World Ski and Snowboard Festival

WSSF File Photo

The World Ski & Snowboard Festival (WSSF) is an annual celebration of snowsports, music, arts and mountain culture. The Festival is held each April in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada[1] and has been recognized as the largest annual winter sports and music festival in North America.[2] It has been called the snowsport industry's version of Burning Man.[3]

The World Ski & Snowboard Festival was created by Doug Perry in 1996.[4] The festival was developed in a partnership between Perry, Tourism Whistler and Whistler/Blackcomb. In 2006 the ownership of the festival was consolidated in a joint acquisition of Perry's ownership stake by Tourism Whistler and Whistler/Blackcomb.

The inaugural WSSF in 1996 consisted of 22 sports events and competitions. In subsequent years it underwent exponential growth in attendance and media coverage,[5] resulting in Whistler becoming the busiest mountain resort in North America in the month of April.[6] At its peak, annual attendance reached an estimated 250,000 resort visits.[7]

An Economic Impact Assessment[8] conducted during the 2006 event found that the WSSF generated $37.7 million in economic activity for the province of British Columbia, with visitor spending and operational expenditure injecting more than $15.7 million into the Whistler economy. Over 28,000 hotel room nights were sold during the Festival, with 86% being directly attributed to WSSF.[9]

The predecessor to WSSF was the World Technical Skiing Championships (WTSC).[10] WTSC was created by Doug Perry as the world's first international freeskiing competition.[11] The first event was staged on Blackcomb Mountain in April 1994 and was televised on ESPN in the United States and its international affiliates. WTSC was designed as a made-for-tv invitational event in which world champions, Olympians and skiing legends from the sport's major disciplines vied for the title of world's best all-mountain skier in a decathlon-format competition of freeskiing, GS racing, moguls and steeps down the Saudan Couloir. WTSC was modelled after Japan's largest skiing event, the All Japan Technical Skiing Championships, in which Perry competed as a member of Team Salomon.

The inaugural World Technical Skiing Championships was groundbreaking in that it drew over 100 media outlets[12] to Whistler at a time when the resort was just beginning to emerge as an international destination. The media attention seeded the idea of developing a more diverse annual event with the potential to attract more top athletes, media and attendees to Whistler Resort.[13]

The 1996 World Ski & Snowboard Festival included the 2nd World Technical Skiing Championships, World Masters Alpine Open, Westbeach Snowboard Classic, Whistler Cup, Couloir Extreme Race and a ski industry symposium.[14] Subsequent festivals expanded to include the Whistler Concert Series, World Skiing Invitational, World Snowboarding Invitational, World Snowboarding Championship, Kokanee Boardercross, Salomon Skiercross, Pro Photographer Showdown, Filmmaker Showdown, Brave Art, State of the Art, Fashion Exposed, Multiplicity, Intersection and many others.

The World Ski & Snowboard Festival has included Canada's largest free outdoor concert series[15] with 50 live acts per festival.

From 2001 through 2006, the World Ski & Snowboard was televised as a four-part series on the Global Television Network and was syndicated to 122 countries.[16]

In 2018, the World Ski & Snowboard Festival announced it will continue under new management in a shorter 6-day format, running April 10–15, 2018 to keep the event "viable." Tourism Whistler relinquished its 22-year part ownership of the property to Vail Resorts, owner of Whistler Blackcomb. 2018 also marks the return of the Saudan Couloir Ski Race Extreme after a 20-year hiatus.[17]

References

  1. "Official WSSF website".
  2. "Official WSSF Website: Facts and Stats".
  3. "Article: Ski Magazine".
  4. "Official WSSF website: Facts and Stats".
  5. "Article: Pique Newsmagazine".
  6. "Official WSSF website: Media Backgrounder".
  7. "Gov.BC.ca News Archives" (PDF).
  8. Canadian Sport Tourism Alliance
  9. "Canadian Sport Tourism Alliance".
  10. "Official WSSF website: Media Backgrounder".
  11. "Article: Pique Newsmagazine "20 years of WSSF"".
  12. "Article: Pique Newsmagazine".
  13. "Article: Pique Newsmagazine".
  14. "Official WSSF website: Facts and Stats".
  15. "Article: SBC Media".
  16. "Official WSSF website: Media Backgrounder".
  17. Vancouver Courier
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.