BIWABIK, Minn. – The granite crag that gives the Giants Ridge resort its name rises almost 2,000 feet above Superior National Forest, offering visitors panoramic views of the millions of dollars spent by the state of Minnesota to transform a local ski hill into a year-round resort.
But the downhill ski runs, trails and golf courses carved out of the woods and granite of the Mesabi Range have not helped Giants Ridge turn a profit. During the 30 years it's been owned by a state economic development agency created to diversify northeast Minnesota's economy, Giants Ridge has never made money. In the past decade alone, those losses have totaled almost $40 million.
Continued losses and a weak real estate market have forced Giants Ridge's owner, the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board (IRRRB), to shelve plans for a vacation village. In just a few weeks, though, the agency will break ground on a new $12 million event center and ski chalet.
One former member of IRRRB's board questions the wisdom of continuing to invest state money in Giants Ridge.
"I just question whether government should be in the resort business," said Carolyn McElfatrick, a former state representative and a retired registered nurse from Deer River. "It just seems like it's been an albatross."
IRRRB Commissioner Mark Phillips said his agency is examining how to run Giants Ridge more efficiently, but he said annual losses are not the best measure of the resort's importance to the region's economy.
Phillips pointed to a 2012 economic impact study by the University of Minnesota Duluth that concluded that the $3.8 million in annual sales at Giants Ridge pumps nearly $6.3 million into the area's economy in wages and other spinoffs. That impact rises to $8 million if you include business generated by the hotel and Villas, the IRRRB said, and all the property taxes paid.
"So much of our tourism infrastructure is dependent on the golf course and ski hill," Phillips said.