Sandia Peak Tramway

Peregrine
Peregrine
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4 out of 5
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Editor Pick

Sandia Peak Tramway

  • February 10, 2005
  • Rated 4 of 5 by wanderer 2005 from Phoenix, Arizona
Sandia Peak Tramway

Sandia Peak Tramway is the world's longest aerial tram ride. The 2.7-mile ride takes about 15 to 20 minutes to get to the top of Sandia Peak. What a lovely ride it is. It takes you 4,000 feet up to the top. Depending of the time of year, you can see miles of snow or miles of trees. Your tram operator/guide will tell you that a small plane crashed into the mountain in the 1970s, but I've been riding the tram since the '70s and have never seen any wreckage.

The Tramway was the brainchild of Robert Nordhaus, one of the founders and owners of the Sandia Peak Ski Company. On a trip to Europe in the early 1960s, he got the idea from riding similar trams over there. What a great idea, so skiers could avoid the half-hour or longer drive to the top of the mountain on icy roads.

After a long 2 years in the planning stages, the tram took 24 months to build. The first ride was on May 7, 1966. Thirty-nine years later, it’s still a major attraction for New Mexico.

There’s a wonderful restaurant at the top called High Finance, and they’re known for their prime rib and seafood dishes, not to mention the view. You still have to pay full price for the ride up, but dinner is definitely worth it, especially at sunset. Reservations should be made, just in case.

Each spring and fall, the tramway closes for 2- week period for maintenance. You can go to their website for the info. www.sandiapeak.com. Rates are $15 for adults and $9 with a ski lift ticket. Closing hours vary from summer to winter, but it opens at 9am every day. You can ride the ski lift all year-round for another nominal fee. Sandia Peak has great hiking and mountain biking as well.

From journal Great Food in an Unlikely Place

Editor Pick

Sandia Peak Tram

  • June 29, 2004
  • Rated 4 of 5 by BawBaw from Small Town, West Virginia
Sandia Peak Tram

It may surprise many to learn that the world's longest aerial tramway is located in Albuquerque. From its base on the desert floor at the foot of Sandia Peak to the mountain's 10,378-ft summit, the tram travels a 2.7-mi round trip above some of New Mexico's most magnificent terrain. Inside the large tramcars, passengers enjoy a succession of extraordinary views encompassing roughly 11,000 square miles of mountains, deserts, and mesas—including vast expanses of the Cibola National Forest, the Rio Grande Valley, remnants of extinct and dormant volcanoes along the western horizon, and a series of spectacular canyons on the western face of the Sandias.


Tickets for the tram are purchased at the base station and are generally for a specified departure time. Once on the summit, visitors are free to explore the Peak's attractions, returning down the mountain on the first available tramcar. The tram’s Peak complex houses the High Finance Restaurant and Tavern, a gift shop, and a nature center—all linked by railed platforms and walkways taking full advantage of the panoramic views.


Activities on the Peak include hiking, biking, skiing, and fine or casual dining. Chair and surface lifts on the eastern face of the Peak offer scenic tours year-round and access to 25 miles of slopes during the ski season. Evening diners can reserve their tables, take discounted tram fares to the Peak, and enjoy spectacular desert sunsets as a memorable mealtime entertainment.


Himself and I found the hiking trails well kept, wide, and easy to follow—inviting even for aging lowlanders like ourselves. Nature offers marvelous views of both sides of the Sandias and provides plenty of resting places for catching one's breath—no small requirement at an elevation of over 10,000 feet. At one off-path location, we sat gazing in awe at a succession of ridges and outcrops extending west and south below us. We found it impossible to resist the lure of inching toward a glimpse over the edge of the world. And literally at our feet, we found the fossilized impressions of seashells. The same earth that now occupies a position high atop this geologically young mountain range was once part of a vast seabed.


A ride on the tram is, literally above all, a photographer's dream. On my last trip up, armed with my trusty digital, I took more than a 150 "keepers" within a space of about 4 hours. While on the gondola itself, the key challenges faced by photographers are (1) making sure they position themselves next to one of the large windows and (2) doing their best to compensate for the sun's glare through those windows. Once on the summit, the chief hazard involves curbing the photographer's mad urge to rush to the sharp edge of a long drop in order to capture a magnificent panorama. All these hazards can be managed to the safety and satisfaction of most photographers—even for not-so-surefooted grandmas.

From journal Albuquerque - Cultural Crossroads of the Southwest

Editor Pick

Sandia Peak Tram

  • July 21, 2000
  • Rated 4 of 5 by Peregrine from , New Mexico
For nearly three miles, the Sandia Peak Tram hangs suspended over wilderness as it slowly glides above the rocky slopes of Sandia Mountain on its journey from high desert to mountain pines.

Once at the top, the view of Albuquerque and the Rio Grande Valley 5000’ below is spectacular. Definitely wide open spaces and big sky. The last time we took visitors up the tram there was snow on the ground, but in spring the wildflowers cover the meadows. In the fall, New Mexico’s most glorious time, the aspens turn the mountainside gold. If you want to haul your mountain bike up the hill, there are trails for you, too, and, in winter, when there is enough snow, the ski runs start here.

Hungry? Try the High Finance, a few steps from the top of the Tram. They serve lunch and dinner, but I’ve only been there for dinner. They serve the usual steak and seafood type menu, but the food is good enough to match the spectacular view. My favorite time to dine? Sunset.

If you are afraid of heights, or don’t want to spend the $14.00 per person to ride the tram, you can drive up the east side of the mountain on the Sandia Crest Highway. You’ll end up a couple of miles north of the Tram. Or, if you really want to experience the mountain, you can hike up the La Luz or Pino Trails.

From journal Albuquerque, Santa Fe's cosmopolitan neighbor

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