Before the beds were stripped bare and the locks were changed, Jean and Larry Zamor stood at the front desk saying goodbye as guests checked out of the Chanhassen Inn for the very last time.
The Zamors, brother and sister and longtime business partners, held back tears as they shared hugs and handshakes with their loyal guests shuffling, luggage in hand, out the door.
"We'll miss you guys," they told the Zamors over and over. Some kept their room keys as a memento.
"This is their home away from home," Jean Zamor said with a sigh. "It feels like a death."
Next month a wrecking ball will rip down the quaint two-story motel that Jean, 71, and Larry, 65, built with their father 36 years ago, a place where they welcomed celebrities, international travelers and Chanhassen Dinner Theatre patrons. The Zamors are retiring, and a Panera Bread cafe soon will replace the inn just off Hwy. 5, 2 miles east of Prince's Paisley Park estate.
Chanhassen residents, and frequent guests there, say the family-owned motel will be dearly missed.
"This is one of the last jewels of Chanhassen," said Susan McAllister, who booked an extended-stay room this week while moving into a new apartment. "You're a person to them, not just money."
The modest 74-unit inn became a community staple over the past four decades, known for its quirky sleep-related signs such as "Snuggle Up with Us." It offered few frills — there was no pool, business lounge or fancy industrial kitchen — just clean rooms for affordable rates ($86 per night) and the "friendliest staff in town."