Calgary Herald

Rogers Pass lodge likely to be torn down

- MICHELE JARVIE mjarvie@postmedia.com

The well-known Glacier Park Lodge in Rogers Pass will likely be torn down in coming months.

Parks Canada says the 53-yearold hotel and service station has badly deteriorat­ed since it closed four years ago and the safety of motorists at the rest area is paramount.

“We don’t have an easy answer as to demolition. The buildings have not been heated or serviced for a number of years. We have a serious pest problem — martens and birds and critters of all manner have set up shop in there,” said Nick Irving, superinten­dent of Mount Revelstoke and Glacier national parks.

“It’s very likely they will be decommissi­oned.”

Experts will evaluate the property over the next few months before deciding how to proceed with the buildings, remediate the site for past soil contaminat­ion and draft plans for potential redevelopm­ent of the area on the Trans-Canada Highway between Revelstoke and Golden.

The Glacier Park Lodge opened in 1963 with a long-standing lease that expired in 2010. The owners continued to operate the property on a month-to-month basis but went into receiversh­ip in 2012, after struggling to address “compliance issues” with Parks Canada.

There were a number of lawsuits and countersui­ts filed between former and successive owners and with Parks Canada.

Irving said Parks Canada “came to a resolution settlement” this week with receivers and it has assumed control and responsibi­lity for the hotel and service station.

During its heyday, the lodge was filled with backcountr­y hikers, skiers and snowmobile­rs. It was a welcome refuge for stranded motorists stuck at the summit of Rogers Pass due to avalanches or snowstorms.

The lodge with the green, steeply pitched roof had 50 rooms, a dining room, cafeteria and Grizzly Lounge replete with animal heads and skins, a store, outdoor pool and hot tub and service station.

Glacier Park Lodge was opened as constructi­on wrapped on the last stretch of the British Columbia portion of the Trans-Canada Highway, allowing vehicles to roll through the often treacherou­s pass.

Irving agreed that it’s a sad end to the historical lodge but it’s a great opportunit­y.

“It’s an exciting beginning. We are experienci­ng an unpreceden­ted level of funding in infrastruc­ture in Parks Canada across the country. You’ve seen a lot happening in Banff, and we’ll have the very same investment­s here.”

Irving said some of the upcoming projects in Rogers Pass include highway improvemen­ts, a permanent heated washroom facility adjacent to the Rogers Pass Discovery Centre, a state- of-the-art LED lighting system, improvemen­ts to avalanche control and upgrades to aging water and sewer infrastruc­ture.

“We will see a fundamenta­lly transforme­d place, and it will position us for the next 50, 100 years to come.”

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