-- This article is originally from Crater Lake
National Park's website
Landscape architects have certainly made their
mark on establishing recreational access and enhancing the
developed areas at Crater Lake National Park. Large parts of two
locales, Rim Village and Park Headquarters, remain coherent and
comprehensive expressions of rustic architecture. Battered
andesite boulders incorporated into stone masonry of National
Park Service structures make an obvious visual impact by
creating the impression that man's intrusions on the landscape
have grown from the ground. More subtle, of course, are
foundation plantings of native shrubs and sedges which aid in
sublimating these features to their subalpine setting.
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Crater Lake Lodge |

Rim Visitor Center |
Crater Lake Park's recreational base grows from Rim Village
and Crater Lake Lodge (1915, expanded 1923, rebuilt 1991-93) and
what is now a summer visitor center but formerly the Kiser
Studio (1921). Concessioners erected these buildings in the hope
that visitors might link the hotel or photography business with
the central attraction of Crater Lake. As a result, both are
literally perched next to the lake, making them readily apparent
whether one is on the lake or in Rim Village. A sharp
distinction between structure and scenery still prevails around
both buildings despite the best efforts of NPS. landscape
architects to mitigate this by transplanting native vegetation
around the lodge and Kiser Studio during the 1930s. Great views
of the lake and surrounding landscape are afforded from the
lodge.
Naturalistic design at Crater Lake eventually reached a high
point between 1927 and 1940. Just a short distance from the
Kiser Studio is a masterpiece of rustic architecture located
atop Victor Rock. Known as the Sinnott Memorial, it is almost
invisible from the surface of Crater Lake. NPS landscape
architect Merel Sager achieved this effect by spending hours
sketching from a row boat so that his design of an overlook and
museum building might fit its surroundings. Opened in 1931, the
Sinnott Memorial continues to be a key feature of the park's
educational program because it allows NPS naturalists to explain
the ecological story of Crater Lake in a way which is reinforced
by what people see. Open from late June through much of
September, this is a logical first stop for many visitors.
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Sinnot Memorial |

Steel Information Center |
Learning and understanding the landscape is an emphasis at
the park. The Steel Information Center, located three miles
south of Rim Village at Park Headquarters, is open all year. It
is where visitors can see how the park fits into its
environment. Situated several hundred feet above the West Rim
Drive, the Watchman Lookout is both a fire lookout and museum.
Opened in 1933, it is accessible by a trail that provides an
inspiring view of the lake and surrounding forests from an 8,000
foot peak.
Completed in 1936, the Administration Building is located
next to Steel Center. As seen against a ridge formed by the
eastern flank of glacially-carved Munson Valley, it is easy to
comprehend how materials, scale, shade, and shadow associated
with this structure effectively harmonize with the larger scene.
Landscape architects prevented automobiles from dominating this
most prominent part of Park Headquarters by siting the building
between two parking areas. In doing so, they allowed for
circulation by using an ellipse which reduces congestion and the
impacts on vegetation.

Superintendent's Residence
Since 1989 several NPS historians and landscape architects
have helped to shift the focus of cultural resource management
efforts at the park. An approach centering on preserving
structures only has been de-emphasized in favor of managing the
larger built landscape, so that Rim Village and Park
Headquarters can now be seen as coherent nodes of naturalistic
design within a broader system.
To a large extent, the physical conditions governing Crater
Lake National Park during the 1930s dictated the appearance of
its rustic architecture. These cultural resources should also be
seen, however, as a part of naturalistic design's evolution from
its roots in royal and private estates almost two centuries
before Congress designated the first national park at
Yellowstone in 1872. In that respect, Crater Lake National Park
furnishes a great example of what the eighteenth century
landscape gardener Humphrey Repton termed appropriation —
or comprehensive park design along the same architectural theme.
Consequently, its rustic architecture supplies an unusual
opportunity to study a perception of nature and how this was
manifested in various forms through out the park.
This article first appeared in Oregon Land,
newsletter of the Oregon Chapter, American Society of Landscape
Architects, Spring 1995.

Steel Information Center