Lift Blog
Well-Known Member
@Lift Blog can confirm, but I believe it is the other way around, the station buildings will be built first and then the lift equipment can be installed in the building.
Most of the gondolas built these days in the U.S. have open-air terminals and no buildings around them, which is why they can be completed in six months or less. I could see the angle station between the Riviera and Epcot built this way with the terminals on tall masts above the parking lot and no building.
At the Oakland Zoo, one end of a new gondola is inside a two story building and the other is outside. For the former, Doppelmayr came in and installed the machinery part way through construction. An entire restaurant was then built on top before a crew came back to hang the cable and commission the system.
During construction:
After:
Here are a few other station building examples:
Mammoth Mountain, CA
Northstar, CA (this one was constructed inside after the building was built.)
Heavenly, CA
Steamboat, CO: