Osgood Cabin with Lake View

Osgood Cabin with Lake View

Photo gallery for Osgood Cabin with Lake View

Bedroom
Bathroom
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous

Overview of Osgood Cabin with Lake View

Reviews
9.0 out of 10 Wonderful

Popular amenities

  • KitchenKitchenKitchen
  • Air conditioningAir conditioningAir conditioning
  • GymGymGym

Explore the area

Map
Paul Smiths, NY
  • Popular LocationPaul Smith's College Visitor Interpretive Center10 min drive
  • AirportSaranac Lake, NY (SLK-Adirondack Regional)22 min drive
  • Popular LocationSaranac Inn Golf and Country Club27 min drive
  • Popular LocationLake Flower27 min drive

Rooms & beds

1 bedroom (sleeps 2)

Bedroom 1

1 bathroom

Bathroom 1

Shower only

Spaces

Kitchen
Dining Area

About this property

Osgood Cabin with Lake View

Located in the lodge building with its own private entrances. So even though Osgood is in what we call the lodge building there are no shared indoor spaces. It is very private but there are two adjoining walls with other units. Osgood offers one large room that contains a sleeping area with a queen bed, living and dining areas, and a small kitchen. Full bathroom with shower, no tub. The east-facing covered deck of Osgood has a lake view in the distance through the trees.

Osgood can be rented in combination with Longfellow for a special reduced price. This combination would sleep a total of 6 people between 3 bedrooms.
The Great Room: The social retreat of an Adirondack Great Camp is the Great Room, a rustically grandiose meeting place for formal and informal activities. White Pine Camp's Great Room is available to guests at all times and provides a comfortable setting with furnishings typical of the era, including stick furniture, leather couches and decorative taxidermy. Firewood in the huge flagstone fireplace is always laid for guests to light at their leisure.

The Overlook: Under a canopy of cathedral pines and overlooking the Japanese Tea House and Osgood Pond is the Overlook. With its expansive vintage red tile patio, pergola, Adirondack furniture and fire pit, the Overlook is a popular spot for a lunch time picnic, late afternoon cocktails or an evening campfire with s'mores.

The Bowling Alley: Part of the Addison Mizner architectural design, the bowling alley was added to the game room in 1911. Yes, the set-your-own-pins bowling alley is still functioning and is much enjoyed by guests young and old. It also boasts a large stone fireplace, pool table and intimate back porch with incredible sunset views of Osgood Pond.

Japanese Tea House: Much coveted by the wealthy ladies of the Great Camps was a Japanese Tea House on an island. Olive White, wife of the original owner, was determined to have one as well. Today the Tea House is one of the most sought-after photo subjects in the Adirondacks. Our guests enjoy unlimited use of the Tea House island as a quiet getaway,

Property manager

Tim Moody 518-327-3030

Languages

English

Amenities

Air conditioning
Gym

House Rules

Check in after 4:00 PM
Minimum age to rent: 18
Check out before 10:30 AM

Children

Children allowed: ages 0-17

Events

Events allowed
Weddings & private parties, Group parties

Pets

No pets allowed

Smoking

Smoking is not permitted

Damage and incidentals

You will be responsible for any damage to the rental property caused by you or your party during your stay.

Important information

You need to know

Extra-person charges may apply and vary depending on property policy
Government-issued photo identification and a credit card, debit card, or cash deposit may be required at check-in for incidental charges
Special requests are subject to availability upon check-in and may incur additional charges; special requests cannot be guaranteed
Parties and events are allowed on site
Note from host: Weddings & private parties, Group parties
Safety features at this property include a fire extinguisher

About the area

Rainbow Lake

This guesthouse is located in Rainbow Lake. Adirondack Artists Guild and The Waterhole are cultural highlights, and some of the area's landmarks include Saranac Lake Adirondack Scenic Railroad Station and Robert Louis Stevenson Cottage and Museum. Kayaking and rafting offer great chances to get out on the surrounding water, or you can seek out an adventure with mountain climbing and rock climbing nearby.
Map
Paul Smiths, NY

What's nearby

  • Paul Smith's College Visitor Interpretive Center - 10 min drive
  • Saranac Lake Adirondack Scenic Railroad Station - 24 min drive
  • Saranac Inn Golf and Country Club - 27 min drive
  • Bartok Cabin - 27 min drive
  • Lake Flower - 27 min drive

Getting around

  • Saranac Lake, NY (SLK-Adirondack Regional) - 22 min drive

Restaurants

  • Donnelly's Ice Cream - 17 min drive
  • Adk Cavu Cafe - 20 min drive
  • The Shamrock Bar & Grill - 14 min drive
  • Packbasket Diner - 12 min drive
  • Airport Cafe - 20 min drive

Reviews

9.0

Wonderful

Reviews are presented in chronological order, subject to a moderation process, and verified unless otherwise labelled.
Learn moreOpens in a new window
Rating 10 - Excellent. 7 out of 9 reviews" "
Rating 8 - Good. 1 out of 9 reviews" "
Rating 6 - Okay. 0 out of 9 reviews" "
Rating 4 - Poor. 0 out of 9 reviews" "
Rating 2 - Terrible. 1 out of 9 reviews" "

9.0/10

Cleanliness

9.0/10

Check-in

8.6/10

Communication

8.6/10

Location

8.6/10

Listing accuracy

Reviews

2/10 Terrible

Laurie H.

Disliked: Cleanliness, check-in, communication, location, listing accuracy
Living history
A place where history and Gods beauty combine for a truly peacful experience.
Stayed 2 nights in May 2023

10/10 Excellent

Blake T.

Liked: Cleanliness, check-in, communication, location, listing accuracy
Serenity Excellence
This is a gem. The camp is elegant and the new construction is outstanding. It was very quiet and peaceful. Having a boathouse full of canoes and kayaks is a treat. We wanted to get away and relax without complications. This was perfection. The cabins are like small well-appointed apartments. We'll be back. We feel privileged to have been able to stay at one of the great camps.
Stayed 4 nights in Apr 2023

10/10 Excellent

Abby N.

Liked: Cleanliness, check-in, communication, location, listing accuracy
Beautiful, peaceful, rustic camp vacation
White Pine Camp is a gorgeous, well-kept, historical campsite with clean and thoughtful amenities. We especially loved the bowling alley and kayaking on the lake. Saranac Lake is only 20 minutes away if you’re looking to explore a very cool little downtown area (we loved Bitters and Bones for drinks and dinner) and Lake Placid is only 10 minutes further down the road. Perfect in any weather!
Stayed 3 nights in Nov 2022

10/10 Excellent

Marsha M.

Liked: Cleanliness, check-in, communication, location, listing accuracy
Great stay surrounded by nature
We were in the area for parents weekend at Paul Smiths and the cabin was the perfect place to stay!
Stayed 2 nights in Sep 2022

10/10 Excellent

Carlton B., Norwalk , CT USA

Liked: Cleanliness, check-in, communication, location, listing accuracy
Epitome of the great Adirondacks
Great place ,and location . Would love to visit in the summer.
Stayed 2 nights in Mar 2022

About the host

Hosted by Tim Moody 518-327-3030

Host profile image
The Builders

At the turn of the twentieth century, much of the St. Regis Lakes area was owned by Paul Smith lumber baron, inn keeper, and raconteur. Many of Smith’s prominent hotel guests subsequently purchased lakefront property from Smith to build their own summer homes, or camps, as they came to be known. One such buyer was Archibald S. White, a prominent New York banker, and his socialite wife, Olive. The Whites purchased 35 acres covered with white and red pine trees overlooking what then was called Lake Osgood.

In 1907 White commissioned New York architect William Massarene to design his Adirondack camp, just a short boat ride from Paul Smith’s Hotel. Ben Muncil, the region’s unschooled master camp builder, was the contractor. White also hired interior designer and architect Addison Mizner to work on furnishings and decor and design several additions and alterations. White Pine Camp was one of Mizner’s first commissions. He went on to become one of America’s leading architects and the visionary behind the development of Boca Raton, Florida.

Why they chose this property

The Camp

The camp that Massarene, Muncil and Mizner designed and built would be architecturally unique among the Great Camps of the Adirondacks. Its 20 original buildings included an owner’s cabin, dining hall, four or five sleeping cabins, two boat houses, a tennis house, bowling alley a Japanese tea house that would become one of the Adirondacks’ most iconic images. But unlike the heavy log style first developed by William West Durant or the ornate artistry associated with later Adirondack styles, White Pine Camp’s builders effected a more subtle rustic expression. Their “pre-modern” composition featured soaring roof lines, asymmetrical -shaped buildings, and the extensive use of dramatic, natural lighting. If windows are indeed the eyes of a home, White Pine Camp’s unusually shaped windows--in corners and clearstories--open every room to a kaleidoscopic array of natural light textures.

Another one of the builders’ innovations was the rough-milled siding developed by Muncil and Paul Smith’s millwright, Charles Nichols. It was a compromise between more traditional clapboard siding and the rustic slab siding typical of other Adirondack camps. Muncil and Nichols’ “brainstorm siding”, as they humorously referred to their innovation, soon became a common element of Adirondack architecture. Also known as “Adirondack siding”, it soon spread throughout the region and beyond.

In addition to its innovative architectural style, White Pine Camp’s designers surrounded their buildings with the most extensive landscape architecture of any Adirondack rustic estate to date. Its masonry walls, paths, bridges, flower plantings and lush rhododendron gardens create a medley of natural elements that embrace the camp’s grounds.

What makes this property unique

As a guest, you have your choice of 13 distinctive cabins and cottages with soaring roof lines, hand-built Adirondack-style furniture, stone fireplaces or wood stoves, and breathtaking views. Two cottages are pet-friendly, and most have private porches or patios.
Also, as a guest, you have total and unlimited access to all our facilities and activities.
Want to go fishing or boating? Just walk down to one of our two boathouses and grab a canoe, rowboat or kayak.
Want to hike? Head out on a trail right outside your door.
Want to swim? Enjoy an invigorating dip in the crystal-clear waters of Osgood Pond.
Like to bowl? You can do so in the vintage bowling alley used by the President himself... as long as you set your own pins.
And don't forget to bring a good book. White Pine Camp literally has dozens of indoor and outdoor hideaways to while away a lazy afternoon - be it by a roaring fire in the 'Great Room,' on a rustic bench in our Alpine garden, or in our iconic Japanese tea house on a tiny island accessed by a 300-foot wooden bridge.
Should you tear yourself away from camp, you'll find an entire smorgasbord of natural adventures. We are surrounded by the St. Regis Canoe Wilderness, with some of the most extensive paddling routes in the country. And, 'down the street' - our version of two miles - is Paul Smith's College, where you are welcome to enjoy the fitness center, café and Visitor Interpretive Center, the ultimate source on snowshoe, cross-country skiing, bird watching and back-country hiking.

Languages:

English
Tell us how we can improve our siteShare feedback