Three 2-year-old black bear cubs look hunt spawning sockeye salmon in Steep Creek at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center on Thursday, August 16, 2018. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

Three 2-year-old black bear cubs look hunt spawning sockeye salmon in Steep Creek at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center on Thursday, August 16, 2018. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

Mendenhall moving toward overhaul

Glacier side visitor center, new trails and boat service on the horizon for Juneau’s most visited landmark

By 2050, the picture windows at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center will depict a much different view. Scientists expect the glacier will have receded out of sight, the area’s icon vanished.

But long before, the Mendenhall Glacier Recreation Area will change to accommodate its new aspect. Plans for an overhaul of the crowded, popular destination are nearly final.

In a presentation to the Juneau Chamber of Commerce on Thursday, U.S. Forest Service Juneau District Ranger Brad Orr said the agency is putting the “finishing touches” on plans to build new facilities and trails.

After a series of seven public workshops focused priorities, design firm Corvus Design is polishing the final product.

It includes plans for a new welcoming center at the end of Glacier Spur Road, a smaller, mobile interpretive center next to the glacier itself and docks for a commercial boat service to ferry visitors next to Mendenhall’s shining blue front. The USFS plans to submit its designs to National Environmental Policy Act review sometime in the next couple of months, Orr said.

One of the main things visitors ask USFS guides at the glacier is how they get up close and personal with the fast-melting ice. The boat service and mobile visitor center will fulfill that priority.

“This will meet that need to ‘touch the ice,’” Orr said.

The USFS hopes the upgrades will spread visitors, Orr said. New trails, multiple visitor centers, a larger theater and additional restrooms were added to the design to disperse the crowds, which are now so large the USFS said it’s damaging visitors’ enjoyment.

A new visitor center next to where bus passengers depart will be used primarily to take care of visitor needs like food, restrooms and directions. The existing visitor center would take on the role as the area’s primary place for visitors to learn about the area’s wildlife and geology.

The new visitor center will “become kind of the public service center,” while the existing Visitor Center would become “more the museum,” Orr said.

The new additions help accommodate the increasing number of people who want to visit the glacier, Orr said. About one of every three people who come to Alaska visit the Mendenhall Glacier Recreation Area. Forecasts call for 6 percent increase in visitors next year, with larger cruise ships delivering more people to Juneau during the busy summer season, Orr said.

Commercial guide days are capped at a little over 500,000 a year, and though they haven’t yet used all of those days, Orr said they’ve come close, and expect to have to have to turn visitors away any year now.

A new loop trail next to the shore on the south side of Mendenhall Lake is in the works to offer another hiking option. The popular Nugget Falls Trail is already the most traversed in the Tongass National Forest, Orr said, so the agency would like to offer more trails to thin crowds.

Full plans can be found at http://mgra-mgvc.us/. The public can comment at that website and at future public meetings on the design, as well as through the formal NEPA review process when the designs make it to that stage.


• Contact reporter Kevin Gullufsen at 523-2228 or kgullufsen@juneauempire.com. Follow him on Twitter at @KevinGullufsen.


U.S. Forest Service Juneau District Ranger Brad Orr speaks to the Juneau Chamber of Commerce during its weekly luncheon at the Moose Lodge on Thursday, August 16, 2018. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

U.S. Forest Service Juneau District Ranger Brad Orr speaks to the Juneau Chamber of Commerce during its weekly luncheon at the Moose Lodge on Thursday, August 16, 2018. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

A male black bear chases spawning sockeye salmon in Steep Creek at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center on Thursday, August 16, 2018. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

A male black bear chases spawning sockeye salmon in Steep Creek at the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center on Thursday, August 16, 2018. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

More in Home

Rainforest Recover Center, a high-intensity residential substance abuse treatment facility, is closing next Tuesday, according to an announcement by Bartlett Regional Hospital. (Bartlett Regional Hospital photo)
Rainforest Recovery Center closing next Tuesday, hospital announces, to surprise of local leaders

Assembly had given initial OK to $500K to continue program; nonprofit says it will speed up takeover plans.

Angoon students prepare to paddle the unity canoe they built with master carver Wayne Price on June 19, 2023. It is the first canoe of its kind since the U.S. Navy bombardment of Angoon in 1882 that destroyed all the village’s canoes. The Navy plans to issue apologies to Kake and Angoon residents in the fall of 2024. (Claire Stremple/Alaska Beacon)
U.S. Navy plans apologies to Southeast Alaska villages for century-old attacks

Navy officials say apologies in Kake and Angoon are both “long overdue” and “the right thing to do.”

(Juneau Empire staff)
Juneau Empire’s voter guide for Oct. 1 municipal election

Mayor, Assembly, school board, municipal bond and cruise ship items on ballots being mailed Thursday.

Sonya Taton, center, listens to the verdict as she is found guilty on all five counts, including second-degree murder, during her trial in Superior Court in Juneau on Nov. 17, 2023. (Meredith Jordan / Juneau Empire file photo)
Sonya Taton gets 50-year prison sentence for fatally stabbing one boyfriend and wounding another

Judge calls Taton “an enormously dangerous woman” after convictions for attacks in 2016 and 2019.

Students arrive at Thunder Mountain Middle School on Aug. 21. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Threat of school shooting posted widely, including in Juneau, does not appear credible, district says

Extra police at Thunder Mountain Middle School on Monday morning a precaution, according to notice.

Boys start the 5K race at the State Preview 2024 meet at Bartlett High School in Anchorage on Saturday. (Photo by Kent Mearig)
JDHS varsity cross-country teams in top 4, Ida Meyer wins girls’ 5K at State Preview 2024 in Anchorage

Consolidated team splits up for three weekend events; next up is Capital City Invite this Saturday.

West Anchorage High School’s Zephaniah Sailele (6) breaks through Juneau defenders during Saturday’s game at Adair-Kennedy Memorial Park. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Huskies come up short at home in 28-27 nailbiter against West Anchorage

Juneau jumps out to 19-0 lead on Eagles’ mistakes, but end up in battle until final few seconds

A memorial in the doorway on Front Street where Steven Kissack was sitting when he was approached by a police officer on July 15, resulting in a 16-minute encounter that ended with him being fatally shot, includes photos, written messages and a “food for friends” dropoff box on Saturday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Some say minds not changed by bodycams of Steven Kissack’s death, but shooting has changed lives

Many suggest downtown confrontation could have been defused before police felt forced to shoot.

An overhead view of the overflowing portion of the glacier-dammed lake at Suicide Basin. (Christian Kienholz / Alaska Coastal Rainforest Center)
Spending $3M to fund half of a Suicide Basin protection study gets Assembly consideration Monday

Meeting will also consider $700,000 in short-term flooding measures, plus help for hospital programs.

Most Read