Lot 1 Kuiu Island, Thorne Bay, AK 99000
Description
Supplements: bringing the entire shoreline to life. Bay of Pillars itself is a storied piece of the Alexander Archipelago, opening to Chatham Strait and long known as a working and wilderness bay in equal measure. For the buyer with the vision and capacity to build, the scale of this parcel is the story. Eight-plus acres of true oceanfront in this part of Alaska is the difference between simply owning a cabin site and creating a destination: a lodge with room to do it right, thoughtfully spaced guest accommodations, staff or caretaker housing, gear and maintenance buildings, and a dock system that makes arrivals and departures feel effortless. It's the kind of footprint that can support a serious fishing programmorning tides and creek mouths close to home, afternoons running the strait, and evenings back on your own shorelinewithout sacrificing privacy, operational flow, or the quiet luxury that discerning guests (and owners) expect. Any lodge or commercial concept will, of course, be guided by due diligence, but as a canvas, it's exceptionally hard to replicate. What makes this property even more compelling is that it doesn't feel manufactured; it feels earned. The land and the water in front of it still wear the imprint of an earlier Alaskawhen this coast was part of the salmon economy that built the region. Historical records place salmon-packing activity here in the late 1800s and early 1900s, including operations associated with Point Ellis and Bay of Pillars, with the Astoria & Alaska Packing Company moving its cannery operation to Point Ellis in 1890, and a Point Ellis plant recorded as burning in 1892. In later accounts, the site is described as transitioning into a saltery after that eraone of the old-style salmon salting works that predated (and often complemented) canningbefore the shoreline's industry evolved again under the next wave of packing operations. Today, the remaining, timeworn structures on the landalong with the skeletal, offshore remnants out front in the bay where the old saltery infrastructure once stoodcreate an atmosphere money can't fabricate. Weathered pilings and dilapidated buildings are more than relics; they're narrative. They give a future lodge the rarest branding advantage of all: authenticity. And the history here is not small. Early 1900s documentation tied to the Pillar Bay Packing Company at Point Ellis reflects an operation measured in real volumetens of thousands of cases packed in a seasonsupported by docks, vessels, and the kind of industrial tempo that defined coastal Alaska at the time. Properties like thisprivate, sizeable, oceanfront, salmon-creek-adjacent, and layered with genuine Alaska historyrarely to never come up for sale. This is a legacy parcel with the bones for something significant: a world-class fishing lodge, a private retreat built to host at scale, or a commercial vision rooted in place rather than trend. If you've been waiting for a Bay of Pillars opportunity that is truly different in size, setting, and story, this is the one that simply doesn't circle back once it's gone.
Antonsen plat ›