September 16, 2024

restaurantlapeonia

sights and trips

Nevada Motel, York Beach, ME, 50s Art Deco

Nevada Motel, York Beach, ME, 50s Art Deco

YORK BEACH, Maine — For the first time in its 70-year history, the iconic beachfront Nevada Motel across from Long Sands Beach is on the market.

The motel at 141 Long Beach Ave. is impossible to miss, with its unique shape, eye-catching bright teal trim, ocean views and, best of all, the ability to transport guests to a more nostalgic era — one of value, simplicity and small-but-mighty family-run operations. 

Generations of families have grown up visiting this motel, which is currently listed for sale at $2.75 million by Keller Williams Coastal Realty. Alongside the visitors are three generations that have kept the motel running since its original opening in 1951.

Nevada Motel, York Beach, ME, 50s Art Deco

Henry de la Pena was the motel’s original owner. He named it after the U.S. Navy ship he served on in World War II, the U.S.S. Nevada, according to his obituary. Henry even designed the motel to resemble the flybridge of a battleship, according to his son, Paul de la Pena. 

Owner of the Nevada Motel Paul de la Pena, 65, poses at the Long Beach Avenue motel in York, Maine on July 28, 2021.

Paul said his father left the Navy in 1947 and was inspired by a visit to Florida, where his sister-in-law’s husband had opened a motel in Pompano Beach. Henry de la Pena came back to Maine with the idea of opening a motel of his own in Wells.

Then he found York. 

“When they took a ride up here, and they came around the corner, he was like, ‘Oh, this is it, this is the place,’ and then he purchased the empty lot in 1951,” said Paul de la Pena.

A photo of Henry de la Pena, the original owner of the Nevada Motel, is displayed in the motel office on July 28, 2021. De la Pena died in 2015 at 96 and left the hotel to his three children, Paul, Edward and Jeanette Prues, who are now selling the property for $2.75 million.

Motor hotel, a piece of Maine history

A series of devastating wildfires in 1947 — which became known as the “Year Maine Burned” — catalyzed the motel industry’s takeoff in Maine, according to the New England Historical Society

At that time, Maine was 90% forested and unequipped to handle the unprecedented wildfire season the state faced. Two hundred fires consumed a quarter of a million acres of Maine forest between Oct. 13 and Oct. 27 that year, wiping out nine entire towns. In York County, the fires destroyed most of the homes in Shapleigh and Waterboro, and then consumed swaths of Alfred, Lyman, Newfield, Kennebunk, Kennebunkport, Arundel, Dayton, Wells, Biddeford and Saco. In all, the the 1947 fires destroyed 851 homes and 397 seasonal cottages, leaving 2,500 people homeless, according to the historical society.