NPS and BPR Collaboration on Approach Roads
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Route 8 (North Entrance to Diamond Lake Junction)
Although the NPS used a
bulldozer for widening the Diamond Lake Auto Trail to a
"standard width" in 1930, BPR ran a P-line survey for
the prospective North Entrance Road later that summer. A
section of the proposed alignment proved unsatisfactory
to Sager and other NPS landscape architects since there
was a possibility that it might cut through the middle
of the Pumice Desert as part of a tangent almost 5 miles
in length. Shifting the line half a mile east where it
crossed the Pumice Desert made enough difference to
Sager that he agreed to a new alignment. This one also
kept the road in timber longer so as to reduce any scar
seen from the rim, while also breaking up the tangent to
some extent. Sargent thus staked what became the L-line
in May 1931 and it met with NPS approval shortly
thereafter.
The contract for grading
almost 8 miles of road between the Diamond Lake Junction
and the park's north entrance went to A.C. Guthrie and
Company of Portland in September. Their crew of about
twenty men then cleared the roadway for another month,
until bad weather forced suspension of the job. Rough
grading began when work resumed in July 1932, with the
contractor also required to do a considerable amount of
roadside cleanup, old road obliteration, and slope
rounding. The cleanup came partly in response to
mountain pine beetle infestations during the 1920s in
this part of the park, attacks that resulted in
considerable loss of lodgepole pine. Obliteration of the
old auto trail crossing the Pumice Desert largely
consisted of removing the shoulders, so the old line was
still somewhat visible from afar. Sager, however, "felt
sure" that in several years natural re-seeding of sedges
and other "low vegetation" would help. He also commented
that flattening and rounding of slopes at the road
margin greatly added to the highway's appearance, so
much so that BPR included this item as a specification
for all subsequent grading contracts in the vicinity.

East Rim
Drive near Anderson Point, looking northwest
toward Kerr Notch. |
With the grading contract well
on its way to completion by late August, BPR began
advertising for a surfacing project to encompass both
the West Rim Drive (Route 7-A) and the North Entrance
Road. Like other contracts awarded from 1931 to 1933, it
contained incentives aimed at alleviating unemployment,
such as a cap of thirty hours per week for each man
working under special wage rates. The Homer Johnson
Company of Portland submitted the low bid, but did not
begin the job until August 5, 1933, due to a heavy snow
pack at the rim. With a roadway of 22' already
established by the grading contractor, BPR specified a
surfaced width of 18' on both routes, in accordance with
park highway standards of 1932.
One NPS landscape architect,
Armin Doerner, observed that work was slow in getting
underway, but this comment had more to do with the
subcontracted masonry guardrails along Route 7-A than
the surfacing done by the prime contractor. Johnson
completed the job by October 1934 so that paving both
routes could take place over the following summer. The
paving contractor, J.C. Compton of McMinnville, used the
latter half of the 1935 season to complete all but the
sealing of several miles along the North Entrance Road.
Once construction of this
approach finished in the late summer of 1936, CCC
enrollees began building an entrance sign motif on the
park's north boundary. Its design, which featured a
large wooden sign with raised lettering, hung from a log
projecting horizontally from an imposing stone masonry
motif, matched one for the East Entrance, but visitor
numbers through each "gate" reflected opposite trends.
Motorists using the East Entrance had been declining
steadily once a road connection between U.S. 97 and the
North Entrance through an adjoining national forest was
initially graded in 1931. Increased traffic brought by
the opening of the Willamette Highway nine years later
led to placement of a temporary entrance station on the
park's north boundary, a structure replaced by a
portable kiosk in 1949. NPS planners projected an
adjoining development during this period, something that
included two staff residences, a fire cache, and even a
small campground. The scarcity of water in this
locality, however, restricted facilities to a ramshackle
building used to house seasonal rangers and two pit
toilets.
Developments along the North
Entrance Road during Mission 66 were limited to a
parking area in the Pumice Desert that featured an
island to provide motorists who stopped with some
separation from moving traffic. The parking area
contained an interpretive marker, one originally
intended to convey the "story" of Pumice Desert as well
as identify peaks seen in the distance. Although Mission
66 provided a golden opportunity for funding road
reconstruction over a decade beginning in 1956, the NPS
elected not to widen what had become the park's most
heavily used approach route. Park officials simply saw
the North Entrance Road as lower priority to the
southern approaches used year round.
Widening as part of a
reconstruction project eventually came about as the
result of studies conducted by the Federal Highway
Administration in 1980 and 1983. Planners saw ample
justification for a new road having 28' of surfaced
width, given the traffic volume of 600 vehicles a day,
as well as a need to accommodate both recreational
vehicles and bicyclists. Other key parts of the project
included realignment of the Diamond Lake (North)
Junction, expansion of the parking area where the
Pacific Crest Trail crossed the road, and a new
development near the boundary in accordance with park
expansion approved by Congress in 1980. The latter
consisted of moving the entrance station about 1.5 miles
north to a point where a rest area and turnaround could
be built close at hand. Reconstruction commenced in
1985, but the contractor defaulted, so the project
remained at a standstill over the following year. It
finally came to a close in 1987, with the only
subsequent changes along Route 8 consisting of building
a new checking station four years later, as well as an
entrance sign and motif modeled after the precedent set
by the CCC at the old park boundary.


Looking south
toward the Klamath Basin from Dutton Ridge.
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