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		<title>Snow resort guide - Independent reviews of Spain's ski resorts - Snow Magazine</title>
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		<link>https://www.snowmagazine.com/ski-resort-guide/spain</link>
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			<title>Baqueira Beret | Ski Resort Review</title>
			<link>https://www.snowmagazine.com/ski-resort-guide/spain/baqueira-beret</link>
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			<description><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.snowmagazine.com/" alt=""></p><p>From the Baqueira Beret piste map to the best ski schools, ski hire shops and après ski bars, here’s your essential guide to Spain's largest ski resort.</p>
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			<category>Spain</category>
			<pubDate>Fri, 22 Oct 2010 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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			<title>Fórmigal</title>
			<link>https://www.snowmagazine.com/ski-resort-guide/spain/formigal</link>
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			<description><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.snowmagazine.com//images/ski-resorts/spain/introimages/formigal-589962-mountain.webp" alt="" width="578" height="364" loading="lazy"></p><p>One of Spain's larger and well-established ski areas, Formigal was purpose built in the 1950s and opened its first lift in 1964. The resort is located in the centre of the Pyrenean Aragonese region, to the north of the province of Huesca and in the Valley of Tena, close to the French border. It is quite an attractive resort, with most lodges five or six storeys high, and generally designed with a local stone facade and slanting roofs, to give a vaguely chalet-like appearance. It is also relatively compact so that most buildings are within an easy walk of services, although the lifts themselves are on the edge of the resort. They are still within walking distance (the furthest is 800m from the village) but there is a ski bus. In recent seasons the resort has been working hard to transform itself in to a state of the art ski destination. Each individual trail and lift is considered to ensure that it works to the optimum requirement, and measures are taken to eliminate problems such as bottle necks or piste cross-overs; even slowing lifts down in beginner areas for ease of use. This 'plan of excellence' also encourages businesses to guarantee high service standards as well as environmental measures, including the planting of 75,000 pine trees in the Valley. There was a vast expansion and upgrading of the area for the 2004-5 season when 7 new lifts were installed including five hoigh capacity chairlifts - one of them the first eight seater in Spain and two magic carpet lifts. Even the lift operators reportedly break the European norm and are friendly to visiting skiers. Formigal's ski area continues to grow, as do some of the other major Pyrenean resorts. There are long term plans to complete a lift link to other major resorts in the region, Astún and Candanchu.</p>]]></description>
			<category>Spain</category>
			<pubDate>Fri, 22 Oct 2010 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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			<title>Sierra Nevada</title>
			<link>https://www.snowmagazine.com/ski-resort-guide/spain/sierra-nevada</link>
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			<description><![CDATA[<p>Generally regarded as Spain's top ski resort, Sierra Nevada stands alone in the Penibetic mountain range in Andalucia, far from the country's other 30 or so ski areas, the majority of which are located 'up' in the Pyrenées. Once known as 'Sol-y-Nieve' or 'Sun and snow', the resort endeavours to offer the best of both worlds - sunshine and snow - the combination of latitude, altitude and a state-of-the-art snow making system usually allow it to pull this seemingly impossible trick off successfully. It is Europe´s southernmost ski resort, wonderfully close to Spain's famous Mediterranean beach resorts but located by the Iberian peninsula´s highest summits. Sierra Nevada's 'resort´ village', Pradollano is one of Europe's highest, at an altitude of 2,100 meters. The resort is famous for staging the World Alpine Skiing Championships in 1996 after the event had to be cancelled when it was due to be staged there a year before because of lack of snow. Since then the resort has invested still further in its snow-making system, considered Spain´s largest and one of Europe's best such facilities. Even in the case of a complete lack of snowfall, Sierra Nevada can now guarantee the opening of the resort thanks to its excellent snow-making system. The number of guns have doubled, to 200 cannons, 13 low pressure and 187 high pressure units producing nearly 2000 cubic meters of snow per hour on 14 runs. The village area has been greatly upgraded with new alpine-style buildings and environmental improvement scheme. This is good news as the resort was a rather characterless mix of concrete rectangular blocks during its first decades of operation. One of the best assets of the resort is a remarkable underground parking complex with a capacity of 2,880 vehicles. Another is the excellent indoor sports facility providing high altitude athletic training. The resort's Pradollano village offers a variety of services including quality hotels in a range of categories which include jacuzzi, squash, workout areas, sauna, indoor swimming pools, convention and meeting rooms, ski lodges, restaurants featuring local Andalusian and international cuisine, sundecks, night clubs, pubs and bars, discotheques etc. There is also a new medical centre, child day-care centre, banks with ATM´s, supermarkets, sports and fashion boutiques. The resort works closely with Spain's Environmental Agency and the University of Granada has designed a complete programme to protect and preserve Sierra Nevada´s extraordinary wealth, including its geomorphology, landscape, flora and fauna. The area was declared a Biospherical Reserve by UNESCO in 1986. More than two thousand trees of different sizes have been introduced or transplanted throughout the village area. Sierra Nevada was the first European ski resort to introduce the 'green ski pass' to its environmental programme. Three per cent of income received from the sale of ski passes goes towards ecological matters.</p>]]></description>
			<category>Spain</category>
			<pubDate>Fri, 22 Oct 2010 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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