Skipping stones. A skillet breakfast with the warm morning sun streaming through single-pane windows as it rose above Lake Superior. Fly-fishing in a calm pool along the Poplar River, which spilled into the lake just in front of Lutsen Lodge.
For generations of my family — and countless others who celebrated weddings, enjoyed ski weekends or planned fall leaf-peeping trips — the lodge was beyond memorable. The loss of that historic resort in an early morning fire Tuesday was a gut punch for anyone lucky enough to have made memories there.
“So sad … absolutely crazy,” said one of my nephews after hearing the news, triggering a long-ago memory of watching him and his cousin slide back into one of the Adirondack chairs that always ringed a fire pit on the beach, even in winter.
As the Star Tribune’s real estate reporter for more than a couple decades, it’s literally been my job to appreciate buildings. I’ve lost count of how many photos I have taken of new home construction or stories I’ve written about another hotel development. Yet even when I came to Lutsen Lodge for these family trips, I couldn’t help myself from “working” by admiring the singularly Minnesotan beauty.
In many ways, the lodge was as evocative of the North Shore as the Big Lake itself. And the images of it burning were as disheartening, in some ways, as watching flames destroy part of Notre-Dame Cathedral in 2019.
“I’m grieving,” Dale Mulfinger said Tuesday morning.
Mulfinger, a Twin Cities architect and “cabinologist,” wrote extensively about Edwin Lundie, the lowkey but prolific architect who designed the iconic U-shaped lodge —with its striking red color and prominent brick chimney — as well as many other notable houses and cabins. Its loss, Mulfinger said, isn’t just for those who treasure it for the personal memories made there. It’s a loss for those who care about architecture.
The lodge, painted in Lundie’s trademark Mesaba Red, was one of just two Lundie-designed buildings open to the public. Most are private homes in Twin Cities suburbs and cabins scattered along the North Shore.