New Effort Aims to Bring Back Shuttered Chateau at Oregon Caves Monument
The Oregon Caves Chateau has been closed since 2018. Now the Oregonian is reporting a group of preservation and tourism agencies is trying to rally support to fund structural improvements and reopen the historic lodge. The six-story chateau, completed in 1934, is in the base of Cave Creek Canyon near the entrance to the Oregon Caves. The lodge has 23 overnight rooms, a 1930s era diner, gift store and formal dining room. Part of nearby Cave Creek actually diverts into the chateau and flows through the dining room. In 1987, the Oregon Caves Chateau received a National Historic Landmark designation. But over the years, the chateau struggled to meet modern hotel needs. Too many cell phones plugged in at the same time would knock out electricity to the whole building. The six-story lodge had no elevator to assist guests with mobility needs. In 2018, the chateau closed for an $8.6 million project to update wiring and plumbing and bring the building up to Americans with Disability Act standards. Friends of the Oregon Caves and Chateau initially planned to contribute an additional $4 million toward the project. But by 2020, the project to update the chateau had exposed bigger problems with the building's structural foundation. An additional $4.5 million was allocated by the National Parks Service for "an immediate stabilization project." And while the immediate stabilization work continues, plans to reopen the chateau have stalled. A coalition of groups held a media briefing this week to drum up support for the funding. They represented the Friends of the Oregon Caves and Chateau, Travel Southern Oregon, the National Parks Conservation Association, Restore Oregon, Visit Grants Pass, and the Illinois Valley Chamber of Commerce.