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Show Hl'i lni Page A4 Thursday, December 23, 1982 Park City News ( Don't be caught unprotected JUDY M. KIMBALL HANLEY Agent No. 202 Silver King Bank Bldg. Park City, Utah 84060 Bus. 649-8656, Res. 649-7607 ' "in ill':''' : di ' (T ')fk llit- photos by David Hampshire I ; t ' SI ' i & ' Z LIFE COMMERCIAL AUTO FIRE jJp S Bonanza im T Salad Bar ( ? seasoned rice, french rolls included in dinner. ' Partial Menu Top Sirloin Shrimp London Broil .. Stuffed Utah $8.95 Trout $8.95 NewYork Fresh Snapper Steak $9.95 Almondine $6.95 Teriyaki Seafood Boat Steak $9.95 alaNewburg. $8.95 1 is Chicken Alaska King Mandarin $7.95 Crab $13.95 Our 11th Year v Wine & Cocktail Jfo "$s Service S J$0. 4w8&& -sasa rGSs ffeWi tSJ- : - SSAm ABOVE: Stein Eriksen welcomes guest Tuesday evening. RIGHT: Sign greets Silver Lake visitors. BELOW: It comes equipped with head phones. Stein takes the wraps off his new lodge by David Hampshire One of the lodge's new employees probably said it best: "It out-Deer Valleys Deer Valley." He was talking about the opulent new Stein Eriksen Lodge, which was unveiled at a reception for Park City residents Tuesday evening. On hand to welcome the guests to their $19-million facility were partners Stein Eriksen, Rick Prince and Paul Dougan. Perched on a ridge at the 8,200-foot level, the lodge overlooks Deer Valley's Silver Sil-ver Lake Lodge on one side and Ontario Canyon on the other. It contains 31 two- and three-bedroom suites, two restaurants, a bar, a sports shop, a health spa with exercise room, sauna, steam room, an outdoor year-round swimming pool, a shop specializing in furs and custom jewelry, a liquor store... "We have all the facilities , here that any first-class hotel can offer," Eriksen says. "And we're located right in the heart of the skiing at 8,200 feet." The lobby has the same spacious feel as the two Deer Valley lodges, with liberal use of oak and pine, huge stone fireplaces, vaulted ceilings reaching, perhaps, 40 feet. "We're trying to create a feeling that belongs to the mountains," says Eriksen. "A lot of rock, a lot of wood, a lot of stucco, slanted roofs with big overhangs." Diners will be able to choose from a Norwegian smorgasbord in the Birke-beiner Birke-beiner room, which is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner, or gourmet fare such as Gaasesteg med aebler og Suedsher (roast goose with apple and prune stuffing) in the Glitretind Room, open for lunch and dinner only. The sports shop will be named Bjornstova (Bjorn's room), in honor of Eriksen's young son. And the furjewelry furjew-elry store will be operated by The Chalk Garden of Trolley Square fame. According to Rand Clark, general manager of the lodge (and former manager of the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas) the complex has 140,000 square feet of useable space. k The lodge proper contains seven suites, with the other 24 divided between the east and west wings. Each suite contains master bedroom and either one or two lockout bedrooms. With each bedroom bed-room comes a full bath, complete with whirlpool tub. And beside the toilet-roll dispenser you'll find a telephone. tele-phone. "Head phones," Clark said. The bathroom faucets may look like slightly-tarnished brass, but they're not. They're gold-plated. 11 . ' A Part of Par part o: curitv k City' ire fllfll Bank, past, Our predecessor bank was founded in Park City almost one hundred years ago by mining magnates, Thomas Kearns and David Keith. Park City has grown a long way since that time and First Security's grown 'i. ir.) 1 1 wiui n. we ve grown anu prospered min - ptfif you because we recognize that as times '1 0ft change, Financial needs change, too. fn We're a full-service bank offering A savings, checking, and credit services that make doing business in Park City possible. When you need banking bank-ing services, turn to the bank that's grown up in Park City-First City-First Security. of Utah, N.A. 1514 Park Avenue Jeffrey L. Thompson, Vice President, Manager Member FDIC , ml i :P7 ''U- 'AW -Mil f fr'M : "This place is going to cater to people who want the very best," Prince says. Handling the interior design for the suites are Park City residents Mary Simos and Anne Prince. The suites also come with amenities like closet lights which come on automatically automatical-ly when the doors are opened. All the units are fully air-conditioned. "I compare it to l'Hermi-tage l'Hermi-tage in Beverly Hills, says Clark, who supervises a full-time staff of 115. Clark is also very proud of the lodge's $110,000 computer compu-ter system, soon to arrive, which will handle all the billing, plus keep in its memory the five most recent visits of all guests, and the suite they used. Clark says the computer will also be able to give an instant breakdown of all previous guests by demographics, demo-graphics, such as zip code numbers. "It's a very, very sophisticated system." The architect for the Stein Eriksen Lodge was Boyd A. Blackner of Salt Lake City. The general contractor was the Cannon Construction Company, which also built the two Deer Valley lodges. Tentative plans call for work to begin on the second phase of the project late next summer. Prince said that it would probably consist of another eight or 16 units, to be completed by late 1984. wmmmmmMmmmmmmi fflffi Park City Furniture has lyd fufU. gifts to go! 6m etched glass boxes, gaggle of G'M H i; , geese, silk flower arrangements, SSj - JiL duck decoys, soft sculpture PiiSU P animals, pottery, brass, and park city furniture & design the emporium, hwy. 248 east p.o. box 1 088, park city, Utah, 84060 801 649-6913 hours mon fri 9:30 5:30 Saturday 10-5 park city's only furniture store 4,000 sq. foot showroom professional design services available. |