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Motel_Inn_of_San_Luis_Obispo Latitude and Longitude:

35°17′28.57″N 120°38′53.21″W / 35.2912694°N 120.6481139°W / 35.2912694; -120.6481139
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35°17′28.57″N 120°38′53.21″W / 35.2912694°N 120.6481139°W / 35.2912694; -120.6481139

The former Milestone Mo-Tel, San Luis Obispo, California, 2005.

The Motel Inn (originally known as the Milestone Mo-Tel), located in San Luis Obispo, California, was the first motel in the world. [1] It opened on December 12, 1925, [2] [3] and closed in 1991. The Apple Farm Inn next door is expanding and incorporating parts of the original hotel that are still standing into additional rooms.

Concept

Photographed in 1976
1976
Photographed in 2003

The emergence and popularization of the automobile in the United States of the early 20th century inspired many car owners beyond commuting into town. The poor roads of the era, combined with lower vehicle speeds and reliability, required two or more days of nearly all day driving for 400-mile trips such as Los Angeles to San Francisco. Nearby destinations of 40 miles or less could be visited in a day to include a return trip. Longer trips required an overnight stay and often left travelers looking for places to pitch tents – or sleep in their automobile – if prior arrangements hadn't been made in destinations or stopovers that happened to have hotels or inns.

2003

The lack of niche accommodations to fill the need for automobile travelers who only needed an overnight stay to continue their trip inspired many entrepreneurs. The combination of the convenience of a campground with the comforts and respectability of a hotel or inn spurred the creation of the motel. The hotel's architect, Arthur S. Heineman (1878–1974), [4] picked San Luis Obispo as a midpoint location between Los Angeles and San Francisco, which took two days of driving on the roads at the time.

Architecture

Postcard c.1940s

The original plan of the Milestone Mo-Tel was to include both bungalows and attached apartments with parking outside each unit, though some would have a private garage. Each location of the chain was to include laundry facilities, a grocery store, and a restaurant. Each unit included an indoor bathroom with a shower, obviously a level of privacy not found at campgrounds. The exterior of the buildings was modeled after the Spanish missions in California; the three-stage bell tower was a reflection of the Mission San Luis Rey de Francia in Oceanside.

Business

The motel cost $80,000 to build in 1925 ($1.39 million in 2023 dollars). It originally charged $1.25 per night per room ($22 in 2023 dollars). [5]

The Milestone Interstate Corporation, created by Arthur Heineman and his brother Alfred, was incorporated in an attempt to seek capital from outside investors in order to build a chain of eighteen motor courts at 150–200 mile intervals in response to the growth in automobile travel in California, Oregon and Washington state. At the time, this spacing would have represented a day's drive between sites. The Motel Inn (as the Milestone Mo-Tel was renamed) was intended to be the prototype for the proposed chain.

The Heinemans were unable to register the name as a trademark, which allowed competitors to use the name. Severe competition in the market as well as competitors with lesser designs but lower pricing also hampered the chain in getting off the ground.

The plans for expansion as a chain ultimately disintegrated as the Great Depression caused investment dollars to become scarce and ultimately caused the Heineman brothers to lose the one existing Motel Inn property to foreclosure. [6]

Today

The Motel Inn closed in 1991. Many of the buildings were torn down in 2006; only two fragments of the original buildings exist, including the mission-style bell tower. [7]

Located at 2223 Monterey Street, at the end of the street next to an on-ramp to U.S. Route 101, the Motel Inn is now the administrative building of the hotel next door, the Apple Farm Inn, at 2015 Monterey Street. [8] [6] The complex is expanding and incorporating parts of the original hotel that are still standing into additional guest rooms. [9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Jackson, Kristin (April 25, 1993). "The World's First Motel Rests Upon Its Memories". The Seattle Times. Retrieved April 2, 2008.
  2. ^ "Photos from the Vault: Motel Inn in San Luis Obispo, the world's first 'mo-tel'". San Luis Obispo Tribune. December 4, 2014.
  3. ^ Hellemans, Alexander; Bunch, Bryan (1988). The Timetables of Science. Simon & Schuster. p. 442. ISBN  0671621300.
  4. ^ "Arthur Heineman, architect". Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  5. ^ Zorn, Eric (August 15, 2006). "World's first motel a site worth saving". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 19, 2008.
  6. ^ a b "Motel Inn restoration proposal (2002, never implemented)". King Ventures (Apple Farm Inn). 2002. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016.
  7. ^ World's first Motel & most disgusting alley! ( YouTube). JustinScarred. January 7, 2017. Event occurs at 0:20-2:33. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
  8. ^ History in San Luis Obispo County Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  9. ^ Herbaugh, Austin (July 14, 2023). "New development approved at world's first motel in SLO". KSBY News. Retrieved July 15, 2023.

External links