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Giant wedding tent for elites infuriates wealthy town

They may now diss the bride!

A wealthy New York couple who built a giant wedding tent at the foot of Aspen Mountain has outraged the area’s locals, who are blasting the structure as a garish monstrosity.

Alexandra Steel, 31 — daughter of former New York City Deputy Mayor Robert Steel — and her groom, James Scott, 37, custom-built a 27,000-square-foot tent, chapel and dance floor in a meadow for their wedding on Saturday.

But the setup — which took 50 large trucks hauling heavy scaffolding to build — is bad for the environment and causes traffic jams, locals say.

“What’s happening right now is over the top concerning anything that’s ever happened on the Little Annie Basin,” Glenn Horn, of the Little Annie Homeowners Association, told The Aspen Times.

The couple’s wedding was so elaborate, it sparked complaints in tony and environmentally conscious Aspen.AP
Scaffolding erected in preparation for the couple’s June 14 wedding.AP

“The impacts will be felt with the vegetation and ground recovery . . . There was no notice to the neighbors about the impact of all the activity. There’s no type of erosion control.”

The tent was built on private land belonging to wedding planner John Miller, allowing the couple to skirt the area’s zoning rules, residents claimed.

In April, Miller requested a commercial-use permit from Pitkin County officials for the wedding.

County planning staffers initially rejected the request, citing the “scale and intensity of the operation.”

But a month later, Miller successfully petitioned the county, saying the wedding was no longer “commercial.” He said he wouldn’t be charging the couple — after learning the bride’s father was a chair of The Aspen Institute and former deputy mayor for economic development in New York City.

Now the pristine natural area could take years to recover, locals charged.

“The intensity of this event is extraordinary. It’s quite the ordeal,” said Cindy Houben, head of the Pitkin County Community Development Department.

“There’s a lot of concern regarding the recovery of the basin after this event.”

County Commissioner George Newman blamed city slickers’ flimsy morals.

“It’s unfortunate people come to our county because of the beauty and bring their values with them while not caring or not understanding our values,” he said.

Even Miller conceded the nuptials were a huge undertaking, but urged critics to chill out.

“The wedding is a larger project than I thought it would be. However, the interruption it is causing is for a very short time,” he said in a June 12 letter to The Aspen Times. “Can we just live and let live, sit back and enjoy where we are privileged to live?”

Alexandra Steel lives in the West Village. The couple often attends charity events, including the New York Botanical Garden Winter Wonderland Ball.

They didn’t return calls seeking comment.