Crater restaurant-gift shop nears completion
Herald and News

Klamath Falls, OR
January 05, 2006
By LEE JUILLERAT
CRATER LAKE – From the outside it looks like an odd-sized snowy hill.
Inside, it’s a pack rat’s nest, with a spaghetti-like tangle of wires and heating ducts along with stacks of drywall and insulation fitted between beams and joists.
Within a few months, after the snow melts and the interior work is completed, Crater Lake National Park and Xanterra Parks & Resorts officials believe the still-under-construction building will help transform the park’s Mazama Village.
“It’s going to be a beautiful building, and it will add a different and nice dimension to Mazama Village and the park overall,” said Chuck Lundy, the park’s superintendent. “I think the building has a great architectural look.”
“This will be the centerpiece of the village,” agreed Craig Peterson, the facility engineer for Xanterra, the park’s concessionaire.
Peterson is overseeing construction of the 10,443-square-foot restaurant-gift shop in the Mazama Village area near the park’s south entrance. Interior work is scheduled to continue through the winter and spring. The cost, including furniture, fixtures and equipment, is $3.2 million.
Construction began last year. Despite winter storms, Peterson expects the building to be ready in June when other Mazama Village facilities – campground, gas station, motel units, laundromat, store and showers – open.
“We are working under some pretty adverse conditions here,” Peterson said. “About the time we shoveled out and were ready to work, we get whoomped by the next storm.”
The yet-to-be-named restaurant-gift shop will replace the Rim Village cafeteria-gift shop, which was closed last year as part of continuing efforts to return Rim Village to its early 1900s appearance.
The new Mazama gift shop will span 1,200 square feet, only slightly larger than the temporary gift shop at the Rim Village Community House and a sharp drop from the 6,000 square feet at the old rim location.
Peterson and Lundy say the new facility will benefit visitors by providing a full range of services in Mazama Village area and reducing congestion at Rim Village. The building is being constructed as part of the concessions facilities improvement program between Xanterra and the National Park Service in conjunction with the park’s visitor services plan.
Peterson is excited because the construction reflects Xanterra’s long-time commitment to environmental sustainability. The building is targeted for LEED Certification (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) by the U.S. Green Building Council.
Features of the building’s “sustainable architectural design” include sustainably harvested wood products, state-of-the-art air circulation systems, an airlock vestibule to limit air infiltration, energy used to reheat interior spaces and formaldehyde-free and post-consumer recycled materials.
Peterson said the facility will be 100 percent powered by renewable energy purchases and has fixtures to reduce water consumption by 40 percent. In addition, the parking lot, with spaces for 35 vehicles and five buses, was redesigned to preserve trees initially targeted for removal.
“Whenever you save water and power you’re definitely saving money down the road,” Peterson said.
Former Xanterra Parks & Resorts general manager Dominie Lenz, who has since moved to company operations at the Grand Canyon, said the facility will be a model for future national park buildings.
“Our goal in constructing this future landmark is to retain the classic lodge look similar to the grandeur of the Crater Lake Lodge,” Lenz said. “We are constructing this building with the intention of it one day becoming a historic landmark.”
The facility will have 35 to 45 employees in the restaurant and gift shop. The main dining area will have seating for 64, with 34 seats in adjacent alternate dining and 36 seats in the outdoor summer patio. The interior will include a rock fireplace, historic park photos and natural wood finishes while the exterior will have cedar siding and stonework.
“We definitely want it to project the National Park Service rustic look,” Peterson said. “There’s some history being done here with work at the Rim and Mazama villages. It’s not often you get to build and make a mark in a national park.”
Other pages in this section
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- Brian Smith plans to answer call of world’s highest peak – December 31, 2006
- Survey says: Snow level ‘nearly normal’ – December 29, 2006
- Fatal crash closes Highway 97 – December 29, 2006
- Under proposal, Crater Lake entry fees would double – December 22, 2006
- Oregon Neutral In Shift From National Parks – December 15, 2006
- Big fee hikes at national parks are a bit too big – December 21, 2006
- Proposal would increase Crater Lake fees – December 18, 2006
- America’s Largest Bald Eagle Festival is President’s Day Weekend 2007 in the Klamath Basin of South Central Oregon – December 19, 2006
- Since You Asked: how much snow does Crater Lake get each winter? – December 14, 2006
- Volunteers become Park Service’s public face – November 28, 2006
- Pacific Crest Trail journey is a repeat performance – November 28, 2006
- Remembering a little boy lost – November 23, 2006
- Memorial Service Scheduled for Boy, 8, Lost at Crater Lake – November 18, 2006
- See old-growth, National Creek Falls on short trail – November 17, 2006
- Pine Beetles Can Set Stage for Disastrous Forest Fires – November 6, 2006
- Mom hopes to use dogs to find son – October 25, 2006
- Search for boy winds down – October 21, 2006
- Ceremony honors missing 8-year-old – October 21, 2006
- Search, hope for Portland boy all but over – October 21, 2006
- Searchers scour woods in vain – October 19, 2006
- Crater Lake Highway Renamed – October 18, 2006
- ‘Frustrating’ search – October 18, 2006
- Boulders, brush and bravery, but no boy – October 18, 2006
- Missing boy faces snow, wind – October 17, 2006
- Searchers continue to look for Portland boy missing near Crater Lake – October 17, 2006
- Snow slows search for boy missing at Crater Lake – October 17, 2006
- Massive search underway for Portland boy missing at Crater Lake – October 16, 2006
- Boy still missing at Crater Lake – October 16, 2006
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- ‘The Good Fire’ – September 25, 2006
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- Bybee Complex Fires – September 14, 2006
- Snow job at Crater Lake National Park in Oregon – September 7, 2006
- Trees of heaven – September 7, 2006
- WebCam now available to view Crater Lake fire – September 7, 2006
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- Bybee Fire Complex Fact Sheet – September 2, 2006
- Crater Lake science and learning center opens – August 28, 2006
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- Lightning-stoked burns still growing – August 27, 2006
- Grand Opening of Science and Learning Center – August 24, 2006
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- Roving the Floor of Crater Lake – August 21, 2006
- Weather makes firefighters work harder – August 20, 2006
- Found in the ashes – August 20, 2006
- Crater Lake due for odd visitor – August 18, 2006
- Army veteran finally gets to run – August 14, 2006
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- Tourists watch fire left to burn at Crater Lake – August 7, 2006
- Terry Richard picks Oregon’s best mountain hikes – August 6, 2006
- Bybee fire use update – August 3, 2006
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- John Carl Owings – August 1, 2006
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- The essence of Oregon summer: visiting Crater Lake – July 23, 2006
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- Gerald L. ‘Gary’ Hathaway – December 12, 2001
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