Timberline Lodge

title: "Timberline Lodge" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["works-progress-administration-in-oregon", "national-historic-landmarks-in-oregon", "national-register-of-historic-places-in-clackamas-county,-oregon", "rustic-architecture-in-oregon", "hotels-in-oregon", "hotel-buildings-completed-in-1935", "mount-hood", "hotels-established-in-1935", "mount-hood-national-forest", "buildings-and-structures-in-clackamas-county,-oregon", "tourist-attractions-in-clackamas-county,-oregon", "historic-american-buildings-survey-in-oregon", "1935-establishments-in-oregon", "hotel-buildings-on-the-national-register-of-historic-places-in-oregon", "gilbert-stanley-underwood-buildings", "federal-art-project"] topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timberline_Lodge" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::data[format=table title="Infobox NRHP"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Timberline Lodge |
| nrhp_type | nhl |
| image | Timberline Lodge 2014.jpg |
| caption | Timberline Lodge in 2014 |
| nearest_city | Government Camp, Oregon |
| coordinates | |
| locmapin | USA Oregon |
| map_caption | Location in Oregon |
| built | 1936–1938 |
| architect | Gilbert Stanley Underwood, W. I. Turner, Linn A. Forrest, Howard L. Gifford, Dean R. E. Wright |
| architecture | Rustic Cascadian Neovernacular |
| added | November 12, 1973 |
| designated_nrhp_type | December 22, 1977 |
| refnum | 73001572 |
| :: |
::callout[type=note] the building ::
| name = Timberline Lodge | nrhp_type = nhl | image = Timberline Lodge 2014.jpg | caption = Timberline Lodge in 2014 | nearest_city = Government Camp, Oregon | coordinates = | locmapin =USA Oregon |map_caption=Location in Oregon | area = | built = 1936–1938 | architect = Gilbert Stanley Underwood, W. I. Turner, Linn A. Forrest, Howard L. Gifford, Dean R. E. Wright | architecture = Rustic Cascadian Neovernacular | added = November 12, 1973 | designated_nrhp_type = December 22, 1977 | refnum = 73001572
Timberline Lodge is a mountain lodge on the south side of Mount Hood in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States, about 60 mi east of Portland. Constructed from 1936 to 1938 by the Works Progress Administration, it was built and furnished by local artisans during the Great Depression. Timberline Lodge was dedicated September 28, 1937, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The National Historic Landmark sits at an elevation of 6,000 ft, within the Mount Hood National Forest and is accessible through the Mount Hood Scenic Byway. Publicly owned and privately operated, Timberline Lodge is a popular tourist attraction that draws two million visitors annually. It is notable in film for serving as the exterior of the Overlook Hotel in The Shining (1980).
The lodge and its grounds host a ski resort, also known as Timberline Lodge. It has the longest skiing season in the U.S., and is open for skiers and snowboarders all 12 months of the year. Activities include skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing, hiking, biking, and climbing.
Design and construction
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Snow-Goose-Weather-Vane.jpg" caption="Bronze "snow goose" [[weather vane]] above the head house"] ::
| align = right | direction = vertical | width = 220 | image1 = Timberline-Lodge-Newel-Post.jpg | alt1 = | caption1 = Purchased for $2.10 each, discarded cedar utility poles were repurposed as newel posts—19 of them crowned with carvings of area wildlife. | image2 = Timberline-Lodge-Fire-Screen.jpg | alt2 = | caption2 = Fire screen made from tire chains and irons forged from old railroad rails | image3 = Operation and Information WPA Camp-1936.jpg | alt3 = | caption3 = WPA workers lived in a nearby tent city while building Timberline Lodge (1936). Timberline Lodge, a mountain lodge and resort hotel, is a four-story structure of about 40,000 ft2. The ground-level exterior walls are heavy rubble masonry, using boulders from the immediate area, and heavy timber is used from the first floor up. The central head house section is hexagonal and 60 ft in diameter, with a six-sided stone chimney stack 90 ft high and 14 ft in diameter. Each of the six fireplace openings—three on the ground floor, three on the first floor—is 5 ft wide and 7 ft high. Two wings, running west and southeast, flank the head house. Oregon woods used throughout the building include cedar, Douglas fir, hemlock, western juniper and ponderosa pine. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0f/Timberline_lodge_fireplace.jpg" caption="Fireplace in the main headhouse"] ::
The architect of Timberline Lodge is Gilbert Stanley Underwood, noted for the Ahwahnee Hotel and other lodges in the U.S. national park system. He produced the designs. Then, his central head house was modified from an octagon to a hexagon by U.S. Forest Service architect W. I. (Tim) Turner and the team of Linn A. Forrest, Howard L. Gifford and Dean R. E. Wright. A recent graduate of the University of Washington, forest service engineer Ward Gano was structural designer. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/45/West_Wing_of_Timberline_Lodge,_Mid-March.jpg" caption="West Wing of Timberline Lodge"] ::
Timberline Lodge was constructed between 1936 and 1938 as a Works Progress Administration project during The Great Depression. Eighty percent of the WPA's $695,730 total expenditure on building costs went toward labor. Skilled building trade workers received ninety cents an hour; unskilled laborers received fifty-five cents an hour. Some of the skilled stonemasons on the project were Italian immigrants brought in after working on The Historic Columbia River Highway and other roads in Oregon. About a hundred construction workers were on site at a given time, and lived at a nearby tent city. Jobs were rotated to provide work.
Materials costs were minimized by the skillful use of recycled materials. Women wove draperies, upholstery, and bedspreads. Hooked rugs were made from strips of old Civilian Conservation Corps camp blankets. Discarded cedar utility poles became newel-posts with their crowns hand-carved into birds, bears, and seals. Fireplace screens were fashioned from tire chains. Andirons and other iron work were forged from railroad tracks. WPA workers used large timbers and local stone from the site.
"All classes, from the most elementary hand labor, through the various degrees of skill to the technically-trained, were employed," reported the WPA's Federal Writers' Project. "Pick and shovel wielders, stonecutters, plumbers, carpenters, steam-fitters, painters, wood-carvers, cabinet-makers, metal workers, leather-toolers, seamstresses, weavers, architects, authors, artists, actors, musicians, and landscape planners, each contributed to the project, and each, in his way, was conscious of the ideal toward which all bent their energies."
Federal Art Project
Federal Art Project contributions to the project were directed by Margery Hoffman Smith, Oregon Arts Project administrator. Smith created many designs for textiles and rugs. She designed the iconic "snow goose", the 750 lb bronze weather vane above the head house. Smith based the abstract forms incised into the lodge chimney on the art of the local Tenino people. Likely-acquainted with William Gray Purcell, a fellow resident of Portland, Smith saw the Prairie School aesthetic carried through in tables, chairs, sectional sofas, columns, bedspreads, draperies, lampshades, and pendant lighting fixtures. She commissioned murals, paintings and carvings from Oregon's WPA artists.
Dedication
| align = right | direction = vertical | width = 220 | image1 = Timberline-Lodge-Plaque-HABS.jpg | alt1 = | caption1 = Dedication plaque | image2 = FDR-Dedicating-Timberline-Lodge-1937.jpg | alt2 = | caption2 = Franklin D. Roosevelt at lectern, dedicating Timberline Lodge (September 28, 1937)
During an inspection tour of government activities in the western U.S., President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated Timberline Lodge on September 28, 1937. In his speech, he said:
::quote This Timberline Lodge marks a venture that was made possible by WPA, emergency relief work, in order that we may test the workability of recreational facilities installed by the Government itself and operated under its complete control.
Here, to Mount Hood, will come thousands and thousands of visitors in the coming years. Looking east toward eastern Oregon with its great livestock raising areas, these visitors are going to visualize the relationship between the cattle ranches and the summer ranges in the forests. Looking westward and northward toward Portland and the Columbia River, with their great lumber and other wood using industries, they will understand the part which National Forest timber will play in the support of this important element of northwestern prosperity.
Those who will follow us to Timberline Lodge on their holidays and vacations will represent the enjoyment of new opportunities for play in every season of the year. I mention specially every season of the year because we, as a nation, I think, are coming to realize that the summer is not the only time for play. I look forward to the day when many, many people from this region of the Nation are going to come here for skiing and tobogganing and various other forms of winter sports." ::
He dedicated the lodge, saying, "I am here to dedicate the Timberline Lodge and I do so in the words of the bronze tablet directly in front of me on the coping of this wonderful building: 'Timberline Lodge, Mount Hood National Forest dedicated September 28, 1937, by the President of the United States as a monument to the skill and faithful performance of workers on the rolls of the Works Progress Administration'".
FDR and Eleanor Roosevelt enjoyed a celebratory luncheon including salmon and huckleberry pie. In her My Day column, Mrs. Roosevelt praised the lodge's architectural features: "It is built exclusively of native products and by WPA labor. The interesting central fire place with its many openings is a feature I have seen in no other building of its kind and no where have I seen such big timbers used. All the furniture, all the hangings, all the iron work as well, were made by WPA workers. Here is a group of workers who have the makings of a handcraft organization, and I hope their work will be appreciated. Mr. Griffith, the state WPA administrator, must be happy over the work done here."
Most work was complete at the time of the dedication. After some interior details were finished, the lodge opened to the public February 4, 1938.
Operation
Main article: Timberline Lodge ski area
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/15/Full_view_of_the_Headhouse_at_Timberline_Lodge.jpg" caption="View of the Headhouse in the lodge during the holiday season"] ::
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Inside_Timberline_Lodge_-_The_Mountain_View.jpg" caption="View from the lodge windows during summer" alt="photo shows a table in front of a large set of windows and outside the windows, Mt. Hood is visible"] ::
Franklin Roosevelt's vision of winter sports at Timberline Lodge took hesitant steps the following year. A portable rope tow was installed, and construction began on the Magic Mile chairlift, which opened November 1939.
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/Mt._Hood_and_Timberline_Lodge,_1943.jpg" caption="World War II]], Timberline Lodge fell into decline."] ::
In the lodge's early years, none of its four operators were willing or able to maintain it. By 1955, Timberline Lodge was closed. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/View_from_Timberline_Lodge_Room.jpg" caption="View from Timberline Lodge Room in Winter"] ::
Richard Kohnstamm, the next operator, recalled difficulties due to financing problems because the government claimed they owned it. Kohnstamm decided to maintain the place as if he owned it; he lost money during his first five years of operation, but his timing was fortuitous. He took over only a few years before skiing exploded in popularity in the late 1950s. That popularity helped the family generate a profit starting in 1960. Kohnstamm, "the man who saved Timberline", died at the age of 80 on April 21, 2006. Kohnstamm's son Jeff is the Area Operator of Timberline Lodge.
As a shooting location
Film
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7e/Timlodge.jpg" caption="Timberline Lodge in the summer of 2006"] ::
Exterior views of Timberline Lodge were used in The Shining (1980), Stanley Kubrick's film adaptation of Stephen King's 1977 novel set at the fictional Overlook Hotel. The staff and owners were concerned that guests would be reluctant to stay in Room 217 if it were featured in a horror movie; the management requested the room number be changed to the fictional Room 237, which Kubrick granted. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/77/Timberline_Lodge_Maintenance_and_Transport_Tractors.jpg" caption="Timberline Maintenance and Transport Tractors"] ::
Other feature films shot at or around Timberline Lodge include Jingle Belles (1941), Bend of the River (1952), All the Young Men (1960), Lost Horizon (1973), Ski School (1991), Hear No Evil (1993), and Wild (2014).
Television
Brief exterior views of a snowy Timberline Lodge were used as a stand-in for a "Bavarian Ski Resort" in multiple episodes of Hogan's Heroes. Director Boris Sagal was killed in an accident on the third day of filming the NBC-TV miniseries World War III (1982), after he walked into the tail rotor blades of a helicopter in Timberline Lodge's parking lot.
Events
In 2017, the inaugural Overlook Film Festival was held at Timberline Lodge. The following year, the festival moved to New Orleans, Louisiana.
On April 18, 2024 a fire broke out at the lodge requiring multiple fire agencies to respond.
Climate
|location = Timberline Lodge 45.3319 N, 121.7102 W, Elevation: 6001 ft (1991–2020 normals) |single line = y
|Jan high F = 33.4 |Feb high F = 34.1 |Mar high F = 36.5 |Apr high F = 39.6 |May high F = 47.9 |Jun high F = 54.2 |Jul high F = 64.9 |Aug high F = 65.4 |Sep high F = 59.1 |Oct high F = 47.3 |Nov high F = 37.2 |Dec high F = 32.4
|Jan mean F = 28.1 |Feb mean F = 27.8 |Mar mean F = 29.2 |Apr mean F = 32.0 |May mean F = 39.2 |Jun mean F = 45.0 |Jul mean F = 54.3 |Aug mean F = 54.8 |Sep mean F = 49.7 |Oct mean F = 39.9 |Nov mean F = 31.7 |Dec mean F = 27.3
|Jan low F = 22.8 |Feb low F = 21.5 |Mar low F = 22.0 |Apr low F = 24.4 |May low F = 30.5 |Jun low F = 35.8 |Jul low F = 43.7 |Aug low F = 44.3 |Sep low F = 40.2 |Oct low F = 32.5 |Nov low F = 26.1 |Dec low F = 22.1
|precipitation colour = green |Jan precipitation inch = 16.37 |Feb precipitation inch = 12.36 |Mar precipitation inch = 12.78 |Apr precipitation inch = 10.13 |May precipitation inch = 6.77 |Jun precipitation inch = 5.36 |Jul precipitation inch = 1.22 |Aug precipitation inch = 1.75 |Sep precipitation inch = 4.17 |Oct precipitation inch = 9.70 |Nov precipitation inch = 16.27 |Dec precipitation inch = 16.72
|Jan snow inch = 95 |Feb snow inch = 102 |Mar snow inch = 89 |Apr snow inch = 59 |May snow inch = 20 |Jun snow inch = 5 |Jul snow inch = 0.1 |Aug snow inch = 0 |Sep snow inch = 6 |Oct snow inch = 21 |Nov snow inch = 40 |Dec snow inch = 106 |Jan snow depth inch = 102 |Feb snow depth inch = 128 |Mar snow depth inch = 144 |Apr snow depth inch = 152 |May snow depth inch = 125 |Jun snow depth inch = 67 |Jul snow depth inch = 16 |Aug snow depth inch = 2 |Sep snow depth inch = 3 |Oct snow depth inch = 11 |Nov snow depth inch = 35 |Dec snow depth inch = 71 |year snow depth inch = 154 |source 1 = National Weather Service (snow depth 1995-2025) |url = https://xmacis.rcc-acis.org/ |publisher = National Weather Service |title = NOAA Online Weather Data |access-date = September 6, 2022 |source 2 = PRISM Climate Group{{cite web |url= http://prism.oregonstate.edu/explorer/ |title= PRISM Climate Group, Oregon State University |publisher= PRISM Climate Group, Oregon State University |access-date= October 4, 2023 |quote= To find the table data on the PRISM website, start by clicking Coordinates (under Location); copy Latitude and Longitude figures from top of table; click Zoom to location; click Precipitation, Minimum temp, Mean temp, Maximum temp; click 30-year normals, 1991-2020; click 800m; click Interpolate grid cell values; click Retrieve Time Series button.}}
References
References
- "Listing of National Historic Landmarks by State: Oregon". [[National Park Service]].
- {{NRISref. 2007a
- "Mt. Hood Scenic Byway". National Scenic Byways Program.
- "Historic Preservation". Timberline Lodge.
- Federal Writers' Project. "The Builders of Timberline Lodge". Essay for the proposed Federal Art Project report to Congress, Art for the Millions (unpublished).
- (November 12, 1973). "Timberline Lodge, National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form". National Park Service.
- Wheaton, Rodd L.. "Gilbert Stanley Underwood". [[National Park Service]].
- (June 8, 2008). "Timberline Lodge: A Legacy from the WPA". [[United States Forest Service]].
- Associated Press. (April 26, 1998). "Timberline Lodge engineer dies at 84". [[The Register-Guard]].
- Munro, Sarah. "Oral history interview with Ward Gano". [[WorldCat]].
- Dorner, Sydney. (2024-04-19). "'Structure anywhere in the country that is like Timberline': Timberline Lodge pivotal in Oregon History".
- "September 28, 1937". [[Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum]].
- (September 28, 1937). "Works of Franklin D. Roosevelt: Address at Timberline Lodge". New Deal Network.
- (2009). "When Art Worked: The New Deal, Art, and Democracy". [[RCS MediaGroup.
- Roosevelt, Eleanor. (September 30, 1937). "My Day". [[The George Washington University]].
- "About the Lodge". Friends of Timberline.
- Nafsinger, Janie. (February 21, 2005). "The man who rescued Timberline Lodge". Lifestyles Northwest.
- ''[[The Oregonian]]'' April 25, 2006
- Munro, Sarah Baker. (2009). "Timberline Lodge: The History, Art, and Craft of an American Icon". Timber Press.
- (2006). "Feature Films and Made for TV Movies Made in Oregon". Asia-Pacific Productions.
- "The Shining". Timberline Lodge.
- (2017-12-22). "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARCHIVE: Snowtime Serenade (1949; originally released as Jingle Belles, 1941)". Oregon Film.
- Neville, Tim. (November 7, 2014). "Behind the Scenes of ''Wild''".
- Kennedy, Shawn G.. (May 24, 1981). "Boris Sagal, 58, Movie Director, Dies After a Helicopter Accident". [[The New York Times]].
- Bishop, Bryan. (May 3, 2017). "How the Overlook Film Festival Turned Itself into a Living, Breathing Horror Movie".
- Kohn, Eric. (November 1, 2017). "America's Most Exciting New Horror Film Festival Is Moving to New Orleans".
- Miska, Brad. (April 26, 2019). "The Overlook Film Festival Heads Back to New Orleans with 21 Features".
- Rife, Katie. (June 7, 2019). "Spirits were high for the Overlook Film Festival's druggy, devil-worshipping return to New Orleans".
- (April 19, 2024). "Firefighters douse a blaze at a historic Oregon hotel famously featured in 'The Shining'". [[Washington Post]].
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