A Stay at the Old Faithful Inn
While we’re partial to Flat Creek Inn and Grand Teton National Park, there’s another famous national park in the area you may have heard of named Yellowstone National Park. Much can (and probably will) be said on all there is to do and see in Yellowstone, but today we’re going to take a field trip to my personal favorite park landmark: the Old Faithful Inn. Built between 1903 and 1904 and costing $140,000 (about $4.7 million in today’s dollars), the Old Faithful Inn is still considered one of the largest log structures in the world. Built at a time when a trip to Yellowstone required a train journey and a multi-day stagecoach tour (count me out), the inn offered travelers a cozy retreat and a warm meal at the end of a long day. The inn, built of local stones and logs, was designed with an asymmetry to mimic the chaos of nature. This design spawned a new style known as “National Park Service Rustic,” or for a catchier and shorter name, “parkitecture.” The classic hallmarks of parkitecture are the use of local materials, natural whole logs, and a hand-hewn look (bonus points if it actually was). This design was used in several turn-of-the-century park lodges and is still mimicked in luxury hotels today. If you’ve ever seen Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel or Disney’s Wilderness Lodge, you’ve seen modern parkitecture. The inn was added onto as time and travel evolved and has been remodeled on three separate occasions, the latest being completed in 2012. These involved adding and upgrading fire equipment (that would eventually save the inn from fire in 1988), re-roofing, earthquake stabilization, oh, and adding bathrooms to guest rooms. Not all the guest rooms though. If you’re lucky enough to snag a room in the original Old House, you’ll get to share a bathroom like you did in your old college dorm. And now, for some fun facts about the Old Faithful Inn:
- There used to be a printing press in the basement that printed daily menus for each meal through the 1950s.
- The original inn, now called the “Old House” housed 140 guest rooms at a rate of $4 per night.
- Many of the original fixtures and furnishings are still in use today.