Tignes,
France
Great skiing and ... er, that's it.
The
appeal of Tignes is simple: good snow, spread over a wide
area of varied terrain. Tignes and Val d'Isère together
form the enormous Espace Killy - a Mecca for experts, and
ideal for adventurous intermediates. And in many ways
Tignes makes the better base: appreciably higher, more
convenient, surrounded by better intermediate terrain,
with quick access to the Grande Motte glacier.
Our
preference is still to stay in Val, which is a more human
place, a more rounded resort and a more central base for
exploration of the whole area. But the case for Tignes is
getting stronger as results flow from the resort's current
campaign to reinvent itself in a generally less hostile
form (Tignes is building its future, as the slogan goes).
The road through Tignes-le-Lac was pushed underground a
couple of years ago, so you no longer have to tangle with
traffic to get from the western slopes to the eastern
ones. Underground car parks are also encouraging
development of the pedestrian-friendly feel that the
resort is striving to achieve. Various buildings are
getting a facelift to make the resort slightly easier on
the eye. It all helps.
Although
Tignes has invested in some impressive lifts accessing the
Grande Motte and Val-d'Isère, enjoyment of the expansive
western side of the Tignes bowl - and large areas of the
Val sector, too - is limited by the time you spend riding
slow chair lifts.
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What's
Great
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What's
Not-So-Great
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Good snow guaranteed for a long season - about the
best Alpine bet
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One of the best areas in the world for lift-served
off-slope runs
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Huge amount of terrain for all standards, shared
with Val-d'Isère
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Lots of accommodation close to the slopes (though
there is also quite a bit that involves some
walking)
+
Swift access to Val-d'Isère slopes
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Resort buildings spoil the views from the slopes
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Bleak, treeless setting - no woodland runs to
retreat to on ~bad-weather days, and many slopes
liable to closure after heavy snow
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Still lots of long, slow chair-lifts
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Poor mountain restaurants
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Near-beginners have to go over to Val-d'Isère to
find long green runs
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Limited après-ski
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Learn
more about Tignes
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