Lake Placid: Whiteface Veteran's Memorial Highway (July 2019)



My spouse and I traveled on the Whiteface Veterans’ Memorial Highway (also known as NY Route 431) on a Friday morning in early July 2019. The highway is not open year-round due to inclement weather conditions; it operates from late May until mid-October. Visitors access the nearly 8-mile long Highway by passing through the Toll House (an alpine-style gatehouse), where an admission fee is charged. (In 2019, it was $16 for the driver and vehicle and $9 for each additional passenger; however, entry is included with the Olympic Passport.) The Highway opened in 1936 and was dedicated to area veterans by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Visitors can take a 10-minute hike near the house around Lake Stevens, named for a 1932 Olympic bobsledder. Visitors rise in elevation over 2,300 feet to reach the top at almost 5,000 feet (the fifth-highest peak in New York). The speed limit is 25 miles per hour, and frequent braking on the hairpin curves of the descent is a necessity. En route to the top, visitors can stop at any or all of the nine designated lookout spots. The mountaintop has a 400-foot-long copper-ceilinged tunnel that leads to a 27-story glass elevator to the summit (handicap-accessible, but no restrooms are at the top and only a bottled water machine is available). Alternatively, visitors can hike/climb a 1/5-mile trail to reach the viewpoint. A cafĂ© and giftshop are housed in a stone castle (restrooms on the ground level might be handicap-accessible, but the gift shop and cafe require climbing some curving stairs). Visitors can enjoy 360-degree panoramic views of the Adirondacks and the surrounding countryside as far away as Vermont, New England, and Canada. We enjoyed our drive and visit to the top of Whiteface Mountain on the Veterans’ Memorial Highway.






No comments: