Summit is a full-width immersive landing page built for mountain and ski resorts. It guides visitors through a cinematic scroll experience, from aerial drone header to fire-lit lodge interiors, and drives event registrations with a structured form. The dark Rainforest color system, parallax layering, and amber call-to-action accents make the resort feel real before a single word is read.
by Rocket studio
Summit is a single-page immersive resort landing page designed for mountain destinations that need to sell experiences, not just rooms. A full-viewport drone header with a floating frosted-glass search bar sets the tone immediately. As visitors scroll, they move through sequential, full-bleed environments that place them inside a perfect day at the resort. The page closes with an event registration form built for planners and groups.
This template is built for resort operators, venue managers, and marketing teams who want to convert serious planners into registered leads. It works equally well for individual season-pass seekers landing on the page from a storm-cycle search.
Most resort pages feel like brochures. They describe amenities in bullet lists and bury the booking flow three clicks deep. Summit replaces that with a scroll journey that makes the visitor feel the cold air and the pine before they ever reach a form.
You get a complete, single-page layout with every section pre-designed and logically sequenced from arrival to conversion. The structure moves visitors through the resort experience morning to night, then delivers a clean registration moment at the right emotional peak.




Theme
Dark Immersive
Creative direction
Immersive Visual
Color system
Rainforest
Style
Full-Width Immersive
Direction
Event Registration
Page Sections
Full-viewport Drone Header with Search Bar
Parallax Depth Scrolling
Sequential Immersive Scene Sections
Event Registration Form
Dual Conversion Path Design
Rainforest Dark Color System
Who is this landing page template best suited for?
Can the event registration form be customized for different booking types?
Does the template support both corporate and leisure audiences on the same page?
What makes the visual design feel different from a standard resort page?
How many sections does this landing page include?
This template is built around a specific set of design and layout capabilities drawn directly from the brief.
The header fills the entire screen with slow-drifting aerial footage over snow-loaded peaks at golden hour. No competing headline interrupts the landscape. A frosted-glass search bar floats at center, asking for activity type, dates, and group size in one horizontal bar.
Each full-bleed section uses parallax layering to separate foreground snow particles, mid-ground pine trees, and background mountain peaks. As visitors scroll, the mountain feels three-dimensional. The effect reinforces the sense of moving through a real environment rather than reading a web page.
Sections are ordered as moments in a single perfect visit: early-morning lifts, night-skiing corridors lit by amber trail markers, a steaming outdoor pool framed by snowbanks, and a timber-and-stone lodge interior with firelight crossing vaulted ceilings. The sequence builds desire before any form appears.
The primary conversion element appears after the third immersive section, once emotional investment is high. The form captures event type (corporate retreat, wedding, family reunion, or race camp), preferred dates, estimated headcount, and one optional open-text field for planners to self-qualify their needs.
Beneath the registration form, a secondary text link reads "Explore Season Passes." This keeps individual visitors in the funnel without cluttering the primary group-booking flow. Both paths are visible without competing for attention.
The palette pairs deep canopy black and wet moss tones for all backgrounds, glacier melt for readable body text, and fungal amber reserved exclusively for calls to action and hover states. Amber appears only where the page wants a hand to move, keeping visual hierarchy sharp throughout the scroll.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Drone video header | Immerse visitors and prompt activity, date, and group search |
| Morning lifts scene | Open the sequential resort narrative at dawn |
| Night skiing corridor | Shift mood to amber-lit evening energy and trail atmosphere |
| Outdoor pool moment | Deliver stillness and contrast after exertion sections |
| Lodge interior scene | Anchor warmth, fire, and shelter before the conversion ask |
| Event registration form | Capture retreat, wedding, reunion, and race camp leads |
| Season pass link | Retain individual visitors with a secondary booking path |
The visual identity uses a Dark Immersive theme built on the Rainforest color system. Every color choice serves a role, and no decorative color competes with the amber call-to-action signal.
The full-width immersive layout is designed to translate across screen sizes without losing its visual impact. Parallax and video sections adapt so the cinematic quality holds on smaller viewports.
The page is engineered so that conversion feels like a natural next step after an immersive scroll, not an interruption. Timing and placement are deliberate.
Summit fits naturally into a broader travel and hospitality template library focused on high-visual, experience-led destinations. A few additional details worth noting for teams evaluating or customizing this template: