2C THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 2016 BUILDING IN THE WILD Luxury lodge rising deep in the wilderness By TIM TRAINOR East Oregonian hen the Minam River Lodge was built in 1950, live- stock hauled in most of the equipment. A sawmill was constructed on site to build the lodge and cabins, but mules provided the muscle when a 400-pound refrigerator needed to travel up and down the mountains to its new home deep in the woods. Now, 56 years later, as the crumbling lodge and old refrigerator is being replaced, some things have changed but many have not. The helicopters are new. Construction manager Ben Gates, of UP Architecture in Portland, conscripted copters to make 97 supply drops into the 127-acre inholding that is surrounded entirely by the Eagle Cap Wilderness. Every- thing from timber to glass touched down at a small air- ield within sight of the main lodge. At a cost of more than $2,000 an hour to rent a heli- copter, just bringing in sup- plies cost “six igures,” said lodge owner Barnes Ellis. Ellis is a former reporter for The Oregonian turned investment banker who lives in Portland. He vacationed at the property growing up and purchased the property at auc- tion in 2011. “There is no forgetting this place,” he said. W E.J. Harris/East Oregonian Crews work on rebuilding the Minam River Lodge in the Eaglecap Wilderness Area east of La Grande. Needed work. Lots of it But it needed work. Lots of it. Decades of erosion had rendered the main lodge unsalvageable, and a smatter- ing of cabins and outbuildings needed major renovation or outright replacement. For the past ive years, that work has slowly progressed. But this spring, after the slow melted, it hit high gear. The business has been closed for all of 2016 as the main lodge was destroyed and a new one erected. “This has grown into a major, major project. If I knew when I started how much work it would take I’m not sure I would have started,” joked Ellis. “But now we’re into it and we’re going for it.” The plan is to build a 4,000-square-foot luxury lodge in the middle of the Eagle Cap Wilderness, where visitors can enjoy high-quality food, running water, showers, electricity and numerous ame- E.J. Harris/East Oregonian Jacob Stevens of Elgin strips the bark off of logs that will by used to rebuild the barn at the Minam River Lodge east of La Grande. nities. Electricity is currently supplied by a combination of solar power and gas genera- tors, though Gates said when construction is complete, solar could supply nearly all the necessary power. The cost will be steep — roughly $500 a night to rent a large cabin — and that does not include the cost of get- ting there. Ellis expects he will help many of his custom- ers charter a plane from Enter- prise, Joseph or La Grande to ly into the lodge. Others will hump it. The closest trailhead is Moss Springs, about 8.5 miles away, and some will travel the route on horseback while ? 9-1-WHAT? THE BEST OF THE WORST CALLS TO ASTORIA 911 DISPATCH others will use their own two feet. For the more economical traveler, Minam River Lodge will offer raised platform beds with linens, in a teepee or wall tent, for roughly $100 a night. That allows customers to make use of communal show- ers and a wood-ired hot tub. Enjoying the natural world Ellis imagines the lodge as a place where both types of people will meet, con- verse, dine together and enjoy the natural world arrayed in front of them. The Minam River can be seen from the currently-under-construction deck, water that both threat- ened salmon and bull trout call home. Hunters will be another main customers base since they have nearby access to elk, bear, cougar, deer and more. Ellis envisions visitors forking over $500 a night to ly in from places like Port- land or Boston and stay for a week, while others will arrive sweaty and hungry and look- ing for a place to rest their head for the night. But irst they’ve got to build the thing. Isaac Trout has served as an on-site construction super- intendent, living and work- ing at the site for much of the year. An avid outdoors- man, he used his bow to bag a mammoth elk within hik- ing distance from the property last year. He said the opportu- nity to live and work in such a beautiful, wild place has been incredible, as is build- ing “something that will be historic.” It hasn’t been easy. Trout and Gates have had to igure out how to erect their lodge without the use of cranes and lifts and other beneits of modern construction. Getting the main joist in place with just a few hands and little more than an ATV took some planning and ingenuity. But that has brought another kind of beneit. “It has forced us to plan in the way that contractors always want to do, but never have time for,” said Gates. No running to the store There is no running to a hardware store for an extra box of nails or sheet of ply- wood — and the waste of hours that entails. Everything had to be accounted for and planned in order to get rigged up for a helicopter ride and then its inal place on the con- struction site. “We’ve been pretty good and pretty lucky,” Gates said. “We don’t have a lot of waste and we don’t have much extra.” Sweyn Wall, of the U.S. Forest Service recreation pro- gram, said the lodge has been good neighbors with the For- est Service. There are a few other inholdings within the 361,000-acre wilderness area, including a few in the upper Minam area. Wall said Barnes and the lodge have been “part- ners on a variety or proj- ects, and we consider our- selves good neighbors.” He said there are important issues that the lodge and For- est Service must stay on the same page on, especially the water system that originates on Forest Service land and the sewage system, as well as how they operate along a Wild & Scenic River. But Wall sees beneits to inholdings and commercial operations such as the Minam River Lodge. “One of the main chal- lenges we face as an agency is trying to keep folks vested,” said Wall. “The more we can encourage people to use and appreciate wilderness, the stronger the argument we have for it.” Halfway complete The construction project is halfway complete, and crews expect it to be open next spring. It is unknown if the lodge will open year-round, but when it is operating it can house up to 30 guests and will employ 11 to 12 people full time. Other contractors will see beneits from the business, including pilots and horse- back outitters who will help ferry and entertain guests. The massive project is a inancial risk, Ellis admitted. But once people see the view from the lodge — and the lodge itself — he thinks they will have a hard time leaving, especially after they contem- plate that 8.5-mile hike back out to civilization. Save our Subarus f they ever take our beloved beaver off the Oregon lag, we nominate the Subaru as a suitable replacement. Sturdy and sensible, the Subaru has served us pretty well. That’s why we think the dude in the Hawaiian shirt who attacked a blue Subaru with a baseball bat in Astoria was probably not local. I Follow reporter Kyle Spurr on his 9-1-What? Twitter watch, where a few of the sometimes head-scratching calls to area dispatch take center stage. The full feed is at www.twitter.com/9_1_WHAT. 3 W AY S TO GE T Y O U R CO PY TOD AY ! OR DER ON LIN E w w w .DiscoverO urCoast.com /order S TOP BY ON E OF OU R 3 LOCATION S A storia • 949 Exchange St. Seaside • 1555 N . Roosevelt Dr. Long Beach • 205 Bolstad A ve. E. #2 o r CALL HOLLY LAR K IN S at 503-325-3211, x227 Em ail: hlarkins@ dailyastorian.com