Oroville Mercury-Register

Hearst Castle to reopen after pandemic, damage

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California’s famous Hearst Castle will reopen to the public in May after a two-year closure due to the pandemic and severe rainstorm damage that prompted a $13.7 million renovation.

The steep, curvy access road to the palatial home that media mogul William Randolph Hearst built on ranch land overlookin­g the Pacific was damaged by atmospheri­c rivers — storms fueled by long and wide plumes of moistures pulled in from the Pacific — in 2021.

The San Luis Obispo County castle designed by architect Julia Morgan includes a 115-room main house, as well as guesthouse­s, pools and cultivated gardens, according to the California State Parks. Constructi­on dates back to 1919.

The access road, which rises 1,650 feet (503 meters) over 5 miles (8 kilometers),

was “reconstruc­ted and re-engineered” over 10 months, according to state officials. The project included replacing and enlarging

clay pipe culverts from the 1920s that had been damaged by the rainstorms. Some historic stone retaining walls were also restored by hand.

The castle sees about 850,000 visitors annually, meaning about 22,000 bus trips traverse the access road each year. Some travel as often as every 10 minutes in the summer tourism season.

“Hearst Castle is a

state treasure and we are thrilled to reopen this wonder to the public to enjoy in a safe and responsibl­e manner,” California State Parks Director Armando Quintero said in a news release. “We are confident that these once-ina-lifetime repairs and improvemen­ts to the road facility will serve countless generation­s to come.”

The castle will reopen May 11.

 ?? JOE JOHNSTON — THE TRIBUNE OF SAN LUIS OBISPO VIA AP, FILE ?? Smoke from a wildfire billows from a ridge line behind famed facade of Hearst Castle in San Simeon.
JOE JOHNSTON — THE TRIBUNE OF SAN LUIS OBISPO VIA AP, FILE Smoke from a wildfire billows from a ridge line behind famed facade of Hearst Castle in San Simeon.

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