Chattanooga Times Free Press

RUSTIC LUXURY

Newly renovated Lodge at Fall Creek Falls offers snuggle-in space surrounded by the great outdoors

- BYANNEBRAL­Y//CORRESPOND­ENT

The new Lodge at Fall Creek Falls is a stunning example of how a team of architects, designers and builders can create a building that seems to meld into its surroundin­gs. The lake, the virgin forest, the shoreline — they all work together to bring the new lodge into focus.

As you come over the hill after a peaceful, beautiful drive down Park Road, passing rushing whitewater and stunning forests, the lodge opens before you, spread out at an angle so that every room has balconies overlookin­g Fall Creek Falls Lake.

“All of the rooms have a beautiful view. There’s not a bad view from any of them,” says Zonda Holloway, general manager.

The lodge opened in 1972, and at nearly 50 years old, needed a facelift. But it got more than that —- a total teardown and rebuild. It took more than $40 million and four years, but now complete, rooms are beginning to fill.

When the lodge opened in January, only rooms on the first floor were available. In February, second-floor rooms were opened. By March, rooms on the third floor opened, bringing the lodge to full capacity.

“We’ve been really overjoyed and excited about the interest visitors have shown in the lodge since the grand opening earlier this year,” says Kim Schofinski, deputy communicat­ions director for Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on. “And we appreciate the patience from

the community as the project continued and have been eager to welcome locals and guests from beyond the area back.”

Surrounded by more than 28,000 acres and described by Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee as “one of the most-beautiful spots in all of America,” the new lodge was built to be an ideal destinatio­n for individual­s, families, groups and conference­s looking for escapes in a natural setting, Schofinski adds.

The lodge features 85 rooms, a conference space, a full-service restaurant and a lounge. Visitors have varying options to accommodat­e any desired overnight experience — from primitive tent camping with 222 campsites available in five separate areas to upscale resort-style rooms and cabins.

THE ROOMS

Rooms are larger and much nicer than what guests experience­d in the former lodge. All king rooms have walk-in showers, and queen rooms have tub-shower combinatio­ns. There are rooms for families with bunk beds for the kids or trundle beds they’ll love as well.

“Every kid wants a bunk bed,” Holloway says. “But sometimes parents don’t want them. This gives kids the experience.”

All rooms feature microwaves and television­s, along with private balconies.

The lodge also features three, one-bedroom suites — one on each floor — with wraparound balconies overlookin­g the lake, a larger refrigerat­or than in standard rooms, dining and sitting areas, a half bath off the foyer and a separate king bedroom and bath.

THE RESTAURANT

The new restaurant takes full advantage of its position on the lake. It has a large dining area with tables and booths and two walls of floor-to-ceiling windows overlookin­g the water. A bar with seating is off to one side and has windows that open to a large wraparound patio with ample seating. It’s a place where you can sit and watch as park guests play on the lake and in the pool. Or you may become an unexpected guest, looking down on a wedding happening on the pier below. According to Holloway, the wedding season is in full swing at the park.

(READ MORE: As the population grows in Pikeville, so do restaurant options)

The menu currently offers a limited number of entrees plus daily specials, but there are enough choices to satisfy most any palate. Salads, burgers and sandwiches and more-filling meals, such as Low Country shrimp pasta, smothered chicken, fish and chips, and chopped steak are served for lunch and dinner. Expect an expanded menu as the park is able to hire additional staff. Like most other restaurant­s and businesses, Fall Creek Falls needs more people to fill positions in the restaurant and the lodge.

THE COTTAGES

Fall Creek Falls has 20 cabins located on the lake. Ten are known as Fishermen Cabins and are currently undergoing total renovation­s inside. They have two bedrooms, a half bath and full bath, and balconies over the water, allowing anglers to walk out the door and wet a line from the comfort of the cabin — Tennessee fishing license required. Renovation­s are expected to be complete by mid- to late summer.

There are 10 three-bedroom cabins referred to as Villa Cabins ideal for families. They have a master bedroom with two queen beds, a private bath and a private balcony. Across the living room are two bedrooms that share a bath. One of these bedrooms contains two queen beds, while the other has a single queen bed. Villa Cabins are undergoing facelifts as well, but they remain open while work is being done.

Prefer a stay in the woods? Fall Creek Falls has 10 Landside Cabins, each with two bedrooms, gas fireplace, patio, picnic table and grill. Landside

cabins have two playground­s and a basketball court. Horseshoe pits are available.

Wi-Fi is available in all cabins, and pets are allowed in six of them — three Landside and two Villa cabins and one Fishermen cabin. There is a $20 per pet charge per night.

THE SPACE

The lobby, with its handsome stone fireplace in the center, is the gateway between jaw-dropping scenery courtesy of Mother Nature and comfortabl­e overnight accommodat­ions. A room off to one side has a few games for kids and a small library. The restaurant opens off the lobby, too, with a central kitchen that can also service the convention center with 5,000 square feet of space and state-ofthe-art technology.

Outside, there are two fireplace areas, one in the front of the lodge with seating on large, flat rocks saved from the old lodge. A second fireplace is located on the large patio off of the restaurant overlookin­g the lake and pool with casual seating — the perfect place to sip on a

cocktail from the bar after a day in the outdoors.

The park, one of Tennessee’s largest, has more than 50 miles of trails to explore, including a paved path that is now complete, extending from the lakeside cabins to Fall Creek Falls, an easy, 3-mile walk.

For more informatio­n or to book a stay at Fall Creek Falls, long onto tnstatepar­ks.com and follow the links to a getaway along East Tennessee’s Cumberland Plateau, just about an hour from Chattanoog­a.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY ATTIC FIRE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? With its jaw-dropping 256-foot sheer drop, Fall Creek Falls is one of the tallest waterfalls east of the Mississipp­i River. Access to view the falls is wheelchair accessible.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY ATTIC FIRE PHOTOGRAPH­Y With its jaw-dropping 256-foot sheer drop, Fall Creek Falls is one of the tallest waterfalls east of the Mississipp­i River. Access to view the falls is wheelchair accessible.
 ?? ?? Stones saved from the old lodge surround a fire pit near the entrance to the newly renovated Lodge at Fall Creek Falls.
Stones saved from the old lodge surround a fire pit near the entrance to the newly renovated Lodge at Fall Creek Falls.
 ?? PHOTO BY ANNE BRALY ?? A fireplace that soars to the ceiling is the focal point of the lobby at the Lodge at Fall Creek Falls State Park.
PHOTO BY ANNE BRALY A fireplace that soars to the ceiling is the focal point of the lobby at the Lodge at Fall Creek Falls State Park.

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