Tooth Rock and Wauna Point

Easy (to Tooth Rock viaduct)

2-mile loop

130 feet elevation gain

Open all year

Use: hikers, bicycles


Moderate (to Wauna Viewpoint)

4.8 miles round trip

900 feet elevation gain


Difficult (to Wauna Point)

10 miles round trip

3250 feet elevation gain

When engineer Samuel Lancaster laid out the original Columbia River Highway in 1913, he decided not to tunnel through Tooth Rock, a basalt shoulder of Wauna Point that juts out over the river. Instead he perched the narrow roadway on a perilous-looking viaduct, a half-bridge clinging to the cliff’s face. The resulting viewpoint was so impressive that Model T drivers often stopped to gawk—and were sometimes rear-ended by the next car.

Today, Interstate 84 roars through a modern tunnel in Tooth Rock’s base. But high above, the fragile old viaduct has been restored for hikers and bicyclists as part of the Historic Columbia River Highway State Trail. For an easy 2-mile loop, take this paved path across the viaduct and return on an unpaved upper path. For a longer hike, continue up to 1050-foot Wauna Viewpoint. For the best view of all, tackle the tough hike to 2160-foot Wauna Point itself.

Start by driving Interstate 84 east of Portland . . .

Other Options

For a backpacking trip, try the . . .

This chapter taken from the book 100 Hikes: Northwest Oregon