https://www.foodandwine.com/travel/r...GZbPbKqbrPcOzs
Old Ski Gondolas Find New Life as Private Dining Rooms
A Colorado woman is revamping used gondolas to help restaurants stay afloat with outdoor dining.
                   
By Sarah Kuta | February 12, 2021                         
                                                                                                                                                       
Credit: Michael Mowery Media
With cold winter weather on the horizon and ever-changing local 
COVID-19  rules limiting indoor dining, Wendy and Rich Tucciarone began worrying  about the fate of their Steamboat Springs, Colorado, craft brewery and  restaurant last fall.
In the summer, it was easy to spread out the tables on 
Mountain Tap Brewery's  large patio and prop open the building's garage doors. But even with  heaters and firepits, the patio would be a tough sell during the icy  evening temperatures and frequent snowstorms in this Colorado ski town  famous for its "champagne powder."
During one creative brainstorming session, their  accountant suggested converting out-of-service ski gondolas—small,  enclosed, cube-like spaces that transport skiers and snowboarders  uphill—into private outdoor dining spaces. The Tucciarones are avid  skiers and mountain bikers, so they liked the idea immediately.
But even in a mountain town, used ski gondolas are hard to come by. 
Lucky for the Tucciarones and other 
struggling restaurant owners  across the country, one woman had been buying up entire fleets of used  ski gondolas over the last few years, mostly on a whim, in the hopes of  someday upcycling them into something else. 
The pandemic became that someday. Dominique Bastien owns 
The Gondola Shop,  a small gondola refurbishment and repair shop with seven employees in  Fruita, Colorado—and an unlikely star during the coronavirus pandemic.  As summer turned to fall, with no end to indoor dining restrictions in  sight in many parts of the country, Bastien and her team began  converting old ski gondolas into novel, pandemic-safe, private dining  spaces for panicked restaurant owners wondering how they were going to  stay in business over the winter.
Mountain Tap Brewery installed three of Bastien's  gondolas, which can each comfortably seat six adults and are available  by reservation, on the patio in November. They've been booked ever  since.
"The gondolas have saved us this winter for sure," said Wendy Tucciarone.
Like yurts, greenhouses, tents, igloos, and 
other pandemic pivots, ski gondolas are allowing restaurants to expand their seating and offer comfortable outdoor dining accommodations 
during the winter  while adhering to local regulations intended to help prevent the spread  of the virus. Each gondola can typically hold between four and six  adults who, in theory, are all members of the same household or pandemic  pod. Many restaurants are blocking off 20 to 30 minutes between  seatings to sanitize, clean, and air out the gondolas, which are often  equipped with lights, heaters, and Bluetooth speakers.
The Gondola Shop is a spinoff of Bastien's regular  trade, which is polishing and repainting ski gondolas that are still in  use at ski resorts around the globe. (Gondola windows and doors are  typically plexiglass, which gets scratched, graffitied, dirty, and  cloudy over time—Bastien says she runs the only company in the world, 
Sunshine Polishing Technology, that contracts with ski resorts to polish their in-service gondolas.)
Bastien's gondola maintenance work typically slows  down in January and February, when ski resorts are operating at full  blast. So three years ago, when she heard that Vermont's Killington  Resort was replacing 55 older gondola cars, she took a huge risk and  offered to buy them all.
A year later, she bought 95 gondola cars from nearby Steamboat Resort. 
"I don't know what came to my mind," said Bastien. "I had nothing in mind really."
Over the course of her 20-plus years in the gondola  polishing business, Bastien occasionally heard from one-off homeowners  who wanted a refurbished gondola for their backyard or event planners  who wanted a gondola to help set an après-ski scene. She figured there  might be broader demand for repurposed gondolas, which she and her staff  could work on during their down months. They experimented with  converting them into saunas and dog houses, but mostly, the 150 or so  gondola cars sat in a field near her shop.
Then, the pandemic hit. In the blink of an eye,  Bastien lost all of her gondola polishing contracts as ski resorts  closed early for the season in March.
"I was slowly planning to go bankrupt—no joke," she said.
In September, Bastien's phone rang. The Town of  Mountain Village near Telluride, Colorado, wanted Bastien to repurpose  five gondola cars into private dining spaces that could be shared among  the 12 restaurants at the base of Telluride Ski Resort. Within two  weeks, they upped their order to 25.
Bastien and her team got to work, frantically  tackling a year's worth of work in four months. They learned as they  went, sometimes calling their vast network of ski area lift maintenance  technicians for questions and troubleshooting.
The Gondola Shop delivered on its promise, and the  Town of Mountain Village opened 25 private dining cars ahead of the  Christmas rush. The picturesque gondolas quickly garnered attention on  social media and in the press—and then Bastien's phone and email really  began to blow up.
Suddenly, she was fielding inquiries from  restaurants in Cleveland, Washington, D.C., St. Louis, San Francisco,  Park City, Utah, and Sun Valley, Idaho. Her team, which includes a  painter, welder, woodworker, and several other artisans, began churning  out customized dining gondolas as quickly as possible.
Bastien offers gondolas in various conditions. Some  restaurants buy them as-is for around $4,800 and just stick a table  inside. (Bastien doesn't recommend this practice but is happy to  accommodate. "It smells like 30 years of use when you open the door,"  she said.)
                                                                                                                                   
Credit: Mountain Tap Brewery
For others, Bastien's team will fully disassemble,  clean, sandblast, fix, repaint, reupholster, and generally spiff up the  gondolas to the restaurant's specifications, a process that takes five  or six weeks and costs between $15,000 to $20,000. She also rents fully  refurbished gondola dining cars for around $500 a month.
Though the last six months have been chaotic,  Bastien says she's just happy to be busy doing something that  matters—and may ultimately help some restaurants stay in business—during  the pandemic. 
"It just got crazy," she said. "Things turned out really weirdly but really well." 
Just outside of Cleveland, five après-ski-themed gondola cars are helping restaurateur John Owen keep the lights on at 
Rocky River Wine Bar and 
Market, two of the seven restaurants he owns in the region. 
Owen invested heavily in the outdoor dining spaces  at both restaurants to keep his staff working and safe (servers pass  food and beverages through the gondolas' open windows), but also because  he believes many people will be uncomfortable dining indoors for the  foreseeable future. He also views the gondolas as an investment in  public relations and marketing—they're popular on TikTok and Instagram.
"It's allowed us to stay relevant and busy, enough  to allow all of our employees to stay employed and not lose  shifts—because when you lose seats inside (the restaurant), you have to  lose staff," he said.
Restaurant owner George Eder is counting on a surge  of pent-up demand this spring and summer, and he believes the two  gondolas he rented from Bastien will help his restaurant Pizza Republica  get by until then. But more than anything, they offer a tiny glimmer of  what dining out used to feel like, before the pandemic.
"It's fun to see people's faces," he said. "If  somebody cancels, it's, 'Oh, I can get a gondola.' They get excited. And  that's what's missing right now from restaurants is that little bit of  joy."