OCALA, FL (352today.com) – In the heart of Silver Springs Shores, just off Spring Lake Road, once stood a lakeside resort known by two names – Panorama Inn and, later, Silver Lake Lodge. Though the building is long gone, its story lingers in fragments, half-remembered vacations and ghostly rumors.
What is known about the lodge comes mostly through community memory, a handful of surviving postcards and online ghost-hunting logs. The Panorama Inn was built sometime in the early 1970s at 501 Spring Lake Road, designed as a tranquil resort overlooking Silver Lake. Its amenities were said to include between 100 to 200 guest rooms, a swimming pool, a dining hall and a lakeside lounge. It catered to travelers visiting the nearby Silver Springs attraction and became a favored retreat for families and weekenders.
At some point in the late 1970s or early 1980s, the inn changed hands and was rebranded as Silver Lake Lodge. Details about its operation during this era are limited. By the end of the decade, the property was abandoned.
What happened next turned the site into a magnet for curiosity. Without a caretaker, the building quickly deteriorated, and its remote location made it a destination for urban explorers and thrill-seekers. Ghost stories began to spread: lights seen flickering in empty rooms, strange noises at night and cold spots along the old walkways. Though no known tragedies are tied to the location, it gained an informal reputation as a haunted site.
Silver Lake Lodge was quietly demolished around 2006. No formal announcement marked its end. Today, the property is nothing more than an empty, overgrown lot – unmarked, unmonumented and largely forgotten.
Despite this, its story persists in whispers. Paranormal websites still list it as a former haunt, and ghost-hunting forums occasionally mention encounters in the area, even after the building’s removal. Vintage keychains and matchbooks from the Panorama Inn occasionally appear online, remnants of a forgotten vacation spot that once promised leisure by the lake.
With no official historical marker and no substantial media archive, the lodge’s existence feels like a local ghost itself – real to some, doubted by others and slowly fading from view. The lack of documentation only deepens its mystery.
In the end, Panorama Inn, or Silver Lake Lodge, is remembered not for what it was, but for the feelings it left behind: nostalgia, unease and a sense that something once stood still and quiet at the edge of the lake, before vanishing without a trace.