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Mammoth Mountain Just Unveiled Its Biggest Bike Park Rebuild Since 1987. Here’s the Gear I’d Bring to Film It.

Mammoth Mountain Just Unveiled Its Biggest Bike Park Rebuild Since 1987. Here’s the Gear I’d Bring to Film It.

In 1987, Mammoth Mountain put a chairlift to work in summer. Not for skiing — for bikes. Nobody else had done it. It became the model for every lift-accessed bike park that came after.

Fast forward nearly 40 years and Mammoth just unveiled a multi-year rebuild of that same bike park, developed with trail design firm Gravity Logic — the same team behind Whistler Bike Park. New trails, new lift access, new progression lines. It opens this summer. And I’m already thinking about what I’d bring to film it.

Flat-design illustration of mountain bike park at ski resort with chairlift and alpine trail system
Mammoth is rebuilding the bike park it invented. The filming opportunities are dialed.

What’s Actually New in 2026

For the first time, Roller Coaster Express [4] will open for bike park operations, giving riders faster access to more trails. A brand-new trail connects it to Main Lodge. There’s also a new Upper Flow trail that bridges the gap between advanced terrain and the famous “Flow Drop” — making the jump line at Pipeline more accessible for a wider skill range without gutting the challenge for experts.

Gabe Taylor, Bike Park Brand Manager, said it directly: “This plan is about honoring that legacy while investing in the future.” I respect that framing. Too many resorts chase the gnarly stuff and forget about everyone trying to get there. Mammoth is building a proper progression ladder — green to blue to black, all intentional. That’s rad trail design.

Flat-design illustration of mountain biker on progressive trail with jumps and alpine mountain backdrop
Progression design means better content at every ability level.

The Gear I’d Actually Bring

Bike park filming is different from ski content. You need coverage from multiple angles — helmet POV, follow cam, wide establishing shots. Here’s how I’d kit up for the new Mammoth trails this summer. Note: best viewed on desktop — scroll horizontally on mobile.

CameraBest ForPriceBuy
Insta360 X5Helmet / 360° reframe in post~$499Insta360 ↗
DJI Osmo Action 5 ProChest mount / stabilized POV~$329Amazon ↗
GoPro HERO13 BlackFollow cam / wide establishing~$299Amazon ↗

I’d reach for the Insta360 X5 as my primary. The reframe flexibility in post is unmatched for bike park content — you shoot 360° and choose your angle after the fact, which is huge when you’re chasing a rider down a jump line and can’t predict exactly where the action lands. The DJI Osmo Action 5 Pro rides a chest harness beautifully for that ground-level look. GoPro on a follow cam or for wider establishing shots of the trails.

Flat-design illustration of three action cameras for mountain biking content creation with alpine background
Multi-camera setups turn a bike park lap into a full content package.

Why This Is a Content Opportunity, Not Just a Trail Opening

When a legacy park rebuilds with a design firm of Gravity Logic’s caliber, the content writes itself. New trail character, clear progression, accessible features for first-timers alongside technical lines for veterans — that’s multiple videos, multiple audiences, multiple content pieces from a single day of shooting.

We’ve talked before about how ski resorts with bike parks often undermarket the summer product. Mammoth is clearly not making that mistake — and if you’re planning a trip there this summer to shoot content, I’d get on this early. The new trails will be worth the trip.

Flat-design illustration of summer bike park base area at golden hour with mountain peaks and alpine trees
Golden hour at Mammoth Bike Park this summer. You want to be there.

A mountain that invented lift-accessed riding in 1987 is recommitting to the next 40 years. That’s the kind of long-term vision most resorts talk about and few actually build toward. It’s all downhill from here — in the best possible way.

Are you planning to film at Mammoth this summer? What’s your current bike park filming setup?

Written by
CR
CR is a longtime ski industry professional who spent years driving results inside Fortune 500 companies across technology, marketing, and corporate training before turning that expertise toward the mountain. Now focused on the intersection of ski resort operations and AI, CR builds proprietary tools and frameworks that help resorts identify inefficiencies, unlock new revenue, and create real leverage — without the overhead of traditional agencies or consultants.

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