Tanzi Propst/Park Record
Adolph Imboden for decades offered a classic dish as an answer to a classic winter day in Park City.
In an homage to his Swiss upbringing, the namesake Adolph’s Restaurant specializes in fondue. The comfort food and other Swiss dishes are the specialty of the Kearns Boulevard restaurant, long a popular destination for Parkites looking for a high-quality option off Main Street.
“Fondue first, because it’s an experience,” Imboden said on Monday, describing the dish as something that visitors to mountain resorts seek, and adding, “It’s something you have in a ski resort.”
The Park City Police Department last week received a report involving a rental listing that may have been fraudulent.
The agency on Wednesday, March 31 at 10:30 a.m., was told of a property on Calumet Circle that had been listed online as a rental. The property, though, belongs to the person who contacted the police, according to department logs.
The department listed the case as a citizen assist.
Similar cases, though, are sometimes reported as suspected fraud. The logs did not provide details about the listing.
The department has long received reports of suspected frauds involving rental listings. In many of the cases, the person files a report with the police prior to losing money in some kind of scheme. In other instances, the person had already sent or wired funds by the time the police were contacted.
Park City’s elected officials during a public hearing Wednesday heard impassioned testimony about City Hall’s proposed arts and culture district planned near the intersection of Kearns Boulevard and Bonanza Drive. Both supporters and opponents shared their opinions on the project.
Courtesy of Park City
Park City leaders on Wednesday night received more than an hour of divergent testimony about City Hall’s plans to develop an arts and culture district, hearing from a broad range of speakers a veritable artist’s palette as important decisions near regarding the especially ambitious municipal project.
The debate about the district intensified in recent months amid concerns about financing as the economic impacts of the spread of the novel coronavirus continue. Much of the formal discussion during that time, though, involved Mayor Andy Beerman and the Park City Council with a limited amount of public input. The meeting on Wednesday, in contrast, was designed to take commen
The Park City Police Department last week and early in this week responded to a series of canine-related reports, including a incident involving two dogs falling through ice in Park Meadows. The police regularly receive calls about dogs, but a concentrated series of unrelated cases like the recent one is unusual.
On Sunday, March 14 at 10:19 p.m., the police received a complaint from someone on Norfolk Avenue about noisy people in a hot tub. The department logged the case as suspected disturbing the peace.
A driver hit a deer in the vicinity of the intersection of Park Avenue and Kearns Boulevard at 10:16 p.m. The vehicle was damaged, but public police logs did not provide details about the condition of the animal.
On Saturday, March 13 at at 9:26 p.m., a vehicle was left outside a residence on Empire Club Drive and someone was reported to be ringing the doorbell “repeatedly.” The police indicated the circumstances were suspicious.