Saving The World's First Motel

Can the world's first motel in San Luis Obispo, dilapidated and surrounded by chain link and barbed wire, be restored to better reflect its historic plaque and Spanish-style architecture?

1 minute read

August 16, 2006, 5:00 AM PDT

By maryereynolds


"In 1925, Pasadena-based architect and developer Arthur Heineman decided to create a 'motor hotel' hybrid between rustic auto camps and conventional hotels. But he found that the words 'motor hotel' didn't fit on his sign, so he scrunched them together. The Milestone Mo-Tel (later the Motel Inn), located in San Luis Obispo roughly halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco, had little garages right next to several dozen bungalows that rented for $1.25 a night. The combination of easy access to rooms and to the highway, reasonable prices, privacy, even a little anonymity, caught on in the lodging industry."

Early motels had critics including Edgar J. Hoover who called them "a new home of disease, bribery, corruption, crookedness, rape, white slavery, thievery and murder." A 1935 study by Southern Methodist University stated: "The whole atmosphere is that of a rendezvous -- of a trysting place secrecy, furtiveness -- quick slipping in and swiftly stealing away."

Monday, August 14, 2006 in The Chicago Tribune

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