Carlsborg business wins contract to move Enchanted Valley Chalet

CARLSBORG — A Carlsborg house moving company has been awarded the Olympic National Park contract to move the historical Enchanted Valley Chalet to safer ground.

The estimated cost is $124,000, and Monroe House Moving Inc. is expected to move the structure — now teetering on the edge of the East Fork Quinault River — during the first two weeks of next month.

A statement from the park Thursday said that once materials and personnel are at the site in the park wilderness, moving the building will take about one week to complete.

The contract covers all necessary labor, supervision, equipment and transportation by either foot or pack mule.

Moving costs

In addition, the National Park Service will provide helicopter transport for equipment and materials that are too large or heavy to be carried by humans or pack stock.

National Park Service staff also will be on the site.

Enchanted Valley Chalet, which is 13 miles from the nearest road, was built as a backcountry lodge in the 1930s, before the creation of the national park.

It is 13 miles uptrail from the Graves Creek trailhead in the Quinault Valley and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.

Storms, fallen trees, rock slides and the constant process of erosion caused the Quinault River fork to change direction and cut a channel to the building.

Monroe House Moving will move the chalet between 50 and 100 feet from the river’s edge.

The Enchanted Valley and Graves Creek Stock Camp will be closed to the public during the project, Park Superintendent Sarah Creachbaum said.

More in News

Crescent School District Superintendent David Bingham is retiring after 41 years with the district, where he began as a paraeducator and boys junior varsity basketball coach. Bingham, a 1980 Port Angeles High School graduate, spent his entire career at Crescent. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Crescent superintendent to retire after 41 years, multiple jobs

Dave Bingham coached basketball, drove a bus and taught many classes

Grant to fund vessel removal

Makah Tribe to use dollars for Port of Neah Bay

x
Home Fund provides transportation reimbursement

Funding supports women getting cancer treatment

Matthew McVay of Bayside Landscaping and Pruning uses a gas-powered pole saw to trim branches off an overgrown gum tree in Port Angeles. Now is a good time for pruning and trimming before the tree saps start moving. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Tree pruning

Matthew McVay of Bayside Landscaping and Pruning uses a gas-powered pole saw… Continue reading

$99M bond to go before Port Townsend voters

District looking for renovations to campus

Presentation highlights tsunami risk, likely generated from an earthquake

Emergency management officials provide scenario, encourage preparedness

Jackson Smart, center with scissors, cuts the ribbon on Wednesday to officially open the newly remodeled section of the Port Angeles Underground Tour. With Smart are, from left, Julie Hatch, Kara Anderson, Elisa Simonsen, Sam Grello and Johnetta Bindas. (Laurel Hargis)
Section of underground tour dedicated to Port Angeles man

Jackson Smart discovered mural in 1989 and has been a tour advocate

Seven nominated for open OMC board spot

Three candidates were defeated in November general election

Navy to conduct anti-terrorism exercises

Navy Region Northwest will participate in Citadel Shield-Solid Curtain 2025… Continue reading

Construction is in the early stages at the new Hurricane Ridge Middle School in Port Angeles. A special cement delivery vehicle brings another batch for the school’s foundation. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Cement delivery

Construction is in the early stages at the new Hurricane Ridge Middle… Continue reading

Port Angeles approves donated building plans

Senior center reviews policies, procedures