Monday, August 22, 2011

Abandonment Issues: Welcome Inn & Restaurant

Welcome Inn

Welcome to the Welcome Inn and Restaurant, just south of the tiny community of Welcome, Ontario.

Welcome Inn

vacancy

Welcome Inn

On the road again. The car is packed full of camping gear and a distant destination is in sight. We take the back roads, mapping our journey with new routes every time we criss and cross the province. Very early in the morning, we stop for yet another circumference walk of the long welded shut Milbrook Correctional Centre, and then head south. We explore the Carmel Line House, and then just north of highway 401, we drive up on these raggedy looking buildings. We pull right into the driveway, where two men are standing, looking at us, beside a house that is clearly occupied.

Stealth is not an option, and so we use the highly effective method of talking our way in. A genuine interest in someone's property, paired with manners and respect, is often as good as getting a key cut.

The property owner is not only a great host to us, he is also a wealth of information. After extensive warnings, including that of coyote and fishers, he allows us to explore the Inn ourselves, before joining us for a venture into the restaurant.

It was built in the 50's, and closed eight years ago, he tells us. He bought the property a few years back from "a millionaire Asian Port Hope couple" for $500,000, and hopes to flip it for $2.5 million, as is. He has already turned down an offer for over a million dollars, he says. His son and his dogs live on site to protect the buildings from vandals, and to keep insurance rates down. The on site resident avoids being forced to fence the entire property up, which would be way too costly, he adds.

The owners name is David, and he brought this bike with him from Newfoundland in the 1960's, when he was 15 years old. He was proud to say that only the seat has been replaced.

60's Newfie bike

Free to explore at will, a certain weight is lifted. We take our time poking around inside each room and we wander the overgrown parking lots and field. Check out these photos, I'll meet you back at the restaurant when you're done.

Welcome
Welcome Inn

no room key
no room key

fuckfest 
fuckfest

window pains
window pains

the carpet DOES NOT match the drapes
the carpet DOES NOT match the drapes

PAPER TOWELS Fragile 
PAPER TOWELS Fragile

room service
room service

welcome in
welcome in

poppin' chairy
poppin' chairy

shagadelic
shagadelic

disco fever
ABBA

complimentary breakfast
complimentary breakfast

WE RULE!
WE RULE!

phoney
phoney

suite dreams
suite dreams

shag swag
shag swag

over the edge
over the edge

fully furnished
fully furnished

parking at the rear
parking at the rear

We walk back around to the front of the Inn and David steps outside to greet us, with a limp. He walks us to the front door of the restaurant, and tells us that not only does the overgrown pay phone still work, people still use it, and Bell still collects from it. He doesn't allow anyone in the restaurant without him present, he says, due to the holes in the floor. He tells us that a man he hired to protect the place was a bigger crook than the thieves that had previously salvaged and looted. This is where my wife ninja takes over. She keeps him near the front door conversing about everything from the building itself to his life story. As I traverse piles of mattresses and large holes in the floor with the camera and snap shots, I can hear him telling her about his life as an addictions counselor with the Salvation Army on Queen Street in Toronto for over 20 years, and about the six kids he raised. He tells her about his disabled wife and the health challenges that he has faced, including almost losing his leg. He wears a cross around his neck, but to him it symbolizes love and has nothing to do with organized religion, he says. Cheers to that, I think to myself in the depths of the kitchen, which is packed with furniture from the Inn. When ninja brings the conversation back around to the restaurant, he tells her that he stayed at the Inn and ate at the restaurant long before buying the property. "The fire would be crackling, people would be eating, it was a beautiful atmosphere." he said.

Welcome Inn Restaurant
Welcome Inn Restaurant

please wait to be seated
please wait to be seated

coffee refill?
coffee refill?

please have a seat at the bar
please have a seat at the bar

side salad
side salad

the owner
the owner

today's special
today's special

kitchen cleanliness
kitchen cleanliness

el dente
el dente

no substitutions
no substitutions

olden arches
olden arches

tell lie vision
tell lie vision

pour me another poor me
pour me another poor me

After exiting, we continue the conversation out front for a few minutes before thanking him for his time and graciousness, and then we are off to another campsite near yet another potential exploration site, and whatever else we might find.

Prince Edward County, here we come!

We hope you enjoyed your stay at The Welcome Inn & Restaurant. Thanks for stopping by, we hope to see you again.


*********UPDATE*********
February 2, 2013

I returned to explore the Welcome Inn with dallas1983, L'Ali and msgsudz, approximately 18 months after my first visit. Again, as we pulled up, David was out front. This time though, not with his son, but his dog. He didn't spot us, and as we exited the car, we couldn't locate him.

Assuming he went inside the house, we took it upon ourselves to look around. Unlike our first visit, almost all of the rooms of the Inn were sealed up tight. In the restaurant, I was rather astounded at the condition of the dining room floor: There were several holes last time, but it is like swiss cheese at this point.

Surprisingly, the pay phone, while covered in a layer of film and dust, is still operational.

Winter wonderland
Winter wonderland

Play time is over
Play time is over

Abandoned barn
Abandoned barn

Potty training in progress
Potty training in progress

No child left behind
No child left behind

Angel with a candle in the wind
Angel with a candle in the wind

Angel eyes
Angel eyes

Smashed
Smashed

Please wait forever to be seated
Please wait forever to be seated

Sitting here now, I find myself smiling, reminiscing on the time we spent with David way back when. Specifically, the way he himself reminisced...

"The fire would be crackling, people would be eating, it was a beautiful atmosphere."

click here to check out all of jerm & ninja IX's ABANDONMENT ISSUES

1 comment:

pokeyone said...

It's so sad to see this place this way and every time I drive past I imagine what it could be again...and so handy to travelers on the 401!

Our family celebrated my Dad's birthday here one year and it was wonderful. The then owner took care himself to tend to the evening, a memorable one due in part to the attention he gave our family's celebration!
I just discovered your blog and am greatly enjoying! Thank you!