Narada Falls Comfort Station

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Coordinates46°46′31.47″N 121°44′44.65″W / 46.7754083°N 121.7457361°W / 46.7754083; -121.7457361 (Narada Falls Comfort Station)
Arealess than one acre
Narada Falls Comfort Station
Narada Falls Comfort Station, 2015
Narada Falls Comfort Station is located in Washington (state)
Narada Falls Comfort Station
Narada Falls Comfort Station
LocationMt. Rainier National Park
Nearest cityParadise, Washington
Coordinates46°46′31.47″N 121°44′44.65″W / 46.7754083°N 121.7457361°W / 46.7754083; -121.7457361 (Narada Falls Comfort Station)
Arealess than one acre
Built1941 (1941)
Built byNational Park Service, Civilian Conservation Corps
ArchitectThomas Chalmers Vint
Architectural styleNational Park Service rustic
WebsiteNational Park Service - Historic Narada Falls Area
MPSMt. Rainier National Park MPS
NRHP reference No.91000208[1][a]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMarch 13, 1991
Designated WSHRMarch 13, 1991

The Narada Falls Comfort Station is a public restroom situated near Narada Falls in Mount Rainier National Park. Similar to nearby Narada Falls Bridge, the comfort station was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.

Constructed between 1941 and 1942, cost overruns required the combined efforts of the National Park Service and Civilian Conservation Corps to complete the build of the structure. The National Park Service rustic style building, featuring stone masonry and Douglas fir siding, contains a restroom facility and an attached waiting room, known for its bench seating. At the time of the building's historic nomination, the comfort station was considered to be mostly unaltered.

Narada Falls Comfort Station was constructed in conjunction with the National Park Service (NPS) and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) between 1941 and 1942. Initial work by the NPS encountered substantial rock excavation with the subsequent cost overrun requiring the use of CCC labor to finish the project; the efforts were successful in completing the comfort station by the opening of the 1942 recreational season.[2]

The design of the station was created under the Western Region Landscape Engineering Division, with plan approval by Thomas Chalmers Vint, NPS Chief of Planning.[2]

Geography

The comfort station is located north of Pinnacle Peak and Plummer Peak and south of Paradise. It lies east of the Nisqually River and northeast of Longmire. The public toilet building is close to Narada Falls in the south central portion of Mt. Rainier National Park.[2][3]

Architecture and features

Exterior, 2019
Interior, 2015

The one-story, building was constructed in National Park Service rustic style over a concrete foundation and is split into two sections, a 22 ft × 24 ft (6.7 m × 7.3 m) restroom area and a 19 ft × 30 ft (5.8 m × 9.1 m) waiting room. The structure features stone masonry walls to the window sill level, wood framed upper walls, and a slight-pitched timber framed gable roof with extended eaves. Timber posts support the ridge beam of the station. A stone chimney with a stove pipe flue projects from the roof line; the flue is the only noted alteration of the structure. Siding is lapped Douglas fir, laid horizontal at the entrance section and vertical to the right of a stone break. The partition marks the separation of the toilet facilities and the waiting area. The waiting room section contains windows that are double-hung sashes.[2]

The interior comprises a waiting room and a toilet facility separated by the stone chimney. The floor is concrete and the ceiling is exposed, showcasing thick timber rafters made necessary to carry extensive weight loads from snow accumulation. The walls are tongue-and-groove planks, reported as varnished at the time of the NRHP nomination. A continuous wood bench lines the waiting area walls; individual benches are situated within the floor space.[2]

Recreation

The Reflection Lake Snowshoe Trail begins between the comfort station and a nearby maintenance garage. The 4-mile (6.4 km) round-trip hike to the lake usually requires gear such as snowshoes or skis during the winter season.[4]

Significance

Notes

References

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