marketing.


the Difference with Local Experts Who Put You First
A husband-and-wife team with deep roots in Park City, Bibi and Ty deliver a rare blend of heart, hustle, and unmatched local expertise. Their backgrounds in education, marketing, and real estate create a powerful combination that elevates every client experience— whether you’re buying, selling, or investing.
With more than 20 years in the community, they understand not just the Park City market, but the lifestyle, the neighborhoods, and the people who make it extraordinary.
Your Needs. Your Goals. Your Trusted Local Team.
Clients choose Bibi & Ty not just for their knowledge, but for the way they listen, advocate, and stand beside you through every step of the process. They believe real estate is personal—and that the relationship doesn’t end at closing.
If you’re considering buying or selling in Park City, reach out today. Let’s talk strategy, timing, and how to help you make your next move with confidence.
BIBI & TY | MAJESTIC PARK CITY TEAM Strength. Integrity. Results.


Bibi Vladimirova | bibi@majesticparkcity.com | 435-901-0305
Ty Webster | ty@majesticparkcity.com | 970.948.7527



Local Insight That Gives You the Advantage Bibi has lived in Park City for over two decades and brings true boots-on-the-ground knowledge. From schools and commutes to market trends and micro-neighborhood nuances, she helps clients make confident, informed decisions.
Marketing That Sets Your Home Apart
Ty brings 20+ years of branding and marketing expertise. Every listing receives a full luxury marketing suite—professional photography, cinematic video, drone footage, targeted digital campaigns, and elevated presentation that attracts more buyers and higher-quality offers.
Exceptional Service From Start to Finish
From staging and pricing strategy to negotiations and closing, we handle every detail with care, clarity, and confidence—ensuring a smooth and successful experience.
Every Client, Every Price Point, Treated Like a VIP
We proudly serve clients across all price points—from modest investments to luxury estates—with equal attention, respect, and dedication.


The main floor of the home boasts a large great room and kitchen with walls of glass, a 2-way fireplace, butler pantry, a primary bedroom wing, 2 dens, a guest suite and duel mudrooms. The basement level features 3 additional guest suites, an en-suite bunk room, a large entertaining space with a 2-way fireplace and bar, a recreation room, fitness room and walk-out access to large outdoor spaces.
Dubbed the Water-Earth-Sky Villa by the renowned architectural team at Berg Design, this home is a private sanctuary, where modern luxury meets nature’s grandeur.
Designed for those who value privacy, peace, and timeless elegance, this custom-built residence sits high on the cliffs on one of the premiere lots in the Lone Peak neighborhood of Tuhaye. Every detail of this home has been meticulously crafted in order to create the ideal indoor and outdoor living environment. The open-concept living space flows effortlessly onto an expansive terrace and infinity edge swimming pool. Whether it’s sunrise over the water or golden-hour light and sunset across the peaks, every moment here feels cinematic.
6 Bed / 9 Bath / 11,847 SF / Listed at $23,000,000
$200K membership deposit to the Talisker Club included.
8988 N Sleeping Rock Circle TUHAYE 8988NSleepingRockCir.com

separate wings of
are connected by
allowing for a private, yet inclusive, aesthetic for owners and guests.





LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1976

Founded in 1976, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Utah Properties is a family owned development, commercial, and advisory services real estate company.

With over 30 offices throughout the Wasatch Front and Back, Logan, Moab, St. George, Southeast Idaho, the company has a long-standing track record of market dominance, dependability, and community-driven service. From 2020-2024, the brokerage saw over $20 billion in sales securing the #1 position in Utah’s real estate marketplace and is the #1 independently operated brokerage in the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices national and global network. full-service brokerage firm in Utah, Utah Properties is proud to offer the most integrated experience for its clients through its core services companies, Metro Mountain Mortgage, an industry leading title & escrow service provider.
Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices is a global residential real estate brokerage franchise with more than 45,000 real estate professionals and more than 1,500 offices across 4 and 11 countries and territories including the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Europe, the Middle
and India. The network completed more than USD $127.7 billion in










Founded in 1976, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Utah Properties is Utah’s premier family-owned brokerage, specializing in residential, development, commercial, and advisory services. With over 30 offices across the Wasatch Front and Back, Logan, Moab, St. George, Kanab, and Southeast Idaho, we are recognized for market leadership, discretion, and worldclass client service.
From 2020–2024, we achieved over $20 billion in statewide sales, ranking #1 in Utah and as the leading independently owned brokerage within the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices global network. As Utah’s only full-service brokerage, we provide a seamless, refined experience through our affiliated companies—Metro Mountain Mortgage, LLC, and a premier title and escrow services provider.
Rooted in Utah’s unmatched mountain lifestyle and vibrant communities, we are committed to delivering the knowledge, guidance, and care needed to make every real estate experience effortless and rewarding. Whether buying your first home, searching for your next, or simply exploring the market, we aim to inspire, inform, and elevate your journey. At Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Utah Properties, it is our privilege to help you find not just a house, but a place to call home.
Steve Roney Chief Executive Officer & Owner
Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices
Utah Properties
Where We Stand In Our Global Network
#1
PRIVATELY OWNED BROKERAGE FOR 2024 [Announced Spring 2025]
#3 OFFICE IN TOTAL PRODUCTION FOR 2024 – PARK CITY [Announced Spring 2025]
#10
BROKERAGE OVERALL FOR 2024 [Announced Spring 2025]
More than 45,000 real estate professionals and more than 1,500 offices across 4 continents and 11 countries and territories.
©2026 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Equal Housing Opportunity.




Centered in historic Old Town, Park City Proper begins at the iconic McPolin Farm and extends to Deer Valley ® These residential neighborhoods provide families with diverse homeownership options, access to top-ranking public schools, trail systems, and state-of-the-art recreational venues. Residents enjoy easy access to Park City’s award-winning restaurants, theaters, resorts, and more. This is a great place to start if you’re looking for the classic Park City experience.
Deer Valley is one of the premier luxury residential areas in the world. Neighborhood developments are seamlessly woven in and around Deer Valley Resort, which has been voted the #1 ski resort in North America numerous times by SKI Magazine readers. Renowned for its world-class amenities, impeccably groomed runs, and thrilling tree skiing, Deer Valley Resort is more than just a skier’s paradise — it’s a vibrant cultural destination, home to the World Cup Freestyle Championships and a celebrated summer concert series.












While the heart of Park City may be in Old Town, some of its most friendly and authentic residential areas reside outside city limits. The Redstone and Newpark Town Centers are filled with colorful boutique shops and recreational centers that include skating, public gyms, and indoor tracks. With multiple dog parks, miles of trails, and live music, you’ll have plenty to do.
Additional area advantages include a short drive to Salt Lake City, the Utah Olympic Park, Junction Commons, Woodward Park City, and top-ranked Park City schools. The National Ability Center, located in Quinn’s Junction, empowers individuals of all abilities by building selfesteem, confidence and lifetime skills through sport, recreation and educational programs.


















Situated just east of Park City the neighborhoods surrounding the Jordanelle Reservoir and developments abutting the Jordanelle State Park—offer stunning views of Mt. Timpanogos and Deer Valley Resort. With the Jordanelle State Park right in their backyard, residents enjoy some of the best water sports in the state. The Jordanelle Express gondola is located at Highway 40’s Mayflower exit, providing ski access to Deer Valley Resort. The development of Deer Valley’s new East Village will also provide access to the resort via Highway 40, offering world-class lodging, dining, and retail.
Home to some of the best fishing, equestrian centers, and views in Utah, nearby Wasatch County is not to be overlooked. Heber City anchors this picturesque county, which is known for its open tracts of farm land and the Heber Airport. The county extends from the Jordanelle Reservoir to the base of the impressive Mt. Timpanogos. For skiers, Park City ski resorts are a short 15 minute drive away, and Sundance Resort is nearby in Provo Canyon. Resting at the base of the Wasatch Mountains is the quaint, Swiss-influenced community of Midway, famous for its legendary annual Swiss Days over Labor Day weekend.









Located below the majestic peaks of the Uintas, the mountain communities of East Summit County boast stunning views and wild natural beauty. Popular with outdoor enthusiasts and ranchers, these townships offer a wide range of real estate options including farmstead estates, large lots on which to build your dream home, and small subdivisions with a quiet neighborhood feel. Just a short distance to Park City and Salt Lake City, these towns have a preserved sense of nature and community without the hustle and bustle of a larger city. From fishing, horseback riding, hiking, mountain biking, rock climbing, and camping these areas provide a range of outdoor pursuits. In addition to their scenic charm, each town offers its own array of community activities including the Oakley Rodeo, Summit County Fair, outdoor summer concert series, and Kamas’ Fiesta Days.
















Welcome to Aspenrise — a secluded mountain sanctuary where architectural excellence meets the raw elegance of the high alpine landscape. Tucked within a gated forest enclave, it’s surrounded by whispering aspens that offer rare privacy and serene connection to nature. Designed by Pearson Design Group and built by Magleby Construction in 2020, the estate includes a finely crafted guest cabin and a fully appointed barn with four bedrooms and four and a half baths. With two structures complete, a future owner can design and build a legacy main residence, completing a visionary mountain compound of timeless craftsmanship and enduring authenticity.


Matt Mullin (435) 901-4707
Matt@MullinRealEstate.com
MullinRealEstate.com



Katy (Mullin) Patterson (435) 901-9250
Katy@MullinRealEstate.com
MullinRealEstate.com



Welcome to Highpine Ranch, a reimagined 160-acre mountain estate in the exclusive Wolf Creek Ranch. Encompassing 8,800 sq ft, this 2025 remodel blends architectural integrity with natural beauty. The luminous Cristallo quartzite kitchen features custom White Oak cabinetry by Mar Wood and a full suite of Wolf and SubZero appliances. Five en-suite bedrooms, including a serene main-level primary, offer privacy and comfort. Wide-plank floors, sleek fireplaces, and Ketra dynamic lighting create warmth and sophistication, while expansive decks showcase sweeping Mt. Timpanogos views. A heated barn with guest apartment and trail access completes this rare retreat.


Matt Mullin (435) 901-4707
Matt@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com



Katy (Mullin) Patterson (435) 901-9250
Katy@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com


Set on 160 pristine acres, this newly built luxury estate blends sophistication, comfort, and seclusion in perfect harmony. With seven bedrooms and ten bathrooms, the home offers generous spaces for both gathering and retreat. Designed for main-level living, it emphasizes ease and accessibility without compromising elegance. Expansive windows frame sweeping mountain and meadow views, flooding the interiors with natural light and creating a seamless indoor-outdoor flow. Surrounded by nature’s quiet beauty, this sanctuary invites peaceful mornings on the patio, exploration of the grounds, and refined relaxation at every turn.


Matt Mullin (435) 901-4707
Matt@MullinRealEstate.com
MullinRealEstate.com



Katy (Mullin) Patterson (435) 901-9250
Katy@MullinRealEstate.com
MullinRealEstate.com



Set amid the aspens and pines of Wolf Creek Ranch, this coveted 160-acre legacy estate offers refined mountain living amid Utah’s high-country beauty. The flat, fully fenced parcel features sweeping views of Mt. Timpanogos and a serene sense of privacy. The single-level home boasts four en-suite bedrooms, vaulted ceilings, and an open-concept layout that welcomes natural light and seamless indoor-outdoor living. Whether you’re enjoying the stone fireplace in winter or watching elk roam at sunrise, the home is designed to embrace nature year-round. With room to build a barn, guest house, or yurt, and a close-knit community that values land and lifestyle.


Matt Mullin (435) 901-4707
Matt@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com



Katy (Mullin) Patterson (435) 901-9250
Katy@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com


Nestled in the heart of Wolf Creek Ranch, this 6,100 sq ft mountain retreat offers an inspiring balance of luxury, comfort, and wilderness. Set on 160 acres—with the home thoughtfully placed on 10 for easy living—it enjoys the privacy of an additional 150 acres of untouched land. Blending rustic charm with modern elegance, the residence features vaulted timber-beamed ceilings, soaring windows, and seamless indooroutdoor flow. With 3 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, and a beautifully crafted barn for up to four horses or recreational vehicles, this property invites both tranquility and adventure—a true mountain escape.


Matt Mullin (435) 901-4707
Matt@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com



Katy (Mullin) Patterson (435) 901-9250
Katy@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com



Discover an exceptional opportunity to enjoy the world-class lifestyle of Wolf Creek Ranch in a refined, right-sized retreat. Set on 163 acres of pristine alpine terrain, this fully furnished 4-bedroom, 4-bath home offers effortless living and turn-key luxury. Built in 2021, the 1,998 sq ft single-level design features vaulted ceilings, granite countertops, radiant floors, and an open layout that brings the outdoors in. Perfect as a full-time residence or seasonal escape, it includes an oversized 5-car garage for all your mountain gear and direct access to Wolf Creek’s private trails—combining serenity, adventure, and smart sophistication.


Matt Mullin (435) 901-4707
Matt@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com



Katy (Mullin) Patterson (435) 901-9250
Katy@MullinRealEstate.com MullinRealEstate.com


Experience ultimate mountain luxury in this newly built 7-bed, 11-bath, 11,775 sq ft Lone Peak residence on 2+ acres in Tuhaye. Enjoy 270° sunset views of Jordanelle, Deer Valley, Mount Timpanogos, the Uinta Mountains, and Tuhaye Hoodoos. Designed for entertaining, the openconcept great room features retractable glass to a heated patio with grill, fire pit, and hot tub. Chef’s kitchen boasts double islands, custom cabinetry, and butler’s pantry. Main-level Master suite includes office, sitting area, double-sided fireplace, and spa-like bath. Lower level offers guest suites, family room, and wet bar. Fully furnished by Suzanne McCammon. Full Talisker Club Membership included








Located in the exclusive Stag Lodge in Deer Valley’s Silver Lake area, this fully furnished 6-bedroom, 7-bath home sleeps 20 with privacy and space. Remodeled with a contemporary design, it offers ski-in/ski-out access, breathtaking Park City and Wasatch Mountain views, and multifamily-friendly layouts including 3 king suites, 2 en-suite bunk rooms, and a double queen suite. Entertain in the great room with gas fireplace, speakeasy-style lounge, heated deck with hot tub, firepit, and outdoor dining, or enjoy the lower-level home theater. Stag Lodge amenities include a private bar and restaurant, ski valet, shuttle, pool, fitness, and concierge. Ownership also includes Red Ledges club membership








Set in Utah’s Wasatch Mountains, Talisker Club is the only four-club/one-membership private home community in Park City—giving you exclusive access to an unmatched collection of mountain, country club, Main Street and backcountry destinations. From custom estate homesites and easy-to-care-for single-family homes, to ski-in/ski-out mountainside condos in the wilds of nature, Talisker Club offers Park City’s widest selection of luxury real estate.
Learn more at TaliskerClub.com

















Ryan McLaughlin (435) 640-5780
Ryan@skiresortproperty.com


Nancy@skiresortproperty.com




|

Tucked above Old Town, this 2023-built 5-bedroom, 6.5-bath mountain-contemporary home spans 4,407 sq. ft. on a 7,405 sq ft lot. Crafted by Aerie Construction with reclaimed wood, steel, and mixed siding, it balances rustic warmth with sleek sophistication. The chef’s kitchen features Wolf & Sub-Zero appliances, a center island, and butler’s pantry. The upper-level primary suite offers tranquility and mountain views. Heated patios, private spa, landscaped grounds, two-car garage, and pre-wired media enhance indoor-outdoor living. Steps to Historic Main Street, Deer Valley skiing, and trails—this is Park City luxury at its finest.


McLaughlin (435) 640-5780






Nestled in Park City’s coveted Old Ranch Road district, this luxury estate blends modern design, natural beauty, and convenience. Designed for wellness and entertaining, it features a sauna, cold plunge, yoga studio, and a 500+ bottle wine cellar with tasting area. Floor-to-ceiling sliders open to a private pool, hot tub, pickleball court, tubing hill, and two outdoor fireplaces. A heated courtyard and five-car heated garage with epoxy floors and dog bath add thoughtful detail. Smart home technology integrates seamlessly. Minutes from world-class ski resorts, Round Valley trails, and Main Street, this estate backs 2,200 acres of open space. Secure your mountain paradise today.






Ryan McLaughlin (435) 640-5780 | Ryan@skiresortproperty.com Nancy Erni (435) 647-1545 | Nancy@skiresortproperty.com
JanaLee Jacobsen (435) 640-3221 | Jana@skiresortproperty.com



Enjoy panoramic views of alpine peaks, meadows, and valleys from this remodeled 6-bedroom, 6.5-bath Mahogany Hills retreat on a 0.42-acre lot. Surrounded by open space, it offers privacy and easy access to top-rated schools, Canyons Resort, trails, and Kimball Junction. Features include a new roof, updated systems, Sonos sound, new flooring, home theater, 6-person hot tub, and a 3-car garage. Clubhouse with fitness, pool, and tennis courts nearby—luxury and comfort in the heart of Park City.








Perched on Deer Mountain, this 4,400-sq-ft contemporary retreat offers 5 beds, 5 baths, and panoramic views of Jordanelle Reservoir and the Wasatch Back. Expansive windows, soaring ceilings, and natural finishes bring the outdoors in, while multiple decks invite sunrises, alpenglow, and star-filled nights. Steps from world-class skiing, dining, and summer recreation, this home balances modern luxury with mountain serenity—ideal for year-round living or a second-home escape.



A luxurious mountain retreat in the exclusive Marcella development, offering ski-in, ski-out access and direct connectivity to Deer Valley East. Modern architecture meets mountain elegance, with expansive windows, high-end finishes, and state-of-the-art amenities. Seamless indoor-outdoor living showcases breathtaking snow-capped views, while a luxurious clubhouse, spa, and gourmet dining provide year-round indulgence. This sanctuary blends luxury, nature, and recreation, creating the ultimate mountain escape.








Set on a coveted street in the Estates at Park Meadows, this 1.59-acre horse property offers a rare legacy estate in Park City. Flat, usable land with a water share supports gardens and recreation. The home features eight bedroom suites, including a custom bunk room for 10+, a chef’s kitchen, five fireplaces, wine cellar, theater, office, elevator, and oversized heated 4-car garage. Multiple indoor/outdoor gathering spaces and trails from the property make it perfect for year-round living near Deer Valley, Park City Mountain, and the Canyons.






This two-story Golden Eagle masterpiece offers panoramic views of Jordanelle Reservoir, Deer Valley East, and Mount Timpanogos. The main level features a chef’s kitchen, office/second bedroom, primary suite, and an oversized three-car garage. Expansive decks, multiple fireplaces, and every bedroom with stunning views complement toptier construction, including spray foam insulation, air exchangers, a 50-year roof, and premium windows—luxury and craftsmanship at its finest.








This Juniper Cabin in Victory Ranch defines luxury mountain living. Nestled among rolling foothills with unobstructed views, the home offers privacy, a stocked pond, and 75 meticulously landscaped trees. Main-level living includes a primary suite, vaulted ceilings, floor-to-ceiling fireplace, and gourmet kitchen with Wolf, Sub-Zero, and Asko appliances. Expansive decks host gatherings or quiet moments. Residents enjoy exclusive access to golf, ski-in/ski-out, fishing, hiking, biking, water sports, and year-round adventure.



This exceptional 6-bedroom residence merges two units into one, offering dual primary suites, four guest bedrooms, and unmatched flexibility for multi-generational living or vacation rentals. Located in the heart of Canyons Village with door-to-door shuttle service to the chairlift, it features high-end appliances, four fireplaces, and abundant indoor/outdoor living spaces. Year-round resort amenities include a heated pool, fitness center, and hot tubs, plus proven rental history for an ideal investment.








Be among the first to enjoy mountain living at the Grand Hyatt Deer Valley in the new Deer Valley East Village. This furnished 2-bedroom, 2-bath residence offers 1,169 sq ft of comfort and is ideal for nightly rentals. Owners enjoy access to Deer Valley’s 5,700-acre ski expansion, a pedestrian-friendly village, North America’s largest ski beach, and full hotel amenities including heated pools, hot tubs, fitness center, ski valet, dining, and concierge services—luxury and location perfectly combined.






12325 Deer Mountain Blvd in Kamas, Utah is a luxurious mountain retreat where classic log cabin charm meets contemporary design. Perched for sweeping views of Jordanelle Reservoir and Deer Valley Resort, the home features rich timber interiors, a stone fireplace, gourmet kitchen, spa-inspired primary suite, and expansive decks—perfect for entertaining or relaxing—just minutes from Park City’s world-class skiing, dining, and recreation. Listed by Ryan McLaughlin and Nancy Erni–Ski Resort Property Group










Be among the first to experience mountain living at the Grand Hyatt Deer Valley in East Village. This furnished 1-bedroom, 1-bath residence offers curated kitchenware, premium furnishings, and lake-view courtyard vistas. Ideal for personal use or nightly rentals, it provides access to Deer Valley’s 5,700-acre ski area, luxury dining, shopping, North America’s largest ski beach, and full Grand Hyatt amenities including pools, hot tubs, ski valet, and dining. Listed by JanaLee Jacobsen and Nancy Erni–Ski Resort Property Group
Ryan McLaughlin (435) 640-5780 | Ryan@skiresortproperty.com JanaLee Jacobsen (435) 640-3221 | Jana@skiresortproperty.com
Nancy Erni (435) 647-1545 | Nancy@skiresortproperty.com







3287 Central Pacific Trail, Promontory
6 Bd | 8 Ba | 6,848 SF | 1.07 Ac | $8,200,000
This striking Promontory Club estate, crafted by Bailey Construction and curated by Bond Design, blends contemporary style with luxurious mountain living. Spanning 7,000 sq. ft., it offers six bedrooms, eight baths, a spacious office, home gym, and expansive entertaining spaces. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls showcase panoramic Wasatch views and open to a radiant outdoor platform. Highlights include a 20’ marble fireplace, chef’s kitchen with Subzero & Miele appliances, bar with wine fridge, and a luxurious primary suite with steam shower. Furnishings included; Full Club Membership available.
2647 E Silverberry Court, Promontory
5 Bd | 6 Ba | 6,140 SF | 1 Ac | $7,850,000
Introducing a contemporary 2023 Promontory Club estate blending architectural sophistication with Wasatch Mountain views. Radiant in-floor heating throughout, a private upstairs primary suite, dedicated office, and exterior heated patio complement four lower-level bedrooms, a home gym, and guest spaces. Crafted with Calcutta marble, porcelain, designer wall coverings, Graff hardware, TOTO washlets, and steam showers, this home features Crestron smart technology, Lutron lighting, automated shades, and seamless indoor-outdoor living. A Full Golf Membership to Promontory Club is available outside of the home purchase with no transfer fee.
6033 Golf Club Link, Promontory
6 Bd | 7 Ba | 7,173 SF | 1 Ac | $7,800,000
Rare new construction in Promontory Club’s coveted Vista Point, completion Spring 2026. This 7,173 sq ft home features six en-suite bedrooms, a dedicated office, three-car garage, and over 2,000 sq ft of covered outdoor entertaining space. Perched above the 10th hole of the Jack Nicklaus-designed Painted Valley Golf Course, it offers forever-unobstructed views of Deer Valley and the Wasatch Range. Designed by Aaron Inouye and built by Lake Creek Homes, buyers can customize interiors with Christie Lewis Interiors. A Full Golf Membership is available, offering access to Promontory’s world-class amenities, including golf, dining, spa, fitness, skiing, and equestrian facilities.






8250 Reflection Point, Promontory
The Pinnacle at Promontory | 2.06 Ac | $4,700,000
Exceptional estate homesite in the gated Pinnacle at Promontory, offering panoramic views of Deer Valley® and Park City Mountain Resort. Quiet cul-de-sac location with privacy, elevation, and prime design potential. Preliminary plans by architect Clive Bridgwater are underway. Full Promontory Club membership available with no wait, providing access to 18+ luxury amenities, private ski lodges, golf, dining, spa, and more. Walking distance to the new Skyhouse amenity and just minutes from downtown Park City. Build your dream mountain estate in one of Promontory’s most exclusive neighborhoods.
4577 Pinnacle Sky Loop, Promontory
The Pinnacle at Promontory | 2.45 Ac | $3,250,000
Welcome to Park City’s premier address in the exclusive gated neighborhood of The Pinnacle at Promontory—a dream within a dream, set apart by privacy and design. This first lot behind the gate offers direct views of Park City’s ski resorts and overlooks the 12th hole of Dye Canyon Golf Course. One of only 36 custom estate lots, it’s a rare opportunity to build a true legacy home in a private enclave within one of America’s most amenityrich communities. Just steps from the Skyhouse, with full Promontory Club Membership available by separate purchase, pending approval.

Full Membership Available—No Wait
8761 Silver Light Lane, Promontory
Pinnacle Portfolio | 1.35 Ac | $2,395,000
This homesite is in the coveted private gated neighborhood of The Pinnacle at Promontory, offering the top location to build a Mitchell Portfolio Estate, one of the most sought-after luxury floor plans from Promontory Homes. Enjoy exceptional privacy and a short walk to the new Pinnacle Skyhouse amenity, currently under construction. Just minutes from downtown Park City, Promontory spans over 7,200 acres and is a four-season mountain club with activities for all ages. The club offers 18 completed amenity venues, including private ski lodges at Park City Mountain Resort and Deer Valley, making this a rare opportunity to build a legacy estate in one of Park City’s most exclusive communities.



Welcome to your private mountain paradise in the gated community of Bridge Hollow. Set on nearly 21 acres of pristine natural beauty, this exceptional 3 bedroom, 4 bath residence offers the perfect balance of seclusion, sophistication, and inspiring views in every direction. Though just minutes from Park City and the exclusive Blue Sky Ranch, the home feels worlds away—peaceful, private, and serene. Designed for effortless main-level living, it features a stunning Great Room, Chef’s Kitchen, and a tranquil Primary Suite with private deck. Expansive outdoor living areas, a guest-ready lower level, and multiple garages complete this remarkable mountain retreat.




Toni Faulk (435) 901-0622
Toni@tonifaulk.com ToniFaulk.com


4830 Bear View Drive | Cedar Draw Estates 2

Nestled on a quiet cul-de-sac in coveted Cedar Draw Estates, this 1.36-acre Park City home offers privacy, Deer Valley ski run views, and its own microclimate. Designed with renowned architects Constantino Grand Jacquet and Jack Thomas, this sustainable straw bale home combines health, efficiency, and artistry. Custom doors, reclaimed wood, historic fixtures, and sculpted lime plaster walls create warmth and character. The chef’s kitchen, radiant floors, sunlit primary suite, stone patios, landscaped gardens, and artist’s studio make it ideal for entertaining and serene living. Every detail is thoughtful, creating a rare, energy-efficient sanctuary.




Heidi Ingham (435) 901-9330
Heidi@heidiinghamrealestate.com
HeidiInghamRealEstate.com

Perched above Jordanelle Reservoir in Soaring Hawk, this Jorgenson Builders masterpiece offers sweeping views of Mount Timpanogos and Deer Valley. Soaring ceilings, walls of glass, and seamless indoor-outdoor flow highlight main-level living. Gourmet kitchen, spa-like primary suite, lower-level living, and smart-home features— including solar roof, Tesla Powerwall, and EV-ready garage—combine elegance and innovation, minutes from world-class skiing, boating, and dining.




Dallin Quinn (435) 714-9926
Dallin@bhhsutah.com
DallinQuinn.bhhsutah.com




This exquisite estate features 6 bedrooms, 6 bathrooms, and a great room with 20-foot ceilings and a dazzling 2-story crystal chandelier. Enjoy unobstructed Mount Timpanogos views, a custom entertainer’s kitchen with butler’s pantry, indoor racquetball/basketball court, theater, and full apartment. Outdoors, a covered pool with waterfall, hot tub, playground, zip-line, gazebo, and outdoor theater create a private, resort-style oasis perfect for gatherings or serene nights under the stars.

Chuck Zuercher (435) 901-1765
ChuckZ@bhhsutah.com ChuckZ.com






3136 W
Nestled in Heber Valley’s Charleston neighborhood, this 1.85-acre estate blends refined craftsmanship with rural comfort. Updated in 2025, it features lifetime shingles, wraparound porches, heated attached and detached garages, and a workshop. Inside, radiant floor heating, engineered hardwood, Pella windows, and custom closets complement a spa-like main suite and high-end kitchen appliances. Smart home systems, central vacuum, and new mechanicals ensure convenience and efficiency.




Dallin Quinn (435) 714-9926
Dallin@bhhsutah.com
DallinQuinn.bhhsutah.com




Built in 2018, this residence offers modern comfort with timeless charm. The bright, open floor plan features spacious living areas, quality finishes, and plenty of natural light. The newly finished basement (completed October 2025) adds additional living and entertaining space. Enjoy a 3-car garage for storing your toys, and a large fully landscaped yard. Located in a welcoming community close to parks, schools, and outdoor recreation. Move-in ready and meticulously cared for, this home is a must-see.

Chuck Zuercher (435) 901-1765 ChuckZ@bhhsutah.com ChuckZ.com



27649 Old Lincoln Highway, Wanship, Utah | Sale Price: $37,625,000
This premier asset is nestled within the stunning Blue Sky Ranch. Set in the scenic hills near Park City. the property offers a unique blend of luxury, heritage, and long-term stability. The property includes approximately 32,317 rentable sq ft, featuring a 21,000 sq ft distillery, an 11,000 sq ft refectory, and a 3,000 sq ft warehouse, all situated on a 5.04-acre parcel. Contact listing agents for specifics. Co-listed with Chris Mullin (332) 345-4308 and Brian Brockman (513) 898-1551 of Bang Realty & Surmount




(435) 640-4964 katie.wilking@bhhsutah.com




Rail Central is a unique multi-tenant office/retail property strategically positioned in the heart of Park City, Utah. This offering provides investors a rare opportunity to acquire a stabilized asset in a high barrier-to-entry market, supported by a diverse roster of established local and national tenants, excellent demographics, and immediate connectivity to robust year-round tourism. Rail Central offers stable cash flow, mark-to-market upside potential, and a coveted location just minutes from Park City’s world-class resorts.















Tridestin.com/Alta-Park 801.243.2567
ALTA PARK
Single-Family Homes
Total Properties .............................................4
Acreage Range .............................0.23 - 0.34
Pricing.........................Starting at $1,159,500
Alta Park is an exclusive new community in Sandy, Utah, offering a limited selection of just four luxury homesites. These homes combine elegant design with modern conveniences, featuring impeccable craftsmanship throughout.

BLACK RO CK ESTAT ES
BlackRockEstatesUT.com 435.602.5400
BLACK ROCK ESTATES
Custom Homes and Homesites
Homesites ..................Starting at $650,000
Custom Homes ................Starting at $2.9M
Black Rock Estates is a new luxury gated community located above the Jordanelle, presenting a breathtaking mountain landscape with lake views, clubhouse amenities, and just 20 minutes to Park City ski resorts, restaurants, and shopping.

BLACK ROCK LUXURY CONDOS Condominiums
Total Properties .............................................3
Sq ft Range ................................4,432 - 4,515
Pricing.......................Call for Current Pricing
BlackRockLuxuryCondos.com 435.602.5399
BLUE SAGE RANCH
BSRUtah.com
801.201.9004 / 435.659.1518
Nestled above the Jordanelle Reservoir, Black Rock Luxury Condos provides the tranquility of mountain living with the convenience and amenities of a hotel.
The SIGNATURE Collection at Black Rock Luxury Condos offers only three elegantly appointed and spacious penthouse suites.
BLUE SAGE RANCH
Custom Homesites
Total Properties ............................................21
Acreage Range ...................................6 - 20+
Pricing.......................Starting at $1,400,000
Blue Sage Ranch is a community of 21 luxury estate homesites located just 5 minutes from Heber’s Main Street. Enjoy stunning views of Mount Timpanogos, as well as 82 acres of dedicated open space. Experience the freedom to build the home of your dreams. Only the last few lots remain!


ESTATES
Tridestin.com/Castello 801.243.2567
Single-Family Homes
Total Properties .............................................5
Acreage Range .............................0.27 - 0.39
Pricing..........................Starting at $1,174.000
Castello Estates is located in South Jordan near amenities that include the Jordan River Parkway, Mulligans, South Jordan Rec Center and so much more. Last one of five homes remaining–a must see!
Single-Family Homes, Homesites, and Townhomes
Homes .........................Starting at $600,000 Homesites ..............Starting at mid $200Ks

CopperRock.com 435.619.7400
EaglewoodCove.com
801.652.1771

ElevationResidences
AtCanyonsVillage.com
435.901.2355
Experience elevated living at Copper Rock, Southern Utah’s premier golf community where luxury meets natural beauty. Whether you’re an avid golfer or simply seeking a quiet retreat, Copper Rock provides the ideal balance of adventure, elegance, and everyday convenience.
Custom Homesites
Total Properties ...........................................72
Acreage Range .................................0.4 - 17+
Pricing..........................Starting at $450,000
The last building lots in all of Eaglewood in North Salt Lake. These estate lots have views, privacy, large building pads and back onto national forest. Choose your builder and choose when you build. Adjacent to Eaglewood Golf Course and 15 min from airport and downtown SLC.
Townhomes
Total Properties .............................................6
Sq ft Range ..............................4,850 - 5,500
Pricing.................Call for current availability
A new private residential enclave in Canyons Village. A collection of only six townhomes that are ski-in/ski-out from Sunrise gondola and the Retreat ski run, with access to the full range of amenities at Hyatt Centric Park City.



FiddlersCanyon.com 435.602.5324
Townhomes
Total Properties ........................................ 330
Sq ft Range ...............................2,063 -2,208
Pricing..........................Starting at $354,900
Fiddlers Canyon combines elegant design with the ideal location in Cedar City, Utah. The area boasts ample outdoor recreational options, with numerous trailheads and parks nearby, perfect for those who appreciate an active lifestyle.
Townhomes
Total Properties ...........................................28
Sq ft Range .................................1,306 - 1,852
Pricing................Starting in the Mid $300Ks

HarvestValleyCourt.com 435.602.5342
HighStarRanch.com 435.602.5331
Introducing Harvest Valley Court, Hyrum’s newest community for those aged 55 and above. Get ready for an outdoor-loving neighborhood where you can connect with like-minded souls around the community garden and gazebo. 2-3 Bedroom plans available.
Townhomes and Homesites
Pricing.................Call for current availability
At High Star Ranch, there are thousands of acres of preserved open space including miles of hiking and biking trails, equestrian amenities, and on-site fishing opportunities—and an amazing collection of contemporary townhomes, The Willows, tucked right into the hillside.


Single-Family Homes
Pricing .....................Starting at $6,295,000
IndiRidgeHomes.com 801.879.2236
This rare collection of only 37 contemporary homes presents an elevated sense of Talisker Club luxury living. Perched high on a ridgeline this prime location is near the entrance of Tuhaye with easy access to both the Club and the town of Park City and include all the benefits of Talisker Club’s unique four-club membership.

Custom Homesites

JuniperRidgeUT.com
435.851.4788
KeetleyRidge.com
435.640.6682 / 435.640.2124
435.729.9623
Phase 3 Properties ......................................25
Pricing...........................Starting at $169,450
Nestled on the scenic benchlands of Hyde Park, Juniper Ridge offers the perfect blend of rural serenity and urban convenience. This thoughtfully planned community features relatively flat lots— rare for benchland properties—providing an ideal canvas for your custom home.

KEETLEY RIDGE Townhomes
Sq ft Range ................................3,217 - 4,675
Pricing.......................Starting at $2,374,000
A total of 12 townhomes perfectly seated between Deer Valley Resort and the Jordanelle. Located a mere 400 yards from the Jordanelle Express Gondola, Keetley Ridge offers panoramic views of the mountains, ski runs, and the water. This is effortless living out your doorstep.

KLAIM Townhomes
Total Properties ...........................................88
Sq ft Range ................................2,751 - 3,873
Pricing........................Starting in mid $1.5Ms
KlaimHideout.com
435.602.5318
LionsbackResort.com
435.602.5320
This exclusive lakeview community features the best in modern, contemporary architecture with four-season adventure right out your front door. Now offering new residences and expanded floorplans with epic views! Short-term rental zoning.
Casita Residences
Total Properties .........................................188
Pricing........................Starting at $1,975,000
Immersed in Moab’s natural wonder. Designed to blend in with its natural landscape, Lionsback Resort offers an unrivaled launchpad for all the adventure, exploration and relaxation Moab has to offer. Now offering two-, and threebedroom casitas and the four-bedroom Spire, all beautifully furnished. Short-term rental zoning. Model open. Resort pool opens Nov ‘25.



MayflowerLakesideParkCity.com 435.602.5361
Townhomes and Condos
380 Properties 200 Townhomes / 180 Condos Condo Pricing Starting in mid $1.2Ms
Townhome Pricing Starting in mid $2Ms
Nestled between world-class ski resorts and the serene Jordanelle Reservoir, Mayflower Lakeside offers the ultimate four-season lifestyle. Imagine waking up to mountain views, exploring the great outdoors, and returning home to a luxurious community that caters to your every need.
Single-Family Homes
Total Properties .............................................2
Sq ft...........................................................5,325
Pricing........................Starting at $1,755,000

Tridestin.com/Parleys-View 801.243.2567
Pendry.com/Park-City 435.655.1930 / 435.901.2355
Introducing two new custom homes in the desirable Millcreek neighborhood, offering a rare blend of modern style with ADU flexibility. The features and upgrades throughout have been carefully chosen by our interior designer to meet the expectation in today’s market.
Hotel Condominiums/Residences
Total Properties .........................................153
Sq ft Range ..................................422 to 2,611
Pricing................Call for Current Availability
Pendry Residences Park City offers fully furnished condominium residences that combine Montage’s legendary service culture with numerous amenities for an impressive year-round experience.
Homes and Homesites
Homes ................................Starting at $2.5M
Homesites ........................ Starting at $900k


PromontoryClub.com 435.333.4600
This is mountain living, beyond promises, at its absolute finest. Promontory’s world-class amenities include two championship golf courses, one par-3 course, six restaurants, a beach club, tennis, pickleball, the new Spa at Promontory, pools, on-slope private ski lodges, an equestrian center, hiking and biking trails and more.

Tridestin.com/Siena-Heights 801.243.2567
SIENA HEIGHTS
Single-Family Homes
Total Properties ............................................13
Acreage Range ............................0.20 - 0.58
Pricing..........................Starting at $999,500
Nestled in the heart of Pleasant Grove, Siena Heights is an enclave of thirteen homes ideally situated near 100 East. In just a short walk, residents can enjoy Manila Park and Discovery Park with pickleball, tennis, baseball, soccer, and children’s play areas.

SKYRIDGE
Homesites and Single-Family Homes
Total Properties ........................................ 469
Homesites ...........................Starting at $1Ms
Custom Homes ..........Starting in the $4Ms
SkyRidgeParkCity.com 435.602.5317
SkyRidge is your gateway to all-season adventures with seamless lake-to-lift access. Nestled between Deer Valley® East Village and the waters of the Jordanelle Reservoir, SkyRidge presents a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build your dream home in a community designed for year-round living.
Custom Homesites
MullinRealEstate.com
435.901.4707 / 435.901.9250
TaliskerClub.com 435.333.3617
Total Properties .............................................4
Acreage Range ............................................5+
Pricing.........................Starting at $1,175,000
Wide-open spaces await you in this secluded and pristine setting in Francis. On each homesite, owners will have the ability to build an estate home, a guest house for friends and family, an equestrian barn, and outbuildings.


TALISKER CLUB
Homes and Homesites
Pricing .....................................$900K - $5.7M
Talisker Club is one of the most highly amenitized private club communities in Park City. The list of activities—just like the mountain views—is nearly endless. Only Talisker Club offers exclusive access to an unmatched collection of mountain, country club, Main Street and backcountry destinations.

Homesites and Single-Family Homes
Total Properties ..........................Approx 274
Acreage Range .....................................2 - 113
Pricing................Call for Current Availability
TheColonyWPC.com 435.901.9073
homesatbluesky.com 435.655.1930 / 435.901.2355
The Colony is an award-winning development that offers a combination of natural beauty, privacy, and world-class ski-in/ski-out access. Nestled among the Wasatch Mountains, The Colony is unlike any other community in the world.
Custom Homesites–Call for Current Availability
Introducing the Farm Estate Lots and the Farmhouses at Blue Sky—an extraordinary opportunity to live in one of the most breathtaking and protected landscapes on earth. With only 31 lots ever to be released, Blue Sky is a sanctuary of peace and tranquility. Ownership includes automatic membership to the Crescent Club for premier access to the amenities of Blue Sky.



SRDVResidences.com 435.575.0775
Final Phase Residences ..............................12
Pricing................Call for Current Availability
The finest address in the finest location. These luxury residences are located in the heart of the #1 ranked Deer Valley Resort and enjoy all the extraordinary benefits and services of The St. Regis Deer Valley.

THE ST. REGIS DEER
Hotel Condominiums/Residences
Total Properties ...........................................93
Sq ft Range .................................1,400 - 7,198
Pricing................Call for Current Availability
DeerValleyRealEstate.com 435.575.0775
The St. Regis Deer Valley provides some of the most luxurious slopeside residences in the area. From its 67 hotelcondominiums to its 26 spacious two, three, four and five bedroom private residences, no luxury has been sacrificed.



At Metro Mountain Mortgage, we understand that a home loan isn’t just about numbers — it’s about people, families, and futures. That’s why we take the time to listen, guide, and support you through every step of the process.
Whether you’re buying your first home, refinancing, or just exploring your options, we’re here to make it simple, stressfree, and centered around you.
With honest advice, personalized solutions, and a team that truly cares — you’re not just getting a mortgage. You’re gaining a partner you can trust. Let’s build your future, together.

Buying or selling a home isn’t just a transaction — it’s a life moment. That’s why we focus on people, not just properties.
At Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Utah Properties, we’re not here for just one deal — we’re here to build a lasting relationship. We take the time to understand your needs, your goals, and what home really means to you. Whether it’s your first house, your forever home, or an investment for the future, we’ll walk with you every step of the way.
Trust. Communication. Real results. That’s how we do business — and how we earn clients for life.
Your journey starts here.















FEATURE
JASMINE ROTH , HOST OF HELP! I WRECKED MY HOUSE, RELOCATES HER FAMILY AND BUSINESS TO UTAH BY SCOUT PETERSEN
Jasmine Roth thrives in chaos. Between raising two young daughters, relocating her design business from Huntington Beach, California, to Park City and hosting season five of Help! I Wrecked My House, the HGTV star has more on her plate than ever. For Roth and her husband, Brett, that energy was the driving force behind uprooting their lives and starting fresh in a new state.
¶ “It almost feels like I’m back to 2012 when I first launched my business,” Roth says. “I’m in start-up mode again, and I love it.”
After 15 years in California, Roth and her family made a break for the mountains. “Park City has always been our happy place,” Roth says. She and Brett vacationed in Utah many winters ago, long before the move felt possible. In 2015, they purchased a small condo, which Roth renovated during a particularly bad snowstorm, filming the process for a YouTube video she planned to share with family. To her surprise, it caught the eye of HGTV, ultimately leading to stints on Hidden Potential, Rock the Block and Home Town Takeover before Help! I Wrecked My House debuted in 2020.
The soon-to-be family of four also made the move in August 2024 to be closer to relatives. “Moving while pregnant … I would not recommend,” Roth laughs. Thankfully, her in-laws live just 13 doors down in a house Roth built for them, and her mom is nearby in an apartment. “As soon as my mom was set up and the movers dropped off our things, my body was like, you’re having this baby,” she says. Darla, her second daughter, arrived a month early.
Back to host the fifth season of Help! I Wrecked My House , Roth takes on client “wrecks” through her company, Built Custom Homes. The self-contained episodic series follows Utah homeowners who have DIY’d themselves into a cor-

ner and need a lifeboat. Problems range from simple drywall patches to foundation issues and electrical nightmares. Roth and her team take the reins while
also slowing down to teach homeowners new skills. “I never want to portray things to be way easier than they are,” Roth says. She prioritizes equipping


homeowners with knowledge of when to ask for help and how to maintain their upgraded abodes.
When accepting projects, Roth says it’s less about what makes good TV and more about whether the family is truly ready for it. “We look for clients who feel stuck and see us as their only path forward. It’s equally as important to note that they have to be in a place to afford it,” she explains. While viewers often question if HGTV foots the bill, Roth dispels that rumor, confirming that homeowners always pay their own way.
In addition to client work, the show simultaneously follows Roth’s personal

The Russell’s beautiful new front entry and en suite bathroom oasis; the charming petite bathroom at the Knutson’s renovated home
life. When she and Brett decided to move, they purchased a partially framed home and took on the challenge of finishing it with a baby on the way. A year later, the residence is still a work in progress. “We live here, but the exterior is still getting finished. The yard looks terrible,” she confesses.
Roth also tackles designing rooms for both daughters on camera — a nursery for Darla and a bedroom for 5-year-old Hazel. “At first, Darla was in a bassinet in our primary bedroom, and the nursery was basically a storage room,” Roth explains. Hazel, meanwhile, had strong opinions of her own. “She was my toughest client this season,” Roth confirms. “She gave me a run for my money.”
Hazel also considers herself a host of the season. When fans say hello to Roth, she chimes in, claiming, “It’s my show too!”
One of the season’s greatest challenges is building new relationships with local contractors and trades. In California, Roth had partnerships that spanned years, many of which were faces viewers had come to love. “Everybody’s always like, what happened to Scott [Cross]?” says Roth, referencing a general contractor featured in past seasons. “I miss him a lot, but he’s doing just fine. We were just texting the other day.”
In a new locale, Roth not only needs to find contractors she gels with personally and professionally, but she also needs people who are comfortable being in front of the camera. “It’s like dating,” she explains. “We have to match contractor skills to clients, and not everyone is a perfect fit for my or the client’s vision.”

On-screen presence matters, but not in the way people think. “I look for people who are the same, whether the camera is rolling or not. I want them focused on the wreck itself. But also, don’t stand in front of the camera with the back of your head blocking the lens,” she jokes.
Utah’s real estate scene also shapes numerous storylines. The greater Park City market is competitive and fast, continuing to surge. Buyers who think they’re purchasing a starter home sometimes find themselves still there 15 years later, which influences various needs each project requires. “The wrecks I saw in Utah were unlike anything I’d seen before,” Roth says. A great deal of creative problem-solving has been required. If taking on wrecks and designing her own residence weren’t enough, Roth was also tied up in finding a new headquarters for Built Custom Homes. As many Utahns know, corporate rentals in the mountains are scarce and highly competitive, making purchasing a space the
HAPPINESS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
“ We just spent our first summer in Park City, and it was equally as great as the winter.”
—JASMINE ROTH
most viable option. On screen, viewers see Roth’s journey to acceptance that finding her headquarters would be a more time-consuming and energy-intensive process than expected. “My current setting is definitely an indication of how far I’ve gotten on finding a new headquarters,” Roth says, as she tuned into our interview from her primary bedroom.
California casual is the design style Roth is known for, so moving to the mountains has been a fun challenge to her typical repertoire. “I’d call it ‘mountain family,’” says Roth, when asked to describe her work in Utah. It’s a contemporary look that doesn’t lean too far into classic
mountain design — meaning less antler chandeliers and more natural textures.
“Function always drives my decisions, no matter what the style is,” she says. A house is meant to work with the family that uses it, and that remains a throughline no matter where in the country her clients reside.
To emphasize the setting, Roth enjoys using natural wood and slabs sourced locally. “Those feel timeless, whether it’s a beach design or a mountain design,” she says. She also sees kitchens trending away from the all-white era. “I still love white kitchens, and you can quote me on that! But there’s a time and place, and we’re moving toward wood cabinets and tan countertops. It’s what I have in my own house.”


The cold weather alone can dictate design choices, especially for winter sports enthusiasts. “I’ve been designing a lot of functional mudrooms,” Roth notes. “Families here come in with boots, skis, sleds and wet gloves. It’s chaos unless you plan for it. I try to keep it functional and beautiful at the same time.”
When she’s not working with clients, Roth’s ideal winter day is a family morning on the ski slopes. With a wagon full of kids and adult snowboarding gear, they walk from their doorstep to the gondola at Park City Mountain Resort. The group does a few laps on the bunny slope so Hazel can warm up, then Brett and Roth peel off for the Jupiter Bowl, leaving the kids with grandma in the
A colorful and airy renovation of the Pututau’s kitchen; Jasmine in the Herrera’s newly renovated home
lodge. Strapped into her Gentemstick snowboard, purchased during a trip to Hokkaido, Japan, Roth finds joy in disconnecting and enjoying the mountain.
The ski-in, ski-out restaurant Summit House, located off the Bonanza Express lift, is a spot Roth knows well. The resort approached her to cosmetically refresh the design after learning she had relocated to the area. “It’s not the lodge Brett and I got married in, but it is the most historic ski lodge on the mountain,” Roth says. She and Brett tied the knot at Mid Mountain Lodge in the fall of 2013.
Come summer, her board is packed away and free time is spent in neighbor-

hood parks and green spaces. “We just spent our first summer in Park City, and it was equally as great as the winter,” she says. “It is called ‘Park’ City … I should have known how great it would be!”
Roth’s brand mantra, Build Your Happy, began as a working phrase in a team meeting. “Happiness is often seen as a destination, but it’s a lot of incremental

moments,” she says. “You’re literally building it.” The line stuck because it marries her professional career with her belief that happiness is a journey. The phrase is featured on a collection of T-shirts, hats and drinkware. Roth frequently shares the mantra with her 650,000 Instagram followers and receives inspiring stories from fans expressing gratitude for the community she has built.
As someone who wears many hats, Roth leans into her own messaging
when she needs to reconnect. “I try really hard to be present no matter what I’m doing. If I’m at work, I’m at work. When I’m at home, I don’t check emails … Mom guilt is real. But all I can do is work at being present for whoever I’m with,” she says.
Roth’s philosophy might be her most potent message, especially to young girls watching. “In my girls’ world, women drive trucks, wear tool belts, swing hammers and run construction crews,”
she says. Roth being in the driver’s seat of Help! I Wrecked My House has undoubtedly paved the way for other women to enter the industry.
Next on the docket is continuing to find balance in her busy life. “Maybe if we get another season, I’ll get around to finishing our primary bedroom,” Roth says. Settling into Park City life means accepting that happiness is never an end game, it’s a process. Roth lives the truth that life is always under construction.
BY BIANCA DUMAS


Swartz’s work was most recently featured in Park City as part of Art in Bloom at Susan Swartz Studios during the 2025 Kimball Arts Festival. The exhibition showcased a unique collaboration between Swartz’s abstract paintings and Hayden Hull of Lamb’s Ear Floral Designs. Swartz’s paintings, based on studies of flowers, inspired Hull to create new floral arrangements using native S U S A N

Swartz’s paintings were born of suffering that has blossomed into gratitude. The artist, who splits her time between Park City and Martha’s Vineyard, endured severe auto-immune disease for 10 years. Yet her paintings are an explosion of flowers, fruits and exuberant color on the canvas, an energetic tribute to life.

Utah flowers. This creative exchange formed a cycle of inspiration with flowers inspiring paintings, which in turn inspired new floral works. It speaks to the profundity and fecundity of nature itself: seeds bear plants and flowers bear fruit that bears seeds.
Swartz’s career as an artist has also born great fruit. She has been honored with solo exhibitions in major cities from New
York to Berlin and Beijing. Her works are in public collections including the Springville Museum of Art in Springville, Utah; Utah Museum of Fine Arts in Salt Lake City; National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C.; and Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland. Pieces are also on display inside U.S. embassies in New Zealand, Hungary and China as part of the Art in Embassies program. Her work is sold through Georges Bergès Gallery in New York and at Susan Swartz Studios in Park City.
At the peak of her auto-immune illness, which was triggered by fish-borne mercury poisoning and Lyme disease, Swartz had five co-infections and couldn’t hold her paintbrush for longer than an hour. She understands the illness with all its concurrent infections to be the result of environmental contamination, so she’s often asked, “Why not depict the devastation of the environment in your paintings?” Instead, Swartz paints nature in its full glory, not in its polluted state. To answer the question, she says nature was intended by its Creator to be beautiful, healthy and whole.
“I want to paint the environment from how it’s meant to be: wild, lively and thriving. That’s how I want to live,” she says. “I want to live in its beauty.”
The joyful aspect of Swartz’s work developed naturally as she began to heal, supported by alternative therapies and natural foods. She moved from painting

realism to abstraction; painting from the brain to painting from the soul. Classical art training at the collegiate level and years of teaching high school art in Princeton, New Jersey, helped Swartz interpret emotional and visual impressions onto canvas in her own way.
While healing, she suddenly found a deep well of energy. “Not only can you see life again, but you’re living life,” she recalls. The exuberance of the moment made its way onto the canvas in thick layers of acrylic paint and built-up glazes, laid in heavy with brushes and palette knives. Even the choice to move from oil paint to acrylic was made from health considerations.
A new idea hit full steam when Swartz began incorporating the very foods that were part of her healing journey into what became multimedia works. These grew into three distinct series. Nuts, seeds and thinly sliced fruits and gourds are embedded in the Evolution of Nature series. A profusion of petals, buds and
whole flower heads can be seen, while Nature’s Bouquet and Boundless are all about layered paint that mimics natural elements like petals carried on the wind.
In 2005, Swartz was honored by Harvard Divinity School for a career that blends artistry and faith. Twenty years later, a solo show at King’s College, Cambridge University in the U.K., again honored this admixture of art and spirituality. When introducing Swartz at the opening, Provost Gillian Tett commented that the artist’s work represents “chaotic natural glory,” a glory that belongs to God and a chaos that is more joyful frenzy than disorganized uproar.
In her first solo European show, Personal Path , Swartz’s paintings debuted at the Kollegienkirche, a renowned Baroque cathedral in Salzburg, Austria. The ornate but monochromatic white interior allowed the glory of the natural world showcased in her paintings to come spilling into the sanctified space. This suited Swartz well as she listens to

hymns while painting in her Park City studio. “I feel like I’m getting stuff from nature, and I think of who created it — so I just like to keep that ambience,” she says. Personal Path would go on to tour through Europe and Asia for the next four years.
When she was ill, it took too much energy to work on large canvases, so in gratitude for feeling well, the painter now uses them frequently. However, small works accompany the large ones in shows, as seen in Three Dimensions displayed in Berlin’s Galerie Noack in 2021. This is another organic development. As the preliminary layers on one painting cure, Swartz starts another. Above all, she likes the challenge of making balanced compositions on square canvases and leaving them

unframed, painting beyond the surface and onto the canvas’s edges.
Being part of the Park City community for more than two decades has inspired Swartz and her husband, Jim, to give back. They are founding members of Impact Partners, a group of investors who support filmmakers in telling stories about social issues. They also founded Christian Center of Park City (CCPC), which is celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2025. CCPC’s motto is “meeting people at their point of need as an expression of God’s love” through a variety of offerings such as food pantries, thrift stores and counseling.
Swartz is governed by her faith and a personal code that is formalized in a threefold concept: care of self, care of planet and care of community. Care of self has been essential since Swartz’s diagnosis of Lyme disease, which will remain in her system for life. Care of planet flows naturally from this need since the foods that contributed to Swartz’s healing can only be produced in a healthy environment. Finally, care of community flows from a sense of gratitude. This third value is shared through her paintings and support of CCPC simultaneously.
“That’s the whole point of my paintings,” Swartz says.“How can we get people to look and appreciate what we’ve been given here?”


A standing ovation to the Park City film festival, a mainstay since 1985
BY DEANNA RHODES
Saying goodbye to Sundance carries a melancholy sadness. There is a Portuguese word for this feeling: saudade. The definition is to miss something that will never return. For many Parkites, saudade embodies the ache of losing the Sundance Film Festival after a run of more than 40 years.
On March 27, 2025, Sundance Institute announced that the annual festival would move to Boulder, Colorado. “I’m heartbroken,” says Katy Wang, executive director of Park City Film. “What we captured was lightning in a bottle.” One more Sundance will light up Park City before the final credits roll. The last run, from January 22 to February 1, 2026, will carry both the joy of celebration and the sting of saudade.
“I began working at Sundance Institute in 1993, drawn by my love of storytelling and filmmaking,” says Meredith Lavitt, former director of

Sundance Institute Ignite, which supports new voices and talent from the next generation of filmmakers and fosters young audiences for independent storytelling. Over the next 25 years, Sundance helped shape her career. Park City grew with Sundance too. “Sundance brought the world to Utah. It opened windows into new perspectives and challenged us to think differently,” she says.
One moment stays with her. At Park City High School, students watched the documentary Salma. Salma herself was there. At 14, she had been locked away by her family simply for becoming a woman. When she told the students that every girl in their class would have been locked away in her village, stunned silence filled the room before a powerful discussion erupted. For Lavitt, that was the imprint of Sundance: films that opened minds, ignited dialogue and
showed the courage of freedom.
Casey Metzger’s journey began with a jolt. “If it wasn’t for Sundance, my business wouldn’t exist,” he says. On a slow night in 2007, he quit his bartending job on Main Street without a plan. That same night, a patron mentioned a new pop-up bar for Sundance’s ASCAP Music Cafe. He begged for the chance. “That was my first gig as Top Shelf,” he claims. From that leap, a business was born.
Seventeen years later, Metzger, owner of Top Shelf Professional Bar Services, feels he has finally nailed it. “Sundance gave me the opportunity. It gave me the confidence. We do more than just show up and serve drinks, we navigate building permits, make connections and build relationships.” For Metzger, Sundance was proof that bold risks can spark lasting possibilities.
After landing in Park City in 1981,

the Sundance Film Festival transformed a small mountain town into a global crossroads for more than 40 years. Each January, snowy streets filled with dreamers. Venues all over Park City became stages for stories. On any bus, you might hear five languages, proof that people travel in from almost everywhere. “For 10 days a year, the whole world came to me,” says Ginger Tolman, a longtime Parkite and film patron. She remembers seeing Whiplash in 2014, when the feature premiered after debuting as a short. It became a major winner that year, taking both jury and audience awards. The energy in the room was electric. “The crowd jumped to their feet before the credits rolled,” she recalls. It was the first emphatic standing ovation she ever witnessed, a moment of pure magic.
Brian Marquez joined Sundance in 2017 as a seasonal volunteer coordinator
while working for OCEARCH. Before connecting with Sundance, he worked for Loveland Living Planet Aquarium in Draper and Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium in Nebraska. The night before his first festival, he joined 400 volunteers at Park City Library’s Jim Santy Auditorium for a screening of Chasing Coral. The film about endangered marine ecosystems felt like worlds colliding. Surrounded by people from around the globe, Marquez realized he had stepped into something special.
“My mind was blown. I fell in love with the Sundance Film Festival,” he recalls. Each year, 1,300-plus volunteers arrive, with nearly 60% coming from Utah. “It was an amazing moment for me,” Marquez says. “Someone like me, who felt lost at the time, could see that there is something for everyone. Everyone has an impact they can make. Everyone has a story.”
Wang reflects on what Sundance brought to Park City. “What I love about Sundance is the excitement around ideas while also being entertained.” She also recalls the energy when Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006, attended and when Jacinda Ardern, the former prime minister of New Zealand, walked into a room. People were starstruck, not just because of fame, but because of the vision and humility these leaders carried with them.
For a small mountain town, moments like that felt extraordinary. That spark is what Park City Film hopes to carry forward in Sundance Film Festival’s absence, continuing to ignite conversations that matter and encourage greatness. The nonprofit is stepping forward to keep independent cinema alive. The plan is to grow from 130 to 200 screenings a year, with a quarter of them free.
As Sundance leaves Park City for Boulder, many here see it as both a loss and a gift. “Boulder is getting something special,” Tolman says. “I hope they know what a gift it is.” The festival may change locations, but the spirit remains.
The true impact of Sundance was always the dialogue it sparked and the inspiration it offered, and that legacy endures. A business built on nothing but nerve. A crowd rising to its feet in awe. Volunteers arriving from every corner of the world, giving their time and finding purpose. Metzger emphasizes, “We have one last Sundance. Hopefully, it’s a banger. I hope we send it.”
All of it was magic, lightning in a bottle, too rare to last forever. These are the closing credits of Sundance in Park City, a final ovation filled with love and longing. Saudade.
Watching great films launch is at the heart of Sundance




PUT YOUR BEST BOOT FORWARD WHEN HITTING THE SLOPES
BY JILL ADLER
From left: The Surefoot approach includes injecting gel-like memory foam into custom liners; writer Jill Adler getting fitted at The Ski Shoe; “magic socks” used to scan feet and gather dimensions at The Ski Shoe

JANINE WAS all smiles as she approached with skis and poles clutched in the crook of her arm, a black bucket helmet and the coolest white ski suit this side of Florida. She was ready, except she wasn’t. Looking at her rental boots, with her generous calves desperately trying to climb out of the cuffs, I felt her pain. There was no way her lesson would be successful, and yet someone at the rental shop ushered her out the door telling her the boots just needed to warm up.
The plastic was so stretched out that together we couldn’t latch the buckles.
“I’m in so much pain, I can’t even think straight,” she said as I escorted her back to the gondola for a date with Mr. Rental Shop Supervisor and a lesson refund.
Janine’s story, unfortunately, is a common one. As

a beginner, you’re not ready to invest thousands of dollars on new, properly fitting equipment if you’re unsure whether you will even like the sport. However, how can you like the sport if you are uncomfortable from the getgo? In addition, how do you know that it can feel any other way? Even as a professional ski instructor with 30 years of teaching under my Professional Ski Instructors of America (PSIA) pin, I have found myself lying on the side of Chips Run at Snowbird, waiting for the arch pain to subside, all because I thought suffering was part of the ski game. And it was, until brothers Russ and Bob Shay said it shouldn’t be.
Russ and Bob grew up skiing in Stratton, Vermont, and after those long, cold winter days on the hill, Bob would hobble to the lodge in agony while Russ, a

competitive racer, pushed through the pain — the alternative was a bigger, sloppy boot that could cost him the podium. Unwilling to accept the situation, they asked every shop in town for help but there was no solution to those mass-produced, generic hunks of plastic and padding. They were either too loose, too tight or just downright torture due to the angles of the shell and the thin padding.
At 18, the brothers moved to Park City, and from inside their family’s garage, they began grinding, cutting, padding and pounding ski boots into submission. By 1982, their first Surefoot location opened its doors to lead customers to a better boot. Before Surefoot, the only option was to find the least bad boot model and hope your toenails didn’t turn black from the pressure. Since then, Surefoot has grown into the world’s largest custom ski boot retailer, with 29 locations across North America and Europe, fitting nearly one million pairs of feet not just into ski boots but custom orthotics for running, golf, hiking and more. “We’re still a family-owned business with my dad and my uncle involved with every location,” says Sierra Shay, Bob’s daughter and chief marketing officer. “Many of our managers have been with us for over 20 years so even though we’ve grown, we still have this great network of knowledge and 40 years of experience. We are always improving

our products and continue being a trusted brand.”
Any level of skier can walk in, step up on the Surefoot digitizer, learn exactly what brand of boot would fit best based on the skier’s ability, build and terrain of choice, and then feel the magic unfold. In just over an hour,
Your boot may be comfortable but you’re not skiing as well as you could if you don’t have the right support.
– SCOTT DUDEVOIR, COLE SPORT
trained boot fitters will take a 3D scan that maps 538 points in your foot to create a topographic map of the sole, which will then be used to drive a CAD/CAM milling machine to craft custom ethyl vinyl acetate (EVA) orthotics. These
ensure a neutral stance to maximize energy transfer to the skis. The process ends with gel-like memory foam injected into custom liners that solidifies in minutes and hugs the foot, ankle and calf. Your boots should automatically fit better, perform

Brian Potempa,
better and warm your toes better. Plus, no break-in time is needed. If you do have issues with pinch points and hot spots, Surefoot’s lifetime fit guarantee offers free adjustments at any location.
However, a luxurious fit comes with a price tag that many might eschew. Even if you found a pair of “prescribed” boots on eBay for $200, you’ll still pay close to $1,000 for fitting fees and the custom orthotics and liners and perhaps $2,000 if you need individual canting, alignment and parts.
“If you are just getting into skiing for the first time you may not want to go full custom but just getting a custom orthotic and maybe a custom liner [that you can put into your rental boot] is going to be much, much better than an off-the-shelf boot. But really, it’s buy right or buy twice,” says Sierra.
Not only can a bad boot be painful, but it can be dangerous. Generic boots, designed for a mythical “average” foot, cause pain, cramping or sloppy control, especially for skiers with wide, narrow or high-arched feet. Custom boots align the foot in a neutral position, correcting pronation or supination and maximizing energy transfer for better turns with less fatigue. You may not even realize that your crappy, standard boot is the reason for your stress on the hill.
Back at Snowbird, I asked a shop guy if he could work on my boots, pointing out where I felt the most pain. Ironically, he recommended I go to Park City as “no one does it like the boys up there.” It makes sense that a place that draws thousands of skier visits, houses the Olympic Ski & Snowboard Team and provides the training ground for international snow sports athletes would be the boot-fitting epicenter of Utah.
While Surefoot’s Resort Center location at Park City Mountain Resort remains iconic, boutique fitters like Bootworks, Cole Sport, Park City Boot Room, Park City Ski Boot and The Ski Shoe also offer incredible customer service and nuanced adjustments tailored to unique foot shapes.
“I’m hands-on, so I pay attention to detail,” says Brian Potempa, owner of The Ski Shoe. The business also partners with Biomoto USA, a company that collects and analyzes body motion data to build custom “sensormotoric” insoles for ski boots and athletic and walking shoes. As a competitive mogul skier and Wasatch Freestyle Team coach for 20 years, Potempa leveraged his skiing expertise to inform his boot-fitting expertise. “We make sure your foot does what it’s supposed to do. Most stores will offer their version of boot fitting but then they say, ‘if it hurts, come back.’ With me, I eliminate the pain right off the bat, so you have a better experience on your first run,” he says.
But what if you have no express pain? And how do you find someone you can trust? “Your boot may be comfortable but you’re not skiing as well as you could if you don’t have the right support,” emphasizes Cole Sport’s Scott “Dude” Dudevoir, who has been fitting feet for 33 years.
Cole Sport puts their boot fitters through a rigorous one-week training program, and the first thing they learn is to size the shell. “If any fitter isn’t doing that, it’s an immediate red flag, but after that it’s a matter of experience,” he says. “To find a good boot fitter, there’s plenty of reviews online these days. Or you can go with the old adage — go to three different bars and if you hear the same name more than once, that’s a pretty good place to go.”
Only you can weigh the costs and benefits of premium boot fitting, but just as no two feet are the same — not even yours — there’s no such thing as a universal fit. For expert skiers, a proper fit means you will have precision and control without losing a second of your day lying down to relieve pain. For beginners, it means longer, happier days on the slopes learning rather than suffering or wasting time arguing with the rental shop manager. In Park City, where artisans like the Shay brothers, Potempa and Dudevoir craft boots to elevate every turn, the perfect ride might be worth every dime.
























A GLIMPSE OF SKI FASHION THROUGHOUT THE AGES
BY BRANDI CHRISTOFFERSEN
Skiing as a sport has been around in the U.S. since the mid-19th century. Even back then, there was a desire for functional, smart ski wear. Early on, men sported trousers and long jackets while women wore chunky sweaters and full-length skirts. The primary goal was warmth and protection from the elements. However, as skiing gained popularity, fashionable outfits became desirable. Fashion-forward skiers started to add pops of color to their winter wardrobe through scarves, handkerchiefs and hats. By the time the Roaring Twenties came around, creative designs began showing up on the mountains.

During World War II and immediately thereafter, new synthetic materials like polyester and nylon hit the ski slopes. These fabrics quickly replaced wool as the go-to choice for outdoor wear, as they allowed for greater mobility and freedom. It was in the fifties that the first stretch pants were invented. They hugged the hips more naturally than their predecessors and were complemented nicely by the emergence of creative patterns and bright coat colors.
By the beginning of the 1930s, the blossoming ski industry had heard the call for exciting, unique apparel. Women began replacing their long, awkward skirts for more practical and comfortable trousers. Unfortunately, in those days, the pants were still quite inconvenient, as they had to be tucked into the top of boots and then secured with gaiters. Thankfully by the middecade, lastex — a knit band containing elastic yarn — was introduced to the fashion world. Suddenly, every pair of ski trousers and jacket cuffs included this marvelous material, allowing for easy dressing. Designers also made the heavy wool outfits more comfortable by lining the inside with soft cotton flannel.


Blanche
In December 1963, Park City Mountain (then called Treasure Mountains) opened to the public. The new resort transported jubilant skiers, outfitted in their contemporary outfits, to the mountain in an underground subway. This allowed for plenty of time to admire all the latest fashions and styles. The slopes were dotted with puffer jackets, bright sweaters and colorful stretch pants. Many skiers also donned real and fake fur and leather. “It was during the sixties that skiwear started to have a more modern feel,” says Kathy Burke, apparel buyer for Cole Sport. “This is the era when high fashion met functionality.”

Often referred to as the golden age of skiwear, the seventies were a time to stand out and be noticed. Synthetic outfits were the rage — think fitted jackets, tighter pants and lots of color blocking. It was at this time that ski apparel began to cross over into street wear with quilted nylon ski jackets featuring zip-off sleeves to convert into vests. “This is [also] when fleece was first created,” explains Burke. Fleece weighs far less than wool, is machine washable and dries quickly. Patagonia partnered with Malden Mills (now Polartec) to make the first fleece sweater, and it became one of the most popular types of fabrics in the winter-wear industry.


Once the decade of decadence had rolled around, skiwear had truly become a fashion statement. Visitors to any mountain resort in the eighties would find neon colored, onepiece suits, exaggerated shoulder pads and stretch pants with stirrups. In addition, GoreTex hit the market, allowing for waterproof, breathable and lightweight fabrics and extended outdoor exposure.
“This is personally my favorite era,” shares Annie Bommer, executive director of the Alf Engen Ski Museum Foundation. “I am a sucker for a good neon and bright pattern.”
Après Ski: The Scene, the Style, the Menu (Artisan Books) by Erin Isakov is a nostalgia-fueled celebration of global ski destinations, a survey of fashion and a source of delicious recipes. Isakov is the cofounder of ski and outdoor apparel brand Erin Snow. She grew up an avid skier and snowboarder and regularly travels to Utah from Southern California to hit the slopes with her family. View styles that have evolved from tailored to sporty and tighter to brighter and see the impact of stretch fabrics. Styles inspired by ski regions emerged in the sixties and seventies, while neon and the streetwear-inspired looks of extreme skiing and snowboarding impacted the following decades. In the 2000s, designers like Isakov took inspiration from skiing’s golden era and introduced slimmer, sexier fashions.
“I am struck by the sense of escapism and joy that the world of ski culture has brought to humans around the world. People from all different walks of life share in the joy of skiing. Whether you are a serious skier or simply in it for the cocktails and nachos, the mountains bring us all together,” says Isakov.

A retro 1990s outfit on the slopes in Brandnertal, Vorarlberg, Austria
This decade introduced snowboarding to the world and with it an entirely new fashion trend. Baggy outerwear that included oversized sweaters and T-shirts were popular amongst the younger crowd, skiers and snowboarders alike. Bright, neon colors were still all the rage, but were often softened a bit by pairing them with neutral accents. “The North Face became a huge outdoor influencer during this time,” says Burke. “And Jean-Claude Killy’s one pieces were seen all over.”

A looser, yet tailored look and earth tones ushered in the 21st century
By the turn of the century, snowboard and ski fashions had meshed together to create a loose, yet tailored look. Neon colors were replaced with pastels and earth tones. Luxury brands including Chanel, Christian Dior and Prada started designing skiwear that could be worn on and off the slopes. Fur made a strong showing during the 2010s, along with shiny and metallic puffer coats.

Today’s fashion trends are a delightful blend of past decades: baggy, tight, multicolored, neutral, two pieces and onesies. The après ski scene has increased the desire for on and off the slope styles, which has caused many new brands to spring forward like Kjus, Rab and locally Team Event. Additionally, through eBay, Etsy and other online services, skiers can find awesome vintage ski outfits from years past.
“The fashion scene is cyclical and it seems that right now, almost anything goes,” says Burke.

For a glimpse at the progression of skiwear, beeline for the Alf Engen Ski Museum at Utah Olympic Park. Ski and snowboard apparel plays a key role in three exhibits.
The first is a collection of early skiwear, dating back a century. Although there are fun examples of wool turtlenecks and trousers, the showstopper is the outfit that greets you while walking through the entryway: an ocean blue sweater that belonged to the museum’s namesake, Alf Engen. “It looks brand new!” says Bommer. The exhibit moves into later decades, including the sixties with one-piece suits and spandex leggings. A second exhibit spotlights the U.S. Alpine Ski Team. Learn about the team’s evolving style and how their

fashion reflects the changing trends of each era, from vintage skiwear to modern performance apparel. The story is brought to life by former ski racer Spencer F. Eccles’s personal collection of U.S. Ski Team jackets that spans three decades of his service on the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Foundation Board of Trustees.
The final exhibit showcasing the collection of Barbara Alley Simon, known as the “first lady of ski fashion,” is perhaps the most exciting. As a fashion editor for several ski magazines, Barbara amassed a wardrobe of nearly 70 outfits and roughly 350 separate items and accessories. The U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Famer provided some of her favorite outfits from the sixties through the nineties for the flashback of her life’s work.
Alley Simon also was known for hosting ski fashion shows and appearing on TV talk shows with her dancer-models throughout the seventies and eighties. Located at the entrance of Alf Engen Ski Museum, the exhibit includes an entertaining video montage with clips from TV appearances.
“When I first did shows, there would always be something special. I would think to myself that it should be saved for a museum collection someday,” says Simon. “Well, that day has come true, and I would like to say what a wonderful honor it is to be recognized for collecting and saving the most beautiful and unique athletic wear of all!”
Check out the exhibits (museum admission is free), find your favorite outfit and recreate it for the slopes this ski season. For Bommer, it’s a two-piece number from the eighties. She says, “I am obsessed with the bird on the leg. I would rock these.”
BY TYRA ERICSON
THE CHRISTIAN Center of Park City (CCPC) is ringing in its 25th year of service in 2025. Founded by Jim and Susan Swartz, a local husband-and-wife duo, the humanitarian resource center began as a humble food pantry operating out of a storage unit. Since then, it has become a wide-casted net of services for community members in need. Programs range from food pantries and basic needs assistance to mental health counseling and Native American outreach. In 2013, the center expanded from Summit County into Wasatch County and now operates a campus in both Park City and Heber Valley.
CCPC envisions its services as a stepladder, each rung lifting people toward stability and self-sufficiency. The base is food security, achieved by free food pantries. The subsequent step is hope and resilience with rent assistance, crisis prevention and back-toschool programs helping families regain footing. Next is a myriad of mental health services to nurture long term well-being. At the top is giving back. “The
final [step], that we think is just as important, is giving people an opportunity to give back,” says Executive Director Steve Richardson.
At a recent community food drive, two volunteers were handing off boxes of donation items. Not long ago, both had been on the receiving end. Now, they stood proudly on the other side, eager to pay it forward. “The most prideful part was how they didn’t need [our help] anymore. When they really needed it, we were there for them,” says Richardson.
Not everyone starts at the bottom of the ladder. CCPC’s mission is to meet people at their point of need, whether navigating job or life transitions, emergencies like home fires, medical crises or other complex challenges. No matter the starting point, the destination is the same: a platform stable enough to extend a hand to the next person in line.
These days, food is in highest demand. In addition to their two brick and mortar food pantries, CCPC also operates mobile pantries, seasonally delivering nourishment to the doorstep of those with young
Top: Christian Center of Park City and Summit Exchange Middle: Operation Hope, Goshute Tribe Initiative; food pantry volunteer Bottom: Food pantry volunteer and Snacks in Backpacks
children, disabilities, fear or even shame. Because that is what is also in most demand: dignity. Combating the stigma of shame associated with having need is at the core of CCPC’s operations, meaning programs are designed to help clients maintain autonomy and pride while providing for their families. Because of this, much of the organization’s work is intentionally discreet.
The successes of CCPC’s support are often intangible, creating challenges for visibility in terms of fundraising. As one of only a few larger nonprofits in town without an endowment, CCPC operates year to year for funding. About one-third of the organization’s revenue is raised throught proceeds from their secondhand and consignment stores: Park City Thrift, Park City Boutique, Summit Exchange and the recently expanded Heber Valley Thrift.
Despite its name, the Christian Center is not part
of any church or denomination — no one must be religious to use their services or volunteer. Anyone requiring basic needs assistance can fill out an online form, whereas events like Back 2 School Basics and the holiday gifting program Operation Hope have in-person registration. For food pantry services, community members can show up anytime during business hours.
Jess Bryant, CCPC’s deputy director of grants and marketing, encourages everyone to tour the organization’s campuses to get a glimpse of their wide-reaching arms. “There’s such a big ripple effect for every interaction that people have with us, and I want [everyone] to know how far that spreads,” she says.
To utilize CCPC’s services and to support the organization’s noble efforts through volunteering time, shopping at the stores and donating directly, go to ccofpc.com.













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BY JENNY WILLDEN
Long ago, people traveling the Overland stagecoach trail often pulled over at the Kimball Hotel & Stage Stop, founded by William H. Kimball. Fast forward to today, and Kimball Junction is a modern and growing neighborhood that serves as the gateway to Park City from Interstate 80.
This shopping, dining and residential center is home to the Redstone Shopping Center, Newpark Town Center, Junction Commons and a diverse array of housing options. While Kimball Junction has a variety of national brand names, it’s best known for its locally run businesses. Along with retail shops and restaurants, it has become a growing hub for wellness centers and fitness studios.
Kimball Junction boasts sweeping views from Swaner Preserve and EcoCenter, Utah Olympic Park and many surrounding trails. Known by many as the “Locals’ Main Street,” there is something for everyone, whether you’re coming from Salt Lake, Heber or just down the street.
“You could spend the entire day or the entire week
in Kimball Junction and never have to leave because you have everything at your doorstep,” says Brooks Kirchheimer, cofounder and restaurateur of Hill Top Hospitality, which has Hearth and Hill and Hill’s Kitchen in Kimball Junction. “The best part is many are locally owned and operated, so you can support the locals that live right around you.”
Whether you visit Redstone or Newpark, there are numerous boutiques to explore. Indigo Highway is the place to find a unique gift, as this mountain modern general store stocks and supports more than 150 artists and emerging brands. Owner Jen Tutor chose Kimball Junction nine years ago to
focus on serving local customers. “We really wanted to get to know our customers and have a relationship with them, as opposed to tourists, who we may only see once,” she says. “We love being a part of their lives.”
She adds, “We feel like Kimball Junction has everything you need in a mountain community, and our little street in Newpark is like our very own Notting Hill.”
For adventurers seeking fashion-forward gear, Northland Mountain Boutique offers a range of options that seamlessly transition from recreation to urban outings. Meanwhile, Free Living Co sells safer home goods, offering only vetted and verified non-toxic and sustainable products, including skincare, beauty and household essentials.
The revived Junction Commons, formerly known as Outlets Park City, is transforming from an outlet mall into a diverse shopping destination with more than 60 businesses, including retail shops, outlets, local boutiques, a thrift store and quick-serve dining. Local-run shops include Blue Sky Nomads, a jewelry and accessories store; CCPC Summit Exchange, a used clothing and recreational goods store; The Beau Collective, a boutique workout studio; and Savannah’s, a custom hat bar.
Whether you’re craving steak or Italian, American, Mexican or Asian cuisine, Kimball Junction delivers.
This neighborhood is packed with several gems. On casual mornings, try Cupla Coffee, Hill’s Kitchen and The Bake Shop for coffee and breakfast. The Bake Shop opened just two years ago and specializes in fresh pastries, sourdough bread and filling breakfast sandwiches.
At lunchtime, savor Tilly’s Charcoal Chicken’s poultry-based sandwiches and plates or stop by 11Hauz for quick, healthy Jamaican fare. Pair lunch with Utah-brewed beer at Red Rock Brewery or Park City Brewing in Redstone. When seeking a sit-down classic, Bartolo’s, Cortona Italian Cafe, Hearth and Hill, and Sterling’s Steakhouse and Lounge deliver culinary satisfaction. Sterling’s feels like more than just a steakhouse thanks to its frequent live music and welcoming vibe. Jackson Sterling, the son in the father-son duo that opened Sterling’s, describes it as a place “where elevated dining meets laid-back Park City vibes.” He adds, “We’ve created a space that feels both upscale and approachable, with live music seven nights a week, a cozy lounge area and a warm, welcoming staff.”
Sterling chose Kimball Junction because of its fast-paced growth, unique feel and vibrancy. “It’s a part of Park City that offers the perfect balance between accessibility and character. It’s easy to get to — right off Interstate 80 — and offers plenty of parking, which makes dining here stressfree, whether you’re a local
or visiting from out of town,” he says. “It’s a hub for both locals and travelers who want a genuine Park City experience without the pains of Main Street.”
Hearth and Hill is another Kimball Junction favorite, and its eclectic menu ranges from burgers and ramen to gyoza and birria tacos. The Eatery opened in the neighborhood seven years ago, and co-founder Kirchheimer calls this booming area the perfect home.
“We opened in Kimball Junction because we wanted to be a gathering spot for the community and felt that Kimball Junction was central to the year-round community of residents,” he says. “We also knew that Center Drive in Kimball Junction could be the new Main Street of Park City and provide locals and visitors alike with multiple dining, shopping and workout options with free parking, convenient public transportation and [a location] adjacent to Swaner Preserve.”
Kimball Junction’s crown jewel is Swaner Preserve and EcoCenter, a 1,200-acre nature preserve and educational center that protects the area’s native wetlands. Explore it on the Wetland Discovery Trail or climb up the four-story tower to survey the landscapes from above.
Another option is to follow the paved trail behind Redstone to connect to the city’s vast trail system for hiking, biking and running. Or park in designated rail-

trail user spaces near White Pine Touring to explore the Historic Union Pacific Rail Trail.
Kimball Junction is also becoming a wellness destination with businesses like Autumn Bear Wellness Collective, Avanto, Prime IV, Pure Sweat and Float Studio, Stretch Labs and Upgrade Labs, where you can opt into the latest trends. For example,
Avanto and Pure Sweat and Float bring Nordic wellness offerings to Park City, with cold plunges and saunas at Avanto and infrared saunas and float tanks at Pure Sweat and Float.
Meanwhile, Upgrade Labs provides cutting-edge biohacking technologies to help optimize the body’s performance, recovery and overall well-being. Prime IV focuses on improving health through hydration therapy, which delivers vitamins, minerals
and other essential nutrients directly into the bloodstream for rapid absorption. Stretch Labs is a wellness studio offering one-on-one assisted stretching services to reduce pain and improve flexibility and mobility.
Autumn Bear Wellness Collective is meeting Park City’s growing demand for a boutique integrative health clinic that combines primary care and traditional healing. The Autumn Bear team includes a doctor of osteopathic medicine who specializes in functional aging, as well as practitioners of acupuncture, cupping, gua sha, Chinese dietary therapy and sound healing. Together, they help patients build strength, balance and resilience at every stage of life.
“Main Street is iconic, no doubt — but if you’re only going there, you’re missing out on a big part of what makes Park City special,” Sterling says. “Kimball Junction has a more relaxed, local vibe and offers experiences you just won’t find downtown.”









At Christy Sports, we help you spend more time where life feels better: outside. Whether you’re skiing powder or unwinding at your favorite après spot, we’ll set you up with quality winter gear and rentals that make every moment more enjoyable. But we don’t just fit gear, we set the tone for your whole day. Our experts listen, fit precisely, and guide honestly so that your time outside is safer, smoother, and more comfortable. No matter the adventure, we’re here to support you, from first chair to last light.









BETTER INFO MEANS BETTER DECISIONS AND MORE FUN!
At Jans, we are the Experts in mountain recreation! We are skiers and riders who use the gear and clothing we sell every day. We love to share our knowledge to help you make the best decisions.
• We test 100+ new ski models each year to select the very best.
• Our boot fitters offer a 100% Lifetime Fit guarantee.
• Jans’ Rennstall team serviced equipment for 26 US Athletes at the 2022 Olympics. And 13 of these athletes brought home Olympic medals!
Come see the Jans Experts in our stores and at jans.com so you can have the most fun!





For over 50 years we’ve made it our mission to provide the best guides and gear and incredible mountain experiences for Park City visitors and locals. We rent and sell top-of-the line equipment and offer guided snowshoe, fat biking, and cross country skiing tours in town and in the backcountry. Located right in the heart of Park City, White Pine Nordic Center offers 22km of groomed skate and classic terrain, lessons, rentals, day passes, and a complete retail store. When you venture out to embrace winter with White Pine Touring guides, you’ll leave with a smile on your face and an experience you won’t forget!




mission to incredible and equipment cross backcounWhite skate passes, venture Touring and













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PRODUCTS TO ELEVATE YOUR DAYS ON THE SLOPES.

Pro Jacket — This iconic Lofoten GoreTex Pro jacket — a key Norrona piece that’s been continuously improved since 2004 — offers an unbeatable combination of dependable weather protection, premium construction with roomy storm hood, wrist gaiters, pit zips, zip-off powder skirt, and comfortable, flexible fit for optimal mobility. Perfect for skiing and riding as well as off-slope and general activities like mountaineering. White Pine Touring whitepinetouring.com
Liner — Experience the ultimate blend of comfort, control and all-day warmth with the Surefoot X 98 Custom Ski Boot Liner — trusted by patrollers, instructors and racers alike. Featuring a new injection-molded upper cuff and reinforced power channel for precision and support, each liner is handcrafted and foam injected by Surefoot’s expert fitters for a truly custom fit. Integrated heating ensures lasting warmth, making every run smooth, responsive and perfectly dialed. Surefoot surefoot.com


A lively all-mountain ski, VÖLKL Revolt 101 feels at home in just about any condition short of deep powder. It’s a high speed powerhouse with easy pivoting, quick edge grip and nice rebound, both on-piste and in ungroomed snow with bumps and rollers. A freerider’s dream! Jans Mountain Outfitters jans.com








































TWO LOCAL PHOTOGRAPHERS CAPTURE
UTAH WILDLIFE IN WINTERY HABITATS
BY BETH BUEHLER
Growing up in Chicago with a darkroom in her family’s basement, Lauren Major spent hours developing images with her father. After earning an MBA in finance and working in the financial industry for more than 20 years, she established a photography and filmmaking company that specialized in portraiture, lifestyle and events for her corporate and nonprofit clientele.
Upon moving from Chicago to the Park City area in 2019, Major discovered
a love of nature, wildlife and abstract photography. After suffering sudden and nearly lethal cardiac arrest while photographing moose in Jackson Hole in 2021, she realized that our time with nature is fleeting. Major’s photography has carried her to the far corners of the earth, from the depths of the Ecuadorian Amazon to the icy expanse of the Arctic Circle. In Utah, Major enjoys photographing horses in the West Desert of Toole County and fall and wintery landscapes around northern Utah. laurenmajor.com




“ I thrive in the quiet immersion of nature’s grandeur in the snowcapped mountains and meadows of the American West.”
—LAUREN MAJOR
“ In Park City, we see as much wildlife as people see in the national parks like Yellowstone.”
– MICHAEL FLAHERTY

Trading in the hustle and bustle of Atlanta for the wide-open spaces and peaceful mountain surroundings of Utah, Michael Flaherty relocated to Park City 24 years ago. The move wrapped up a sales and marketing career in the insurance industry that exceeded 30 years, giving him plenti-
ful time for photographing wildlife around Summit County and the world.
With a residence overlooking Swaner Preserve & EcoCenter, Flaherty has plenty of material from his own backyard. He has taken thousands of photos, earned a following on Facebook (Michael Flaherty Photography) and posts images of wildlife and landscapes almost daily on Nextdoor,
but he doesn’t sell his work. Instead, he simply enjoys spending time with majestic animals in nature, networking with photographers and sharing his photos with local nonprofits such as Swaner Preserve and Save People Save Wildlife. Flaherty also spends time at a summer home in Ennis, Montana, located only 72 miles from West Yellowstone.







David Yarrow
Archival Pigment Print
Standard 52x76
Large 71x107




SPONSORED

WILLIAM KRANSTOVER FINE ART
5642 N. State Road 32 | Peoa 435-901-2007 | wjkart.com By Appointment
“Open Pasture” by William Kranstover 36” x 36” | Acrylic on canvas
O’CONNELL GALLERY
513 Main St. | Park City 435-729-0412 | chrisoconnell.com @iam_chrisoconnell
“Frost & Rime 09” by Chris O’Connell
Location: Wasatch Mountains 40” x 60” | Archival pigment print on Hahnemuhle PhotoRag 308 cotton paper, deckled edge, matted with maple frame


Main St. | Park City 435-655-3803 troveparkcity.com


SUSAN SWARTZ STUDIOS
260 Main St. | Park City 435-655-1201
susanswartz.com
“Nature’s Bouquet 83” by Susan Swartz 36” x 36” | Acrylic on canvas
RELEVANT GALLERIES
692 Main St. | Park City 435-901-5366 relevantgalleries.com
“Sinclair Oil” by David Yarrow 49” x 84” | Archival pigment print

MEYER GALLERY
305 Main St. | Park City
435-649-8160 | meyergallery.com
“Puffy Clouds” by Luke Anderson 18” x 18” | Mixed Media


GALLERY MAR
436 Main St. | Park City
435-649-3001 | gallerymar.com
“Many Rivers to Cross” by Nina Tichava
60” x 60” | Mixed Media

11/21-2/1 12/26 12/31
ARTS COUNCIL PARK CITY SUMMIT COUNTY CREATE PC Holiday Makers Market 1500 Kearns Blvd. 435-200-5220 pcscarts.org/create-pc
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll
Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com
KIMBALL ART CENTER
Noon Years Eve 1251 Kearns Blvd. 435-649-8882 kimballartcenter.org
JANUARY
GALLERY MAR
America Martin: Exhibition Opening Celebration 436 Main Street 435-649-3001 gallerymar.com
America Martin, a Colombia-born artist living in Los Angeles, creates bold, expressive works that celebrate the beauty and complexity of life with unapologetic clarity. Her paintings are grounded in nature, gesture and a deep belief in the power of personal conviction as creative fuel. Martin describes her process as a joyful pursuit that is less about perfection and more about the exhilarating chase toward something greater with each brushstroke. Early Morning on the

JANUARY
FEBRUARY
2/21
JULIE NESTER GALLERY
Elodie Blanchard: Exhibition Opening Reception 1280 Iron Horse Drive 435-649-7855 julienestergallery.com
Elodie Blanchard, a French-American artist and designer based in Brooklyn, has a textile-based practice that transforms discarded materials
GALLERY MAR
Havoc Hendricks & Samantha Dasilva: Exhibition Opening 436 Main St. 435-649-3001 gallerymar.com
2/7
MEYER GALLERY
Brian Kershisnik: Annual Solo Show Opening 305 Main St. 435-649-8160 meyergallery.com
JULIE NESTER GALLERY
Gordon Studer: Exhibition Opening 1280 Iron Horse Drive 435-649-7855 julienestergallery.com
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com
2/13 2/13
ARTS COUNCIL PARK CITY & SUMMIT COUNTY
CREATE PC Local Artist Collective: Winter/Spring Showcase Party 1500 Kearns Blvd. 435-200-5220 pcscarts.org/ create-pc
GALLERY MAR
Matt Flint: Exhibition Opening 436 Main St. 435-649-3001 gallerymar.com

2/27
MEYER GALLERY
Jeffery Pugh: Annual Solo Show Opening 305 Main St. 435-649-8160 gallerymar.com
2/27
into sculptures, wall hangings, vessels and immersive installations. Working primarily with used clothing and textile remnants, she reclaims forgotten or overlooked materials through layering, stitching and embroidery. Blanchard’s work is both intuitive and intentional, balancing technical experimentation with emotional resonance. 1/16 1/17 1/30
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll
Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com Bouquet 27 by Elodie Blanchard
6/12-6/14
ARTS COUNCIL PARK CITY & SUMMIT COUNTY
Latino Arts Festival Canyons Village Forum 4000 Canyon Resort Drive pcscarts.org
GALLERY MAR
Nina Tichava: Exhibition Opening 436 Main St. 435-649-3001 gallerymar.com
KIMBALL ART CENTER
Art Soirée
Pendry Park City 2417 W. High Mountain Rd. 435-649-8882 kimballartcenter.org

3/6 4/6 5/15
KIMBALL ART CENTER
Seeing Sound: Exhibition Opening 1251 Kearns Blvd. 435-649-8882 kimballartcenter.org
3/13
TROVE GALLERY
Tom Judd: Artist Reception 804 Main St. 435-655-3803 troveparkcity.com
A multi-day celebration featuring live performances, visual arts, film screenings and culinary experiences. This annual event highlights local and international artists while fostering cultural connection and community engagement.
The annual Art Soirée is Kimball Art Center’s signature fundraising event, bringing together art, creativity and community for an unforgettable evening. Each year, guests enjoy fine dining, live music, dancing and auctions. Art Soirée supports Park City’s longeststanding nonprofit arts organization that inspires, connects and educates through art.
3/27
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll
Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com
4/24
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll
Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com
5/29
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com

6/26
PARK CITY GALLERY ASSOCIATION
Park City Gallery Stroll
Park City Main Street parkcitygallery association.com



FRESH PERSPECTIVES FROM EXECUTIVE CHEFS AT FOUR FOOD-SAVVY RESORTS
BY LEIGH WILSON
For a mountain town with about 8,500 year-round residents, Park City has an extraordinary pool of culinary talent. Mountain connected with the executive chefs from four local resorts to learn why they choose to live and work here and find out about their plans for this winter’s menus. While we can’t speak to the snow outlook for this season, the food forecast looks incredible.
DEER VALLEY RESORT
Peter Menteer has been in and around restaurants for most of his life. His mom was a waitress, and Menteer started washing dishes at a restaurant as soon as he was old enough. He worked the kitchen line in college, but after two years a big realization hit. “I thought about cooking more than I thought about schoolwork. It just made sense to drop out and go to culinary school instead,” he says. In the 25 years
since, he has held a variety of roles, from private chef to catering and corporate chef.
The Montana native “never thought I would work at a ski resort,” he says. “They’re not typically known for their food. But Deer Valley has a rich culinary history and a team that is very handson.” Before joining Deer Valley four years ago, Menteer had to promise friends that he would not touch the famous turkey chili or cookies.
Overseeing the resort’s 20-plus food outlets is no small task. Menteer has been tasked with bringing each of the chefs

together and removing the silos between outlets, while leaving room for each chef’s culinary creativity. When we spoke in the fall, Menteer was laser-focused on developing menus and plans for Deer Valley’s newest expansions. There will be an 80-seat temporary restaurant in the East Village this
winter, followed by two new lodges in East Village and Park Peak set to open in coming years. Menteer emphasizes, “Anyone who wants to work for a great company and help us push the limits” should keep an eye out for open positions, as there will be hundreds to fill in the new outlets.”


WALDORF ASTORIA PARK CITY
At Waldorf Astoria Park City, Stuart Roger is preparing for his first full ski season at Powder. He joined the team last February, and this time around gets to design the new winter menus. A native of Evian, France, Roger is no stranger to the mountains, so he’s settled in Park City quite nicely. After working in Mexico resorts for 18 years, Park City has been a wonderful return to an alpine environment. “After so many years in big cities and beach towns, coming back to the mountains is like coming back to my childhood,” says Roger.
In addition to bringing his global experience from France, Scotland and Mexico, he is focused on sourcing local products. In addition to partnering with local ranchers, farmers and creameries, Roger is excited to incorporate Dendric Cider into his recipes. The new Kamas cidery debuted its first dry sparkling cider in June. Roger plans to use Dry Cut for a cider-glazed chicken entree. He is also working on a selection of family-style dinners. With a shared entree and choice of seasonal sides, it will be “ideal for filling up your whole family after a day of skiing,” he says.

In February, Guillermo Tellez will celebrate two years overseeing the culinary scene at The Lodge at Blue Sky. The Mexico native spent 19 years working with renowned Chicago chef Charlie Trotter and is the first and only recipient of the James Beard Foundation’s Felipe Rojas-Lombardi Award of Achievement for Hispanic Chefs.
Tellez brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to the Auberge property in Wanship and is excited about the potential to develop more dining concepts. As executive chef, he also oversees several onsite curated events, such as Gracie’s Farm Dinners and British filmmaker Guy Ritchie’s WildKitchen.

In addition, the culinary team receives numerous requests for private dining, and each menu can be customized for individual guests.
Tellez is passionate about maintaining a strong focus on flavors and keeping a farm-totable approach at all The Lodge at Blue Sky’s dining outlets. He works closely with Lynsey Gammon, the property’s director of farming. The property’s farm is “improving and growing little by little every year,” he says. “Production this year was amazing!” When it comes to developing seasonal menus, Tellez is driven by simplicity. “It’s the hardest thing to do,” he says. “You have to stay true to your ingredients. You can’t mask the flavor.”
Tellez is working on several concepts, including a tasting menu to pair with whiskeys from the on-property High West Distillery.


ST. REGIS
Matthew Fradera oversees the culinary operations of all dining outlets at The St. Regis Deer Valley, including Rime, La Stellina, Brasserie 7452 and Vintage Room.

The Chicagoland native started cooking at a young age after receiving a kids’ cookbook for his birthday. Through the SkillsUSA workforce development program, Fradera competed in cooking challenges in high school and then attended culinary school at Johnson & Wales University in Denver. After years of working his way up the line in Michelin-starred restaurants in New York City, he relocated to Park City in 2020.
Fradera and his team are continually seeking ways to “deliver the best food product in Park City” at The St. Regis, he says. For example, they added a Sunday Summer Brunch in 2025 and look forward to reintroducing a skiers’ lunch buffet at Rime this season. Fradera is most excited about the addition of caviar and A5 Wagyu beef (the highest quality rating given by the Japanese government) for winter. The team now includes sushi chefs, so the Brasserie and Vintage Room menus have enhanced sushi options. If you haven’t locked in your holiday reservations, Rime will serve a prix fixe dinner, while La Stellina will feature a traditional Feast of Seven Fishes on Christmas Eve.
While winter has far fewer festivals than summer, there are still many occasions to celebrate the food of the season. Each of the venues mentioned also hosts fabulous Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners, which book up early. Keep an eye out for more details about the following culinary events.
Deer Valley’s Taste of Luxury Series spotlights guest chefs and winemakers from around the world. It’s often a great opportunity to experience Michelin-star cuisine in Park City.
Red, White and Snow is the annual fundraising event for the National Ability Center. The three-day event on March 5-7 includes Uncorked, Wine on the Mountain and vintner dinners and culminates with a gala and after-party at Grand Hyatt Deer Valley on March 7.
Park City Spring Wine Festival (below) returns for a second year on April 9-11. Say goodbye to winter at paired wine lunches and dinners around town and grand tastings on Pendry Plaza.


NINE WAYS TO CAP OFF A WINTERY DAY, THE PARK CITY WAY
BY LEIGH WILSON

Ask a dozen locals for their favorite après-ski spot, and you will probably receive a dozen different answers. Everybody has their favorite, but the luxe list is much shorter. These are the spots where you bring your out-of-town friends who want to après like celebrities. From Main Street to the Montage, put these après-ski experiences on your must-do list this season.



When it opened in 2021, The Vintage Room at The St. Regis Deer Valley totally upped the ante for Deer Valley’s après scene. Now in its fifth season, Vintage Room continues to elevate offerings with a DJ spinning sets from Thursday through Sunday and a renewed focus on fresh seafood flown in daily. Vintage Room typically opens in tandem with Deer Valley Resort’s adjacent Deer Hollow Run and serves up style, food and beverages from 12-7 p.m. Seating is first-come, first-served with the exception of VIP tables, which can seat up to 10 people. Watch for reservations early as they go quickly.
Not to be outdone by its downhill neighbor, Montage Deer Valley has reimagined The Après Lounge in partnership with Veuve Clicquot. The elegant, yurt-style ski lounge is the OG (originator) of elegant après ski in Deer Valley’s Empire Village. An impressive selection of champagne and sparkling wine is accompanied by luxurious menu offerings selected to pair perfectly with bubbly. Menu items include locally inspired wagyu tartare, decadent caviar service, foie gras torchon, local cheeses and charcuterie.
Deer Valley Resort has stepped up its après game in the last few years. Last January, Chute Eleven opened at Empire Canyon Lodge and became an instant hit. Chute Eleven’s slopeside sets feature celebrated DJs like G-Love, who made a surprise appearance last season and performed an acoustic set to close out the season. This is Deer Valley after all, so expect a decadent menu of caviar, seafood and charcuterie. The selection of Laurent Perrier Champagne is served alongside craft cocktails like Huck n’ Bubbles and Whiskey Apple, beer, wine and a full bar.
Canyons Village at Park City Mountain Resort hasn’t historically been known for luxury après, but that changed when the Pendry Park City opened for the 2021/2022 ski season. Après Pendry is the cozy lobby lounge serving everything from caviar to pretzels with cheese sauce. Enjoy live music and a roaring fireplace inside or head outside to the Après Terrace, an all-new ski-in après experience. Director of Marketing and Communications Meera Patel says, “Après Terrace is poised to redefine après ski in Park City this season.”
Now in its second ski season, this speakeasy tucked away in Grand Hyatt Deer Valley in the new East Village is a must for après ski on the east side. The age 21-plus only venue features live music, whiskey-forward craft cocktails and a tasty menu that includes fondue, shared plates and desserts. With several new East Village chairlifts opening this season, traveling to après ski at the Grand Hyatt is a piece of cake. For a family-friendly take on après ski, check out the High Hot Chocolate experience in the Living Room at the Grand Hyatt.
Opened at the end of the 2024 ski season, this Riverhorse on Main offshoot is the perfect complement to one of Park City’s most popular restaurants. Palomino, a play on the Riverhorse name, serves signature cocktails and small bites from Seth Adams, the same renowned executive chef as the restaurant. Marketing Coordinator Kiara Tineo says, “You can expect the same Riverhorse vibe at Palomino with signature cocktails, small bites and upbeat music.” Palomino features DJs or live music on Fridays, Saturdays and holiday or festival weekends. There is a VIP room for private parties.






For those who prefer a more low-key luxe vibe, Alpining Distilling’s Park City Social Aid & Pleasure Club is the place to be. Known as the Alpine Pie Bar before moving one door, the club is tucked away on Swede Alley and features plush velvet furnishings, low lighting and delectable craft cocktails. This season, Alpine Distilling will launch the Alpine Dopamine Experience, with nostalgic throwbacks and interactive experiences. And, yes, they still serve pie in addition to other light bites like smoked pecans, snack mix and ice cream.
Jennifer Francis launched Après House in 2019, after experiencing the après scene in Aspen, Colorado. She wanted a more luxe option in Park City, so began with pop-ups at Fletcher’s and Riverhorse on Main and partnered with Veuve Clicquot to host house parties during the COVID pandemic. Today, Francis and partner Jen Sutton want to “put Park City on the map for après,” Sutton says. “The town is positioned for it, and the demand is there.” To stay in the know about pop-ups, like the Saturday Pool House Social at Pendry Park City, get added to the email list and follow on social media.
Can’t decide on one après spot? That’s a great reason to join Inbal Baum, founder of Delicious Cities, on the Park City Après Tour. Baum launched her first food tour in Israel, and now calls Park City home. She loves hosting and talking about food, so food tours are “a passion project that turned into an opportunity,” she says. Partnering with local chefs and restaurateurs, the Après Tour offers artisanal alcohol tastings at four locations, paired snacks and insider stories. She’s also launched a familyfriendly food tour of Main Street.



From our Park City beginnings to a growing presence across the region, we’re redefining what fast casual can taste like.




AN EXCEPTIONAL DAY STARTS WITH A SATISFYING BREAKFAST OR BRUNCH BY MEGAN RULE






The process of getting organized and out the door for snow and mountain activities often takes over winter mornings, but don’t forget to fuel up for the day. Fortunately, Park City takes its breakfast and brunch seriously. Will you? It can make the difference between a dream and subpar day.
If a morning of slowly making your way to the mountain sounds painful, plenty of neighborhoods across Park City have quicker and more casual breakfast and brunch options.
When driving in from Salt Lake City, Heber City or Kimball Junction, stopping at The Bagel Den on your way to ski resorts makes the most sense. Be prepared on a Sunday morning for a line out the door, because yes, they are truly that good. Get a classic bacon, egg and cheese or try out the blueberry cream cheese with a toasted bagel. Enjoy with a cold brew or smoothie on the comfy couches in the back before hitting the slopes.
If Park City Mountain is your destination, make a quick turn into the Prospector neighborhood for a pit
stop at Alberto’s Mexican Restaurant for some of the best breakfast burritos you’ll find. At Alberto’s, you’ll be met with endless options to customize your meat or no-meat burrito. Snag a breakfast mini if you’re not that hungry or jump right into the enchilada, taco or quesadilla platters with rice and beans.
Before going up Town Lift, make a stop at Harvest, which is right on the way. If you’re coming from Midway, check out their new location there, too. Any time of the day, you can order the toasted paleo banana bread and other toasts like avocado, savory and BLTA (bacon, lettuce, tomato and avocado). Make sure to get a warm matcha on the side to balance out your meal.
Farther up Main Street, stop at Union Patisserie.


Even though they’ve just been open a year, this cozy coffee spot has quickly become a local favorite.
Order your latte or cappuccino with a croissant, crepe or slice of quiche and sit in a cozy corner that transports you to Europe.
If skiing isn’t your thing, or your feet need a day off from the uncomfortable boots (let’s be honest), you can still be social and enjoy the wintery wonderland that is Park City.
Le Depot Brasserie, a sister to Union Patisserie and located right next door, has a full brunch menu on the weekends. Definitely start your order with a baguette and butter but try not to fill up on it. Save some room for the Eggs Benedict, Omelette Aux Brie and seasonal profiterole dessert.
It’s only a few exits east on Interstate 80 to Wanship, home of The Lodge at Blue Sky and High West Distillery. “If you’re willing to make a

little drive outside of Park City and can plan ahead a bit to get a reservation, High West Distillery at Blue Sky makes for a fun brunch day,” says Austin Balls, a Park City local and lifelong Utah resident. “You can take a tour of the facilities and enjoy whiskey flights and other cocktails, plus they have a killer all-you-can-eat buffet. Most of the time, there’s live music too, which tops off the enjoyable experience.”
If you’re skiing Deer Valley, or looking to meet with friends who are, make a reservation at Stein Eriksen Lodge’s Glitretind Restaurant for the delectable Sunday brunch buffet. Fill your plate with delicious seafood, sushi, fruit, eggs, meats, omelets made to order, crepes and vegetables cooked to perfection each week. Save room for the dessert table that is filled with melt-in-your-mouth treats to top off the meal.
Sterling Steak and Lounge in Kimball Junction also
offers a tasty brunch buffet on Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Stop by this location on your way to the airport perhaps and fill up on endless shrimp, prime rib, honey ham, slow-cooked St. Louis-style ribs and Belgian waffles.
“I used to be the head chef but have since hired someone else to help so I can spend more time in front of guests and watching everyone enjoy our Sunday brunch,” says owner Jackson Sterling. “I enjoy working at the end of the bar and being face-to-face with guests while doing their made-to-order omelets and scrambled eggs. Pretty much anything you want, I’ll cook it in front of you.”
Bartolo’s in Kimball Junction serves brunch every day of the week with menu items like the blueberry lemon “pan cake” and egg white frittata to name a few
"My favorite item, no matter what day of the week it is, is the breakfast sandwich."
— ALEX BARTOLO
local favorites. “Weekends are busiest for sure, but we see a lot of locals come in and have business meetings over brunch throughout the week,” says owner Alex Bartolo. “My favorite item, no matter what day of the week it is, is the breakfast sandwich. I call it the ‘breakfast burger’ because it’s so big and filling.”
Five5eeds in Park City’s Snow Creek shopping center serves breakfast all day, making it the perfect spot for a snoozed alarm or after getting first chair on the mountain. Get the banana bread with espresso cream for something sweet or the shakshouka (a Moroccan baked egg dish) for a flavorful plate to warm your insides up.
Also don’t miss Deer Valley Cafe on your way to the resort. This cozy restaurant and deli is located inside Deer Valley Plaza and overlooks the lake. Enjoy a Wasatch Mountain Sandwich for breakfast until 11 a.m. or a turkey panini for lunch until 3:30 p.m. Whatever you’re in the mood for, be sure to pair it with a hot chocolate to really get into the season’s spirit.




French culinary mastery in a historic, atmospheric landmark.


In the iconic former Union Pacific Depot, Le Depot Brasserie offers a relaxed yet refined French dining experience for lunch or dinner curated by James Beard Chef Galen Zamarra. Whether you’re coming straight from the mountain or dressed for a night out, the atmosphere is both comfortable and elevated—perfect for locals and visitors alike. Enjoy classic brasserie favorites, beautiful wines, and the kind of hospitality that makes every meal feel easy, delicious, and memorable.
| ledepotpc.com
CANYONS VILLAGE
DEER VALLEY
HEBER VALLEY & MIDWAY
KAMAS & OAKLEY
KIMBALL JUNCTION
MAIN STREET
PARK CITY MOUNTAIN
PARK CITY PROPER
SALT LAKE VALLEY/EDEN
Rodizio Grill, New World Distillery, STK Steakhouse, Asher Adams Hotel, Salt Lake Brewing Company, Rouser, Feldman’s Deli
Dairy Keen, Midway Mercantile, Z’s Steak and Chop Haus at Zermatt Resort, Lobby Lounge
Other: Soldier Hollow








































Operated by celebrated James Beard Chef Galen Zamarra, Le Depot draws inspiration from his time in France, where he worked alongside some of the world’s most renowned French chefs. The menu features a modern approach to authentic French classics, including the elegant Plateau de Fruits de Mer, Roasted Bone Marrow, French wines, and an array of craft and nonalcoholic cocktails. After decades of serving as an iconic landmark, the Depot was restored in 1995 to house Robert Redford’s renowned Zoom Restaurant, which closed in 2017. Under its new ownership by Reef Capital, Le Depot now brings fresh life to this cherished Park City building.
Cod a la Grenobloise
Black Cod, fennel confit, fennel puree, rhubarb emulsion, caper brown butter and croutons.
Paillard de Poulet
Chicken breast, root vegetable brunoise and petite salade.
Cotelettes d’Agneau Grillees en Persillade
Grilled lamb chops, olive and sun-dried tomato mashed potatoes, broccolini and garlic and parsley sauce.



Since 1946, our family has been serving your family. Today, four generations of our family work diligently each day to create a fun-filled family atmosphere where quality food and family can come together. We hope your experience at the Home of the Train is a memorable one. Our Menu, through the years, has expanded to Gluten-free options from shakes to burgers to chicken strips and don’t forget our famous shakes.
Bacon Cheese Burger : 1/4 lb. Hamburger, crisp bacon, melted cheese, ketchup mustard sauce, lettuce and pickles..
Turkey Club Deli Sandwich: Thin sliced turkey breast, served cold, ranch, lettuce, tomato, two slices of swiss cheese, three pieces of bacon, on a hoagie bun or wheat bread.
Fish and Fries Dinner : Three pieces of Tavern Battered Cod, French Fries, our own special tartar sauce, side of coleslaw, roll and butter..


801-906-0369 | feldmansdeli.com 2005 E 2700 S, Salt Lake city
Enjoy award-winning ½-pound sandwiches like Pastrami, Corned Beef, and Reubens, all sliced fresh to order. Savor our homemade entrées, including Borscht, Blintzes and Brisket, along with deli classics like Matzo Ball Soup, Smoked Whitefish Salad, and fresh-baked bagels. Whether dining in or taking out, Feldman’s is Deli Done Right.
Corned Beef Reuben Sandwich : A Classic Corned Beef and Sauerkraut with Swiss and Thousand Island. Served on Jewish Rye Bread with Deli Mustard and choice of side.
Rachel: Our Fan Favorite Pastrami and Coleslaw with Swiss and Thousand Island.
Sloppy Joe :Our Signature Double Decker Sandwich with Corned Beef, Pastrami, Thousand Island and Coleslaw on Jewish Rye

Croquettes di Patate : speck ham, house mozzarella, ‘nduja aioli
Lasagna Bolognese: blistered tomatoes, parmesan
Pan-Seared Seabass : ‘cioppino’ broth, mussels, littleneck clams

435-940-2200 | steinlodge.com/dining 7815 Royal Street E, Park City
Elevated Design. Inspired Dining.
Cena’s refreshed space blends elegance and warmth with mountain-modern style, light woods, natural elements, and a bright, open feel. New French doors lead to an extended patio, creating a fluid indoor-outdoor dining space. Distinct zones provide intimacy without losing the spaciousness guests love, all thoughtfully tied to the property’s updated lobby and lounge. A new chapter of dining at Deer Valley begins here.

435-657-0600 | donpedrosheber.com 1050 S. Main St., Heber City
Don Pedro’s Family Mexican Restaurant, where authentic flavors and heartfelt hospitality come together to create a memorable dining experience. For generations, our family has been dedicated to serving the finest traditional Mexican cuisine, crafted with love and the freshest ingredients.

Enchiladas Rancheras : Three corn tortillas rolled & stuffed with cheese, ground beef, chicken or picadillo. Smothered with ranchera sauce.
Tacos Al Carbon: 3 soft “Grilled” tacos. Your choice of chicken, steak or marinated pork. Enchiladas À La Crema : Three corn tortilla stuffed with chicken, smothered in our special white cream sauce & melted cheese.

385-244-0144 | newworlddistillery.com info@newworlddistillery.com
This Limonada Margarita by New World Distillery is a bright, refreshing twist that combines the tangy zest of Mexican-style limonada (limeade) with the smooth kick of a classic margarita.



435-647-7711 | javacowparkcity.com 402 Main Street, Park City
Park City’s destination for FUN! A Main St staple sure to satisfy! Offering coffee and espresso, pastries from scratch, crepes, soups, fun gifts and our famous ice cream!! We surely have something for everyone!
Biscoff Bliss Latte : cookie butter and white chocolate, espresso, streamed milk and topped with whipped cream, cookie crumbles and caramel drizzle.
You’re Bacon Me Crazy Crepe: Bacon, eggs, mozzarella, spinach and bruschetta folded in our crepe. Housemade Pastries from Scratch : Croissants, French macarons, eclairs, muffins, biscotti and much more.


435-602-1177 | ilovemooparkcity.com 1626 Uinta Way, Park City
Satisfy your sweet tooth with Java Cow Ice Cream, waffles,boba, and unique candies!! We also offer vegan ice cream, acai bowls, and real fruit smoothies too! Find something new at the Moo!
Holy Cow Waffles : Two of our housemade Liege waffles, a layer of ice cream topped with whipped cream and syrup!
Berry Good Acai Bowl: acai, strawberries and bananas blended together and topped with granola, fresh strawberries and blueberries, shredded coconut and a drizzle of agave! (GF & vegan)
All-Natural Ice Cream : We offer an array of traditional as well as unique, seasonal flavors made from real, high-quality fruit that will have you mooing for more.





















APERITIVOS
Meats & Cheeses
Fried Brie Bites
Crispy Chicken Croquettes
VEGETABLES
Sautéed Brussels Sprouts
Spinach Salad
DEL MAR
Grilled Octopus Salad
Piquillo Peppers Mussels
DA LA TIERRA
Chorizo Sampler
Pollo al Ajillo
Crispy Duck Spring Rolls
Lamb Lollipops New Zealand
PLATOS PRINCIPALES
Parrilla de Carne
Bodega Paella


APPETIZERS
Bruschetta
Mussels Vaporetto
RAVIOLI
Di Formaggio
Alla Nono
Sapore Fiero
Veal Ravioli
Buffalo Ravioli
Wild Mushroom Ravioli
PASTA
Alfredo
Gnocchi Al Pesto
Gnocchi Al Funghi chicken
Pollo Alla Parmigiana
BEEF
Bolognese Firenze
Gnochi Alla Bolognese
Spaghetti Polpette
Di Carne Lasagna
FISH
Scampi
Salmon Piccata
PIZZA
Alla Margherita
4 Cheeses
Alla Bolognese





BANGKOK THAI FRESH ROLLS
Fresh Rice Paper Rolls stuffed with Shrimp, BBQ Pork, Crispy Shallots, Lettuce, Cucumber, Carrot, Beansprouts, Basil and Rice Noodles, served with Special Peanut Sauce
ROASTED DUCK WITH STEAMED BUNS
Roast Duck with Crispy Skin, Cucumber, Green Onion, Topped with Sweet Dark Sauce, served in a Fluffy Steamed Bun
CHICKEN SATAY
Grilled and Marinated Thai Spices Chicken and Coconut Milk, complimented by Peanut Sauce and Cucumber Salad
PAPAYA SALAD
Shredded green papaya with hot, salty, sweet and sour dressing +topped with grilled shrimp or crunchy soft shell crab
CHICKEN COCONUT SOUP (TOM KHA)
An Exotic Creamy Soup with Chicken, Mushrooms with Kaffir Lime Leaves, Lemon Grass, Galangal, and Green Onions
ROASTED DUCK AND LYCHEE RED CURRY
Red Curry with Coconut Milk and Roasted Duck, Lychee, Pineapple, Tomato, Red Bell Pepper and Thai Basil. Jasmine Rice included. + (Chicken or Beef Red Curry)
YELLOW CURRY
Choice of Braised Beef or Chicken Yellow Curry and Coconut Milk with Potatoes and Onions. Jasmine Rice Included.
Please Specify Degree of Spice When Ordering
**MILD - MED - HOT - AUTHENTIC - CHALLENGING
+ Vegetarian Chicken, Beef, Shrimp

THAI PORK RIBS
Pork ribs marinated with our special house sauce, served with Thai mashed potatoes and steam vegetables
PINEAPPLE FRIED RICE
Thai jasmine rice stir-fried with fresh pineapple, chinese pork sausage, shrimp, chicken, raisins, cashew nuts, onion, red bell pepper, green onion with yellow curry and brown sauce, served in a pineapple boat
NORTHERN THAI CURRY NOODLES
SOUP WITH BRAISED CHICKEN
An Influence of Burmese Yellow Curry Soup with Egg Noodles and Braised Chicken served with Fresh Shallots, Lime, Green Mustard Pickles and Chili Oil
SWEET AND SOUR JUMBO PRAWN
Stir-fried Jumbo Prawn, Pineapple, Onions, Green and Red Bell Pepper, and Green Onion with Full Flavored Thai Styled Sweet and Sour Sauce. Served with Jasmine Rice
THREE FLAVOR SEA BASS (PLA SARM ROD)
Fried Three Flavor Sea Bass, Topped with Spicy Sweet and Sour Sauce. Jasmine Rice Included.
STIR-FRIED THAI BASIL
A famous Thai street food with fresh garlic, chili, bell pepper, green bean and Thai basil
HONEY GINGER DUCK
Roasted Duck with Honey Ginger Glaze
MANGO WITH SWEET COCONUT
STICKY RICE
VANILLA ICE CREAM WITH CHOCOLATE
MOLTEN LAVA CAKE
THAI ICED TEA / COFFEE
ASSORTED SPECIALTY HOT TEAS



710 Bodega
Baja Cantina
Bangkok Thai
Buona Vita
Encanto
Don Gallo
El Chubasco
Este Pizzeria
Fuego Bistro & Pizzeria
Full House Asian Bistro
Grub Steak
Main Street Pizza & Noodle
Oishi Sushi
Red Banjo
Sergio’s Authentic Mexican
Shabu
Teriyaki Grill
Tarahumara
Lush’s BBQ
Wasatch Bagel & Grill
PRICING AND PAYMENT:

Tenderloin Tidbits
Butter, garlic, demi-glaze, with olive oil and crusty bread
Wood-Fired Shrimp Bake
*House Specialty*
Fresh garlic, butter, vino and asiago cheese served with garlic ciabatta
Sauteed Blue Mussels
Vino, garlic, tomatO Es and a touch of onion and basil
Wood-Fired Artichoke Fontina
*House Specialty*
Marinated artichokes, butter, asiago and fontina cheese
Seared Ahi Tuna Salad
Spring mix, tomatO Es, onions, and mandarin oranges with a whipped balsamic dressing
Spinach and Arugula Salad
Candied walnuts, crumbled Feta cheese, pancetta and pears in a raspberry vinaigrette
Meatball Fagioli Soup
House made meatballs in a great pasta fagioli soup
Vegetarian Fagioli Soup without meatballs�
Bistro Grilled Chicken Salad
*House Specialty*
Mixed greens, toasted walnuts, marinated chicken, gorgonzola, mandarin oranges, balsamic basil dressing
435 . 645 . TOGO ( 8646 ) •
2001 Sidewinder Drive , Park City
. com
Baked Lasagna
Our signature recipe with layers of pasta, Italian sausage, ground beef, ricotta and Italian cheeses and housemade marinara
Chicken Piccata *House Specialty*
Breaded white meat chicken, diced tomatO Es with a lemon-caper sauce
Shrimp and Clam Linguini *House Specialty*
Served with a Romano white sauce and garlic Ciabatta
Pesto Penne
Sauteed chicken, fresh basil pesto and sundried tomatO Es
Chicken Parmigiana
Lightly breaded chicken baked with our homemade marinara and whole milk mozzarella on top served with linguini
Gorgonzola Linguini
Gorgonzola cheese simmered with portabella mushrooms, red onions, garlic, topped with pears
ADD chicken or Shrimp
Fresh Tomato Basil Soup without bread
Shaved parmesan. Add Smoked Shrimp
Roasted CapresE *House Specialty*
Roma tomatO Es, fresh mozzarella, basil leaves, pesto, and a touch of balsamic syrup roasted in our oven
Meatball Sandwich *House Specialty*
Our homemade meatballs and melted mozzarella on a ciabatta roll
The Traditional
Mozzarella and Fuego’s homemade tomato sauce
Pizza Margherita *House Specialty*
San Marzano tomato sauce, fresh mozzarella and fresh Basil
Wasatch *House Specialty*
Blend of house made honey tomato chipotle sauce, topped with mozzarella, pancetta, garlic, fresh pineapple and cilantro
Pesto Pollo *House Specialty*
Sauteed chicken breast atop of toasted ciabatta with a fresh basil pesto and roma tomato
ADD chicken or ADD shrimp includes side of mixed greens
Burrata Ravioli
Delicious creamy mozzarella filled raviolis served with a pink sauce and garlic ciabatta
Pasta Fresca
Linguini with diced romas, red onions, artichoke hearts, garlic and olive oiL - ADD chicken Shrimp
Pollo Pompeii *House Specialty*
Lightly breaded chicken sauteed with sundried tomatO Es, cream, parmesan, spinach, mushrooms and a side of pasta
Pan-Seared Ahi Tuna*
Served atop risotto with a vegetable tapanade and a roasted red pepper sauce
Fuego Blanco *locals Favorite*
Alfredo sauce, mozzarella, parmesan, ricotta cheese, drizzled with balsamic reduction
Veg Head (no cheese) Mushrooms, tomatO Es, eggplant, roasted red peppers, olives and our house made tomato sauce and artichoke hearts
The Jupiter Pie *House Specialty*
Olive oil, garlic, fresh spinach, sundried tomatO Es, mozzarella and feta cheese
Meat Lover’s Pie
Mozzarella, tomato sauce, Italian sausage, salami and pepperoni
These Onaqui wild mustangs turned an empty stretch of road near Dugway Proving Grounds in western Utah into something truly unforgettable for photographer Lauren Major. See pg 188 for more.






SKI-IN/SKI-OUT
UNDER $500,000 AT DEER VALLEY
Introducing Pioche Village by Extell Development Company, the only ski-in/ski-out community in Deer Valley with fully furnished residences starting under $500,000.
Skip the Park City traffic—this prime location offers direct Deer Valley ski access. Short-term rental eligibility makes this luxury community ideal for owning multiple units as both a personal retreat and investment.
Coming soon next door, the Canopy by Hilton brings a signature restaurant and rooftop lounge to elevate the après-ski experience. Own a rare piece of Deer Valley, before it's gone.
For more information visit piochevillage.com




