CoF Home | OSU Home | Calendar | Find Someone | Maps | Site Index
spacer

Roads & Engineering

OSU College Forests
College of Forestry

The College Forest road system consists of 141 miles of gated single-lane gravel surfaced roads providing access to 14,500 acres of land managed by the College Forests. Road access is used for teaching, research, demonstration, commercial log hauling, administrative traffic, fire control, and non-motorized recreation. The roads are maintained, repaired, closed or vacated depending on the road management objective (RMO) for each road segment.

McDonald-Dunn Road Management Objective Maps

Blodgett Road Management Objective Map

Road Information and Updates

College Forest Road Systems are gated to control access. Keys may be obtained from the Peavy Arboretum Office for teaching, research, demonstration and other authorized purposes. Gate access helps to prevent illegal dumping, damage to research installations, and unnecessary road maintenance costs. Walking on closed roads can be a pleasant experience.

Storm events and maintenance activities have the potential to disrupt planned forest activities. It is recommended that you contact Dave Young or Tom Edwards (see contact information at top of the page) before accessing the forest.

Road Inventory

An inventory of the road system on each forest includes the location and functionality of drainage structures.

Tract Bridges Ditch
Relief
Stream
Crossing
Total Miles of
Road
McDonald-Dunn 4 703 113 820 109
Blodgett 6 157 24 187 24
Cameron 0 6 10 16 5
Marchell 0 0 0 0 0
Rams's Dell 2 12 3 17 1
Spaulding 0 3 0 3 2
Oberteuffer 0 1 0 1 1
Total 12 882 150 1043 142
AVERAGE Number of Structures per mile:         7.4
AVERAGE Number of miles per square mile:     6.2

Road Closures

The following McDonald-Dunn roads have been water-barred and are accessible only by four-wheel drive (NO vans or sedans):

100 System
142
146
148
150
170
1010
(between the 100 and the 190)
500 System
530
531
543
550
570
582.2
582.3
590
600 System
611
630
640
650
660
670
672
672.0
672.3
681

The 612.4 road was permanently closed to vehicle traffic as of August 21, 2001. A trail on the road location is available for forest users.

The 200 road is now closed to all but trail use, from the 210 road junction to the 131 road junction. The 230 road and 830 road are no longer roads.