
The slide washed out an 85-foot bridge, damaged the roadway, and severed power to Johnston Ridge Observatory
VANCOUVER – On Sunday evening, May 14, around 9 p.m. a landslide caused significant damage to the upper portion of State Route 504 at milepost 49, leading up to the Johnston Ridge Observatory north of Mount St. Helens. The event followed a recent warming trend and significant snowmelt.
The slide washed out an 85-foot bridge, damaged the roadway, and severed power to Johnston Ridge Observatory. No one was injured because of the incident and twelve members of the public who were stranded overnight at Johnston Ridge Observatory were safely flown out the following morning.
In coordination with federal agencies, the Washington State Department of Transportation closed the highway to all travelers. Travel along SR 504 remains open with multiple scenic viewpoints up to milepost 43 near the Science and Learning Center at Coldwater.
There is currently no access to Coldwater Lake, the Hummocks Trail, and the Johnston Ridge Observatory. For safety, WSDOT and federal agencies strongly encourage people not to venture beyond the highway closure location due to the severity of the unstable hillside.
The USDA Forest Service is in the process of exploring alternative options for visitors who would like to visit the north side of the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument this summer and develop a plan to manage the influx of visitors in a safe manner. Several other visitor centers located along SR 504 remain open to the public, including scenic viewpoints where visitors can see Mount St. Helens and learn about the history, eruption, and recovery of the volcano. As the snow melts and forest service roads open for the season, additional sites on the Monument and surrounding communities will begin to open for visitors to explore.
WSDOT and federal agencies are working together to assess the slide area and develop next steps. Due to continued landslide instability, data collection is being conducted from the air.
WSDOT is scheduled to conduct a fixed wing aircraft LIDAR (Laser Imaging, Detection and Ranging) flight over the area on Friday, May 19 to gather preliminary data, weather permitting. This is an important step in collecting data to help inform when on-site access, cleanup and work can begin. It is too soon to tell when crews may be able to access the slide from the ground or when the highway may reopen.
A National Incident Management Organization team arrived on Friday, May 19 to support coordination across agencies.
Updates will be available on the following:
Gifford Pinchot National Forest Information
- Website: https://www.fs.usda.gov/giffordpinchot
- News and Alerts: https://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/giffordpinchot/alerts-notices/?aid=80265
- Sign up for news updates: https://www.fs.usda.gov/news/giffordpinchot/news-events
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GiffordPinchot/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/gpnf
Washington State Department of Transportation Information
- Website: https://wsdot.wa.gov/
- Sign up for email updates: https://public.govdelivery.com/accounts/WADOT/subscriber/new
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WSDOT/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/wsdot/
- Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/wsdot/
Also read:
- Opinion: ‘I-5 Bridge replacement plan does not accomplish the needs of the project’Transportation architect Kevin Peterson outlines why the current I-5 Bridge proposal falls short on mobility, urban design, and transit, and offers alternative solutions including BRT and urban integration improvements.
- Opinion: Two ways to keep rightDoug Dahl explains how Washington drivers must “keep right” differently depending on whether traffic flows in one direction or both, plus the exceptions that apply to two-way turn lanes.
- C-TRAN board increases salary for CEO Leann CaverC-TRAN CEO Leann Caver received a 2.5 percent raise as the board recognized her leadership and celebrated rising ridership numbers after years of recovery.
- Clark County March storm response information and closuresClark County Public Works is responding to reports of flooded roads and parks, with closures and safety advisories in effect as heavy rains impact the region.
- C-TRAN: Light rail funding addressed again; changes are coming to C-TRAN board compositionC-TRAN approved new language tied to the Interstate Bridge Replacement Program that shields smaller cities from light rail operating costs while shifting potential financial responsibility toward Vancouver and the urban growth area.






