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Sandia Peak Ski Area

Ski areas and resorts in New MexicoSports venues in Bernalillo County, New Mexico
Sandia Peak Ski Area, Albuquerque AC2
Sandia Peak Ski Area, Albuquerque AC2

Sandia Peak Ski Area, originally La Madera Ski Area, is a ski resort located in the Sandia Mountains in northeast Bernalillo County, New Mexico, United States, immediately northeast of the city of Albuquerque. It is part of a Special Use Permit Zone in the Sandia Ranger District of the Cibola National Forest. It is New Mexico's first ski area, opening to skiers in 1936. It features Sandia Peak Tramway, which was until 2010 the longest tramway in the world, and remains the longest in the Americas. The resort includes 35 ski runs and a terrain park, and also serves as a site for summer recreation. It is one of the few ski resorts in the US that can be directly accessed from a major city.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sandia Peak Ski Area (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sandia Peak Ski Area
Sandia Crest Road, Albuquerque

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Wikipedia: Sandia Peak Ski AreaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.207005555556 ° E -106.41344722222 °
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Address

Double Eagle II Cafe (Sandia Peak Cafeteria)

Sandia Crest Road
Albuquerque
New Mexico, United States
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Sandia Peak Ski Area, Albuquerque AC2
Sandia Peak Ski Area, Albuquerque AC2
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Sandia–Manzano Mountains
Sandia–Manzano Mountains

The Sandia–Manzano Mountains are a substantial mountain area that defines the eastern edge of the middle Rio Grande valley of central New Mexico. They are not only an attractive backdrop to greater Albuquerque, the largest metropolitan area in New Mexico, but their elevation changes provide recreational opportunities including winter skiing and cool summer hiking or picnicing, as compared to the desert grasslands, foothills, and Rio Grande Valley below. The entire mountain chain comprises three parts, arranged north to south: the Sandia Mountains, the Manzanita Mountains, and the Manzano Mountains. The Manzanita Mountains are a series of low-lying foothills that separate the Sandias from the Manzanos. The Sandia–Manzano Mountains are often considered to be the easternmost major range in the Basin and Range Province. A substantial distance gap of much lower elevation grasslands and savanna exists between the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and the Sandia Mountains, and climate conditions shift between both ranges. This distinction is further made by plant, animal, and insect species that are common in both the Sandia–Manzano Mountains and in other mountainous areas to the south, but diminish quickly in the mountains to the north. These include Quercus turbinella, Opuntia engelmannii, Aloysia wrightii, and the western diamondback rattlesnake. However, at higher elevations in the Sandia–Manzano Mountains, a strong climatically driven Rocky Mountain biotic element exists.