Description
Méribel is the central resort in the world's largest lift linked ski area, the 3 Vallées. One of the first in the post-war 'second wave' of ski centre development, the village and its skiing have been a success on a colossal scale. Méribel today has grown far beyond the original village with half a dozen 'neighbourhoods', extending the resort over 10km (6 miles) of the valley floor, and expansion is still continuing apace, helping to make the resort one of the most important in the world today. The resort holds the world record for high capacity gondola lifts, which means it can probably transport more skiers uphill faster than any other resort. Whether such a record matters to the average skier or boarder is open to debate, but the practical off-shoot is that queues are now almost unheard of and skiers get to ski more terrain than anywhere else faster than anywhere else, which must be worth something.The Méribel valley was 'discovered' in 1938 by future British Colonel Peter Lindsay, who returned after the war to oversee its early development in partnership with French architect Christian Durupt. Although the men's plans were modest compared to what was to come, they did begin the task of building the resort in a traditional style, with gabled slate roofs and white pine and stone facades. Along with its perfect location, Méribel's decision to stick to these building requirements through its 50+ year history and through the era of the rec-tangular concrete tower block has won it ever more fans over the years. Although tempted to construct the inevitable altitude 'satellite off-shoot', Méribel Mottaret at 1800 metres in 1972, the resort ensured the giant apartment blocks still had chalet style design. The British influence in Méribel remains strong and vast numbers of Brits arrive each winter, the more well-heeled staying around Méribel Centre, the rest up at Méribel-Mottaret, whilst Courchevel in the next valley is popularly regarded as being more French, more chic (and more expensive).ActivitiesSnowboarding: Two terrain parks. Platieres Snowpark: , vertical drop of 300 meters; half pipe, 1 baby pipe, 2 quarter pipes, 3 tables, 1 spine, 650-meter-long boardercross, and a test equipment chalet. Arpasson Snowpark: 1220 meters long with a 200 meter vertical, 1 half pipe dedicated to initiation.Cross Country Profile: Meribel, Courchevel and La Tenia over 100 km of cross country tracks, all marked and groomed. Trail for all abilities. 33 km are in Meribel Valley in the Nature Reserve of Cembro Pines at Lake Tueda and in the Altiport protected forest.Lodging35,000 tourist beds in 25 hotels, fully catered chalets, tourist residences, vacation centers, a mobile home park, and hundreds of self-catering apartments run by private owners and estate agencies.Winter RecreationSnowshoeing, cross country, dog sledding, groomed walking trails, 13 restaurants, 64 other eateries, fitness centers, casino, cinema, sports oriented and other retail shops in town, national park and more.