Ptarmigan Tunnel Explained

Ptarmigan Tunnel
Location:Glacier National Park, Glacier County, Montana, USA
Nearest City:West Glacier, Montana
Coordinates:48.8492°N -113.7078°W
Built:1930
Architect:Ole Westman
Added:February 14, 1986
Mpsub:Glacier National Park MRA
Refnum:86000360

The Ptarmigan Tunnel was built in 1930 through the Ptarmigan Wall at an elevation of 7200feet in Glacier National Park, near Many Glacier, in Montana, US. The 250feet manmade tunnel allows hikers to avoid a strenuous climb over very steep terrain between Many Glacier and the Belly River valley. Two opposing steel jackhammers drilling from either side of the tunnel and a series of ten-hole rounds of dynamite gradually broke through the mountain in less than three months.

A wide area, originally for guide and tourist horses, extends from each portal with a masonry retaining wall. Natural rock lines the interior walls. Heavy iron doors were hung across the tunnel adits during the summer of 1975. They remain open from mid-July until October 1, weather permitting. Designed by Ole Westman, this trail tunnel embodies exceptional qualities of landscape architecture and engineering in a pedestrian-scaled tunnel, cut through a sheer mountain wall.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ptarmigan Tunnel. 2008-11-07. List of Classified Structures. National Park Service.