The two were ejected from a gondola climbing Mont-Tremblant when their cable car struck a drilling machine around 11:30 a.m. on Sunday, Quebec provincial police Sgt. Audrey-Anne Bilodeau said.
The Quebec coroner’s office identified the victim as Sheldon Johnson, 50. The second occupant, a woman in her 50s, was in critical condition in a Montreal hospital Monday.
Bilodeau said it’s still unclear why a drilling machine was operating near a moving gondola.
“There was a collision between this drill and one of the gondolas in which these two Ontarians in their 50s were occupants,” Bilodeau said. “Investigators will try to determine the circumstances surrounding this event.”
Representatives from the Mont Tremblant resort, located 105 kilometres northwest of Montreal, and police said the drill belonged to a third party and the incident occurred about halfway up the mountain.
The panoramic gondola takes passengers on a trip to the summit of Mont-Tremblant year-round. A video on the website of the resort operator says the gondola moves slower during the summer and fall to let people take in the view.
Police say the machine first struck an unoccupied gondola before it collided with the second car, inside which were the two Ontarians.
Quebec’s workplace health and safety board is also investigating.
The gondola has been turned off until further notice, and Sunday’s activities on the mountain were cancelled. Flags at the resort were at half-mast on Monday.
Last December, a gondola crashed at the Mont Sainte-Anne resort, near Quebec City, but no one was injured as the cabin was unoccupied.