What a View!

From the Penobscot Narrows Observatory you really can see for miles and miles.



Photo by Michele Stapleton


The first time Andy Lacher reached the top of the Penobscot Narrows Observatory tower, he jumped up and down. Not out of joy, but just to make sure the floor wouldn’t bounce under his feet.

“There was no give, no sway like you might feel in the [Seattle] Space Needle,” Lacher recalls, “and it was plenty windy that day.” Lacher, owner of the BookStacks bookstore in neighboring Bucksport, had good reason to be reassured. He was up there before the observatory was finished, and the only thing between him and the surface of the Penobscot River 420 feet below was a two-by-four railing. “The view was astonishing.”

When it officially opened last May, the bridge observatory became one of only four in the world — the other three are in China, Thailand, and Slovakia. The enclosed observation decks atop the western tower awed more than 72,000 visitors last year, almost twice the number that state officials expected, before it closed for the season on October 31. (It reopens May 1.) Some 60 percent of its visitors were from outside Maine, and the observatory, along with its jaw-dropping cable-stay bridge across the Penobscot, quickly became the state’s newest landmark.

Visitors access the observatory through neighboring Fort Knox State Park — the admission fees of five dollars for adults and three dollars for children also give access to the fort and its amenities — and enter the tower at its base just above the river’s edge. The elevator is the fastest in northern New England, lifting visitors to the tower’s upper levels in less than a minute. “When the [elevator] door opens, it can be a little jarring for some people,” Lacher notes, “because there’s a floor-to-ceiling window overlooking the river just three feet in front of your face.”

Stairs lead upward to two higher floors and views that on a clear day stretch from Matinicus Rock to Mount Katahdin. Bucksport hugs the river just beyond the end of Verona Island, and Cadillac Mountain rises above the horizon to the southeast. Maps on the walls and a compass rose in the floor help orient visitors and point out various landmarks.

Contrary to popular fears, the view from the top is not the vertigo-inducing experience that can occur on the outer deck of the Empire State Building. There’s no wind inside the observatory, no balcony that lets the visitor look straight down, no irrational sense that a misstep can lead to a long fall. Nonetheless, it’s not for everyone. “I took a friend of mine, a lobsterman from Matinicus, up there,” says Pat McGowan, commissioner of the Department of Conservation, which oversees the tower, “and he got dizzy, had to go back down.”

So the choice is up to you. Ride the elevator to the top, or just enjoy these panoramic pictures from the safety and comfort of your armchair. Either way, though, you have to admit: it’s one heck of a view.

To view more pictures of the Penobscot Narrows Bridge and Observatory, click here.
For more information, call Fort Knox State Park at 207-469-7719 or visit www.maine.gov/doc/parks/parksinfo/observatory

Comments may be edited for spelling. Profanity is discouraged.

Reader Comments: 
Log In Post anonymously
Add your comment:
Create an account, or please log in if you have an account. Anonymous comments are enabled.
Email address (not displayed publicly)  Password
 
Enter your comments below:
   
Verification Question:
What is 1 + 6 ?     This is so we know you are a human and not a spam robot.



MAINE DIRECTORY!

Down East Editors' Choices
& Down East Readers' Favorites...


Add your own favorites. Click on any directory and select "Add free listings" or email favorites to online@downeast.com.

Upcoming Events

20th Annual Heirloom Appraisal Day
05.09.2008

Part "old home day", part "Antiques Roadshow", Yarmouth Historical Society has been presenting an annual appraisal event for 20 years! A top-notch...

Rufus Porter Museum Cultural Heritage Series 2008
05.09.2008

The Third annual Cultural Heritage Series is scheduled for July 8 - 12, 2008 in Bridgton, Maine. The series is highlighted by a 3-day class Rufus...

Cabinet of Curiosities: The Museum, Science Collections, and You
05.09.2008

This exhibit, curated by the museum’s co-chief scientists, Paula Work and David Work, shows the many facets of the museum’s science...

Journeys West: The David and Peggy Rockefeller American Indian Art Collection
05.09.2008

This exhibition features Pueblo paintings, Navajo blankets and silverwork, embroidered Dakota leatherwork, Nez Perce weavings, basketry from...

Journeys West: The David and Peggy Rockefeller American Indian Art Collection
05.09.2008

This exhibition features Pueblo paintings, Navajo blankets and silverwork, embroidered Dakota leatherwork, Nez Perce weavings, basketry from...

Recent Acquisitions & Contemporary Works from the Permanent Collection
05.09.2008

Among the recent additions to the museum’s permanent collection are works by Joanne Baldinger, Jeffrey Becton, Bob Brooks, Rudy Burckhardt, David...

Recent Acquisitions & Contemporary Works from the Permanent Collection
05.09.2008

Among the recent additions to the museum’s permanent collection are works by Joanne Baldinger, Jeffrey Becton, Bob Brooks, Rudy Burckhardt, David...

Progressive Gourmet Dinner
05.09.2008

Weekend inclueds tours of three historic Freeport B&B's and the entree catered by the Azure Cafe'.

Show all events »