The 17-mile Hurricane Ridge Road will reopen today for daylight use
only, as long as conditions remain safe. Visitors are urged to use
extra caution, and to be prepared for flaggers and a short section of
unpaved roadway near the rockfall site.
The road will open at 2:00 p.m. today and close at 9:00 p.m. this
evening. The gate at Heart o’ the Hills entrance station, five miles
above the Olympic National Park Visitor Center, will be locked
overnight, beginning at 9:00 p.m.
Crews will closely monitor the rockfall area and if conditions continue
to allow, the road will open daily at 8:00 a.m. and close at 9:00 p.m.
Flaggers and a rockfall monitor will be stationed near the rockslide and
will control traffic through the area.
“Our crews have made significant improvements to the berm, and have
shifted the travel lanes to allow safe passage through the area,” said
Sue McGill, Olympic National Park Deputy Superintendent. “The rockfall
site is still active, however and we will continue to closely monitor
the area; further closures may be necessary.”
“Visitor and employee safety remain our highest priority however, and we
will keep the road open as long as it is safe to do so,” emphasized
McGill.
The existing rock berm at the base of at the rock fall chute was
enlarged and improved by the park’s road crew and is now 10 feet high.
Concrete barriers have been placed at the base of the berm. In
addition, the travel lanes have been slightly shifted onto an adjacent
pullout; visitors should use caution on this area of the road, as these
temporary travel lanes are unpaved.
Park staff and a Federal Highway Administration engineering geologist
visited the site again this morning and observed several rockfalls. The
newly improved berm prevented any rocks from reaching the road.
Members of the park maintenance staff flew over the site yesterday and
were able to better observe the summit and upper slope of the rockfall
chute. Based on their observations, the short-term improvements made
today will allow the road to open on a conditional basis, while
additional monitoring and long term plans can be completed.
The rockfall originates on a steep slope high above the road and follows
a winter avalanche chute about nine miles south of Port Angeles and four
miles above the Heart o’the Hills entrance station. A slow but
continuous stream of falling rocks and gravel began on Saturday, August
15 and continued the following day, when the road was closed to all
traffic. Rocks have continued to fall since then, though at a reduced
rate.
For information about visiting Olympic National Park, people may consult
the park’s website at www.nps.gov/olym or call the Olympic National Park
Visitor Center at 360-565-3130. The recorded Road and Weather Hot Line
is updated throughout the day with changes and can be reached by calling
360-565-3131.