59 Residences (not all stood at the same time; the number peaked at 36 in 1939):
30 slid to the sea, undercut by erosion
8 were deconstructed 6 were moved off the spit before it became an island in 1952
4 burned down for lack of a fire department
4 burned down for lack of a fire department
9 were burned, and buried to enable construction of the breakwater that reconnected the island to Cape Meares in 1956
2 had unknown fates
Rock crusher: used to manufacture 3.5 miles of concrete streets and sidewalks along High Terrace and Twelfth Avenues Two schoolhouses
Machine shop
Warehouses: at least two; many untallied outbuildings
Kaaran Ann Kottages: a duplex
Cottage Park: 42 rental cottages (the number and style varied)
Annex: 38 guest rooms and a restaurant
Amusement Pavilion: a three-sided structure including a bowling alley, billiard room, ice cream parlor, game room, and curio shop
Tennis courts
Bayside Inn: 24 guest rooms and a restaurant
Three dance halls: at different times, the last put up by Reed College students when they ran the resort in 1921
The Mitchell: a mercantile with at least three apartments upstairs
Pier: one quarter mile long, with a harbor for ocean-going ships
Water lines: run from Coleman Creek on Cape Meares
Sewer lines: run along High Terrace and Twelfth Avenues
6-7 million cubic yards of sand: which would have filled a cube 545’ to 573’ on each side, roughly two Portland city blocks and the street between