Instead, he said he would continue to focus his energy on overseeing Air & Style, his vision of a snowboarding, art and music festival, which will present an event in Los Angeles this weekend. Air & Style will also make stops at stadiums in Beijing and Innsbruck, Austria, this year.

White bought into the tour as an owner in 2014 and took it to the Los Angeles area last year, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, where rain forced the cancellation of many of the art installations. Restrictions attributed to a noise ordinance also put a damper on much of the music.

This year, the snowboarding event will feature riders like Mark McMorris, an X Games gold medalist and Olympic bronze medalist, on a 16-story scaffold supporting a snow-covered runway. Participants in the event launch dozens of feet in the air while pulling their best maneuvers for the judges. The discipline, known as big air, has grown in popularity, with an event held in Boston at Fenway Park last week. Big air will make its Olympic debut at the Pyeongchang Games in South Korea in 2018.

White, who does not compete in big air, said he planned to make a run in halfpipe at the 2018 Games, when he will be 31.

“I have plans to go to Korea and possibly the Olympics in China,” he said, referring to the 2022 Games. “I’m definitely far from done competing.”

This week, White unveiled additional plans to expand the Air & Style brand to include halfpipe and slopestyle disciplines — both already in the Olympics — at mountain resorts next season. The three-stop tour will include an event at the Secret Garden resort outside Beijing; another in Laax, Switzerland; and one at Mammoth Mountain, a California resort where White bought an ownership stake this year.

The idea, he said, is to create an international professional tour that unifies the many scattered events that characterize the sport, while carrying forward momentum from the Olympics.