Work to begin this month on new Border Patrol headquarters in Port Angeles

PORT ANGELES — Work will begin within three weeks on the North Olympic Peninsula’s new Border Patrol headquarters, barely a month after Eagles Aerie 483 completed the $2 million sale of its lodge to the federal government.

Project manager Mike Sangren of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said Friday the building at 110 Penn St. east of downtown Port Angeles will be gutted, the inside redone and a new roof put on in two to three weeks.

The 19,000-square-foot Border Patrol station “will just look newer on the outside” when the $5.7 million construction project is completed by April 2012, Sangren said.

The 3.4-acre site also will include a 40-foot radio tower, three dog runs, a kennel and a chain-link fence topped by razor wire, with the outside lighted at night.

Inside will be two holding cells, the same number as in the current, smaller Border Patrol headquarters at the Richard B. Anderson Federal Building at 138 W. First St., which Border Patrol officials said the agency has outgrown.

In 2006, four agents worked in the Port Angeles headquarters.

That number had increased to 25 as of August.

The new facility will be built for up to 50 agents, a standard size for the agency’s headquarters.

Sangren said there are no plans to expand the agent numbers for coverage of Clallam and Jefferson counties.

But the draft environmental impact statement for the project said: “Future staff expansion is anticipated for the Port Angeles station.”

The Corps of Engineers is building a 75-agent station in Bellingham.

Building plans are standardized.

“It does not make financial sense to custom-build a station for every location,” Sangren said.

Blackhawk Constructors LLC of San Antonio won the contract for the project.

The outside lighting at the new facility will be half as bright as the Ruddell Auto Mall vehicle dealership just east of the building, according to the draft environmental impact statement for the project.

After waiting several months — the Corps of Engineers and the Eagles agreed on the $2 million purchase price at least five months ago — the Eagles have been on the fast track for the past two weeks.

Sale of the site by the Eagles for $2,015,000 closed April 14, two weeks earlier than anticipated, said Pili Meyer of Coldwell Banker Uptown Realty, who represented the Eagles in the transaction.

The parcel was listed in May 2010 for $1.99 million. The Clallam County Assessor’s Office valued it at $2.14 million.

“They were waiting for the environmental study to get signed off, and it just got signed off,” Meyer said Friday.

“The keys were turned over a few days later.”

A week later, on April 21, the Eagles purchased property east of the city limit behind the 2709 E. U.S. Highway 101 Safeway from Brad Maxhimer of Port Angeles for $184,450, according to Clallam County Auditor’s Office records.

Today, the Eagles plan to open their temporary new facility at the former St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store at 112 E. Eighth St. and will rent it from Peninsula Community Health Center, located next door.

Tonight, the Eagles will review potential design plans presented by the organization’s building committee, with hopes of moving into a new lodge by February, real estate committee member Kevin Wheeler said Friday.

“It’s a case of, OK, [the building sale] part is done, we’re waiting in a holding pattern now, and now we have to move forward,” Wheeler said.

But the developments are a touch bittersweet for Eagles members faced with having to move from their longtime home because dwindling membership could not support maintenance and upkeep of the Penn Street facility.

The new facility will be 5,500 square feet, roughly one-quarter the size of the Eagles’ former home, said Thomas DeJoy, a member of the Eagles’ board of trustees.

It won’t include the Eagles’ renowned “floating” dance floor from the old lodge, though some members did take pieces of it, DeJoy said.

The Penn Street lodge has been a second home for many Eagles for many years, DeJoy said.

“But we also realize we need to downsize,” he added.

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-417-3536 or at paul.gottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

About 100 people dipped three times into the water during the 38th annual Polar Bear Dip on Thursday at Hollywood Beach in downtown Port Angeles. The air and water temperature were both in the low 40s. Each received a certificate for participating, and proceeds benefitted Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Ringing in the new year

About 100 people dipped three times into the water during the 38th… Continue reading

A new mural, painted by Larry White, has been installed on the east side of BarHop in downtown Port Angeles. (Sam Grello/Port Angeles Waterfront District)
New mural painted as part of initiative

Artist chooses orca on BarHop building

Michael Calvin Mills’ short story collection, “The Caged Man,” was released in December. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Author’s work published after a long wait

Stories set in Spain, Costa Rica, Colombia

x
Home Fund contributes to continuing education

United Way funds 11 students for job training at Peninsula College

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Boards to set 2026 legislative priorities

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Aspen Mason-Kleeb, left, and Satria McKnight, both of Port Townsend and members of Popup Movement in Port Hadlock, a circus school owned by Sadie La Donna, right, rehearse a routine they were set to perform Wednesday in a performance as part of the First Night event put on by the Production Alliance. Watching is Julia Franz, seated, a rigger for the company. (Steve Mullensky/ for Peninsula Daily News)
First Night

Aspen Mason-Kleeb, left, and Satria McKnight, both of Port Townsend and members… Continue reading

Free days added for national parks

Non-U.S. residents to pay more for visiting

About 150 to 200 people jumped into 49-degree water at Hollywood Beach on Jan. 1, 2025, for the 37th annual Polar Bear Dip. The air temperature was about 39 degrees, so it was a short, brisk dip that they did three times. There was a beach fire to warm the dippers afterward as well as two portable saunas in the parking lot. The event was sponsored by Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County under the leadership of organizer Dan Welden. Hot drinks, tasty muffins and a certificate for participants were available. (Dave Logan/for Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Polar Plunge set for Hollywood Beach

Event raises funds for Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County

Five elected to Waterfront District board

Five people have been elected to three-year terms on… Continue reading

Holiday lights reflect off the water at Boat Haven in Port Angeles. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Holiday reflections

Holiday lights reflect off the water at Boat Haven in Port Angeles.… Continue reading

Clallam extends public defense

Contract agreement is through February

Celebration of life set Super Bowl Sunday

Messages continue to arrive for John Nutter