HISTORY OF SUNSET LODGING

Sign for Sunset Motel, black and white photo.

1936

After the carnage from the Great Bandon Fire of 1936, Vern began construction on Rooms to house the community and the builders of our Beautiful Town.

Sunset Motel was built to provide affordable places to those in need who had lost their homes to the Fire.

Hotel building in 1948, showing a low-rise structure with peaked roofs and multiple windows, likely a roadside establishment.

1940's

After World War II, Vern connected the two buildings with a row of rooms, forming a U-shape with six apartments and eight rooms. The original incentive for building the U-shaped complex was to provide housing for teachers for the Bandon School District. As a member of the PTA, Mabel was aware of a need for affordable housing for teachers and convinced Vern to help out by building the additional rooms.     So for the first years, the Browns rented rooms to teachers from September to June and then to travelers during the summer.

Man in hat stands in front of a

1960's

On April 14, 1960, a fire of unknown origin claimed two-thirds of the structure. For a while, only two apartments and four sleeping rooms remained. Undaunted, Vern Brown rebuilt and enlarged the motel to honor his wife's memory,

creating 12 more tourist accommodations (18 total with one apartment for his family). Vern believed in expanding the motel to allow better access to what he believed was the greatest view of the Pacific Ocean.


Couple smiling in front of a motel sign that says
Yellow motel building under a blue sky, with a paved parking lot in front.

1970's

To meet the rising demand of tourists who had discovered Bandon, Vern began construction on the Original Oceanfront, creating six more units with the help of his son-in-law, Harold “Butch” Longland, between 1969 and 1971.


Three people seated. Man and grandsons; text reads
Black and white photo of a three-story building on stilts, 1988, next to a grassy hill and beach.

Mid/Late 1980's

In the mid-1980s, Vern's daughter Judy and her husband Carl Densmore took over operations. Later that decade they constructed the Vern H. Brown Addition honoring Vern himself. Each of the 21 units in this three-story building west of the bluff has a private balcony with a spectacular ocean view.


Black and white aerial view of a coastal resort town with hotels and cottages on a cliffside.

1990's

In addition to the motel, they began managing rentals for several owners of small beachfront cottages. In the early 1990s, Judy and Carl sold an adjacent lot to the Iverson family, who built Lord Bennett's. Vern's grandsons, Bryan and Jeffrey Longland, grew up helping their grandfather at the beach resort. After finishing college, they returned with their families to help manage the business and design the Ocean View Studios. The motel’s name was changed to “Sunset Oceanfront Lodging” to acknowledge its beachfront location and the wide variety of tourist accommodations in this four block long complex.


Row of light-colored buildings with balconies, chimneys, and a grassy yard.

2000's

In 2000, the 18-unit Ocean View Studios opened. The two-story addition included spacious rooms with fireplaces, private patios or balconies, along with a spacious new lobby and indoor swimming pool and Jacuzzi. In 2002, Bryan and Jeffrey Longland, the fourth generation, took over operation of the motel.


Building with a dark roof and a small cupola under a dusky sky, with a lit sign in the foreground.
Sunset over ocean viewed from under a building labeled

2026

Sunset Lodging still thrives with Three Oceanside Buildings along with Two Buildings across the street from the Pacific Ocean!

Two Private Beach Access points on-site.