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Located in the southwestern corner of Grand Teton National Park, the Preserve includes 1,106 acres surrounding the southern half of Phelps Lake and includes a small, 7,500 foot interpretive center, three restroom facilities and an approximately 8 mile trail network. The Preserve Center contains a series of sensory exhibits designed to help visitors become more aware of the nature that surrounds them.


Laurance S. Rockefeller believed in the power of nature to restore and sustain the human spirit. He expressed his hope that the Preserve would become a place of physical and spiritual renewal, that it would be a model for acheiving balance between the preservation and public use, and that it would demonstrate how citizens working in partnership with their government can acheive important goals.


Monday, July 18, 2011

Reclamation





In preparation for donation to the park, and at the direction of Laurance S. Rockefeller, all roads, buildings, utilities, and other structures were removed from the ranch in order to restore the area's natural landscape.  Thirteen of the buildings that were removed were donated to the park for reuse.  Three of the buildings have been converted to permanent employee housing, four to seasonal housing, one to a laundry facility, one to a garage and three to storage facilities.  The largest of the buildings, the JY Shop, was moved to the park headquarters area and has undergone extensive renovation work.  It now serves as the offices and workshops for the Western Center for Historic Preservation.  The other seventeen buildings, including the main lodge were moved to another ranch that the Rockefeller family still owns south of Grand Teton National Park.








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