The Breakwater sat vacant for many years, but underwent restoration in 1999. The Yacht Club was revived in 1962, but is now located in Greenville. Steps from the beach and the bay, Breakwaters offers ceremonies in the sand, rooftop rehearsal dinners, a coastal-style ballroom with dark-wood floors and paneled walls, 13 guest rooms, and accommodates up to 160 guests. Later attempts to resurrect the resort failed, and the hotel annex was also torn down, in 1995. The Breakwaters at the Dunes, Sea Isle City, 60. The resort was successful until the Great Depression, and its main hotel was torn down in 1938, leaving an annex, a collection of residential cottages, and The Breakwater, which were consolidated under one ownership in 1946. Construction was overseen by the adjacent Mount Kineo Resort, with some funding coming from the Moosehead Yacht Club, one of the leading social organizations in the lake-oriented community. The Breakwater was designed by New York architect Howard G. The upstairs has been arranged for residential use, with bedrooms and bathrooms. There is a large central living room area, with dining rooms on either side. The interior of the lodge has a fairly open plan of rooms, with service areas largely confined to the ell. The porch balustrades are diamond-shaped woodwork. Windows on the first floor are twelve-over-one on the first floor and six-over-one on the second. The western facade is somewhat similar in appearance the first-floor porch has been glassed in, and there is an eyebrow dormer above the porches. A hip-roof dormer pierces the roof above the porches. A beltcourse of trim separates the first and second floors, rising in gentle keystoned arches above the windows of the side bays. The primary facade faces the lake to the south, with a two-story recessed porch at its center, and flanking multiwindow bays on either side. The main block is set on stone piers and topped by a shingled hip roof, with a side ell of 1-1/2 stories that is gambrel-roofed. The Breakwater is a two-story wood frame structure, set at the southern end of the narrow peninsula projecting south from Mount Kineo into Moosehead Lake, Maine's largest lake. It was one of the centerpieces of central Maine's most successful summer resort, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. Chamberlain, a New York City architect, with funding from the nearby Mount Kineo Resort and the Moosehead Yacht Club. Built in 1909, it is an architecturally sophisticated example of a sporting lodge, exhibiting Shingle style and Italianate features. The Breakwater is a historic sporting lodge on the Mount Kineo peninsula of Moosehead Lake in central Maine.
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