An attractive, modern resort built in a traditional style, Verbier is without doubt one of Europe’s top ski resorts. The village lies in a sunny, south-facing bowl with spectacular views of the surrounding peaks. The largest resort of the “4 Vallées” ski region, with over 400km of piste, Verbier is home to some of the most challenging yet rewarding skiing in the Alps. Not only does Verbier have an enormous range and variety of challenging pistes, but it also offers some of Europe’s most exciting lift-served, off-piste skiing. Nowhere is there a more extensive menu of glaciers, couloirs and deep powder bowls for advanced skiers and riders. The Savolèyres and Lac des Vaux sectors provide a more limited playground for intermediates. Five resorts (Verbier, Nendaz, Veysonnaz, Thyon, La Tzoumaz) are tied into one single pass which offers you one of the largest skiable areas in the Alps, but in practice, few skiers venture beyond the limits of the main Verbier lifts Verbier's principal lift station is at Medran at the top end of the village. From here a six-person telecabin runs up to Les Ruinettes (2,200m), the start of the Funispace, a state-of-the-art lift with 30-person stand-up telecabine that runs up to Attelas (2,723m). On one side of Attelas there is some gentle cruising skiing around Lac des Vaux, as well as chair-lift access to the notorious Chassoure-Tortin run, which is always steep, often heavily mogulled but glorious in fresh powder. On the other side of Attelas to Lac des Vaux, there are several other chair-lifts and runs leading to Les Ruinettes, Carrefour and on back down to resort level. There is also access to the La Chaux sector, which offers a few gentle pistes as well as being the starting point for Le Jumbo, a 150-person cable car that runs up to Col des Gentianes (2,950m), from where a further, smaller cable car runs up to the top of Mont Fort (3,330m), the highest point in Verbier's ski area. Verbier's other main ski area is Savoleyres. A telecabin rises up to 2,354m and there are some easy pistes on the south-facing (Verbier) side, as well as runs on the north-facing side down to the village of La Tzoumaz.
Snowboarders are welcomed in Verbier, with its awesome freeriding from Mont Gelé. The 120,000 square-metre terrain park at Les Chaux offers four different runs, separate boardercross and freestyle areas, and music and a bar at the base. Both Mont-Fort and Les Ruinettes have terrain parks with half-pipes and obstacles, and there is a park at Savolèyres.
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