Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jan 2007 Source: Whitehorse Star (CN YK) Copyright: 2007 Whitehorse Star Contact: http://www.whitehorsestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1493 Author: Allan Fotheringham VANCOUVER HAS THREE YEARS TO CLEAN UP WHISTLER, B.C. - The date is Feb. 12, 2010, where for 16 days this little town two hours north of Vancouver will be the centre of world television and don't you think we're proud - and a little nervous. The Winter Olympics poobahs knew what they were doing. The two biggest ski mountains in North America right outside your ski-in, ski-out condo, a mile of vertical drop for skiers, 8,200 acres, 200 named runs, breathtaking views and, as one ski writer put it, "more bowls than Conrad Black's china service." Best of all: no traffic jams. To have traffic jams, you have to have cars. Thanks to the genius of some stubborn mountain guys here some 25 years ago who designed the town, you can't see a single car at Whistler. They're all banished far away on vast parking lots that are out of sight. The result is that you have a walkable village that could have been plucked out of an Austrian or Swiss retreat in the Alps. There's nothing like it on this continent. Grouped around village squares, walk from your restaurant to your jeweler to your pub to your bank to your restaurant to your restaurant with the ski lift within sight past the last pub. On any stroll you can spot the Japanese - spiffiest ski togs of all. Drifting by are the French accents - in the restaurants especially, naturally: the Germans, the unmistakable Brits, some Chinese. They're all checking out the joint. At the top of the Whistler run there is the usual food stop for the hungry mob seeking burgers and beer. But this is different. Christine's has pristine white tablecloths, silver cutlery and (hello there, Conrad) china tea cups. A European couple at the next table, amazed, say there is nothing like this even in St. Moritz - all the classy restaurants are down below at the foot of the mountain. There's only one fly in the ointment. The smart local boys, Intrawest, who own the Whistler-Blackcomb complex also own Mont Tremblant outside Montreal and have made so much moola by mixing condo development into their plans that New York money came sniffing. Something aptly named Pirate Capital quietly acquired 18 per cent of Intrawest in the last year. The local lads grew nervous and have announced their plans to be purchased by Fortress Investment Group, a firm based in New York - with some $23 billion of institutional funds in their portfolio. So now little Whistler village where you can't see the cars will be bossed by some chaps in Manhattan who have had no connection or experience with ski resorts - and have probably never seen snow. Hold onto your poles. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek