LOS ANGELES — Cabin No. 3 at Cal Neva resort isn’t just any cabin.
The wooden cottage — outfitted with a heart-shaped bed, a secret tunnel for rendezvous, and the best view of Lake Tahoe’s Crystal Bay — was Marilyn Monroe’s prized vacation spot, and the place she stayed the weekend before her death on Aug. 4, 1962.
But that cabin, with its wraparound deck and fortress of tall trees, is set to be demolished as part of renovations for the historic lodge that was once owned by Frank Sinatra, according to recently revealed plans by the new owners, McWhinney. The real estate firm announced in April that it had acquired Cal Neva. The hotel has been closed for a decade, and McWhinney plans to rebuild it into a luxury hotel, the company said.
While her cabin faces demise, Monroe’s Brentwood home has been granted a temporary reprieve from demolition. The owners of the house — her final home and the only one she ever owned herself — had sought to knock down the structure, but local residents and a Los Angeles council member are pushing to save it. After a unanimous City Council vote, it is being considered for status as a historic-cultural monument.
No such efforts appear to be underway for her favorite getaway. (There are conspiracy theories that Monroe died at Cal Neva.)