Orange County Landlord Guide: French Lick, the West Baden Dome, Patoka Lake, and Operating Indiana’s Resort Country Rental Market
Orange County contains two of the most architecturally spectacular buildings in Indiana — the French Lick Springs Hotel and the West Baden Springs Hotel — in communities that were once the most fashionable resort destination in the Midwest. At the turn of the 20th century, French Lick and West Baden Springs attracted presidents, celebrities, and wealthy visitors from across the country who came to take the mineral spring waters, gamble discreetly, and enjoy the grand hotels. West Baden’s Dome, completed in 1902, is a 200-foot freestanding atrium dome that remained the world’s largest such structure for years and still commands the title of one of the most extraordinary interior spaces in America. The resorts declined through the mid-20th century, fell into disrepair, and were ultimately rescued and restored beginning in the early 2000s by the Cook Group (Bicentennial Enterprises), which transformed them into the French Lick Resort complex operating today. For a landlord, this history is not merely background: the resort’s revival fundamentally transformed Orange County’s economic base and created the employment-driven rental demand that exists today.
French Lick Resort: The Economic Engine
French Lick Resort, encompassing the casino, the restored French Lick Springs Hotel, the restored West Baden Springs Hotel, multiple golf courses, a spa, and extensive conference and recreation facilities, is by far Orange County’s largest employer. The resort draws visitors from Indianapolis, Louisville, Cincinnati, Chicago, and beyond, generating year-round hospitality employment that sustains a significant working-class and lower-middle-class tenant base in French Lick, West Baden Springs, and the surrounding communities. Casino dealers, hotel housekeeping and front desk staff, food and beverage workers, golf course maintenance crews, spa technicians, and administrative personnel collectively represent the largest single employment concentration in the county.
For landlords, resort employees are a mixed tenant segment. Base wages in hospitality are often modest, but steady employment and the relative stability of a major resort operation provide more reliable income than purely seasonal or agricultural employment. Positions with tip income — food service, certain casino floor positions — require documentation of consistent tip earnings for accurate income assessment. Properties in French Lick, West Baden Springs, and accessible Paoli that are maintained to appropriate quality for working-class hospitality tenants generally achieve stable occupancy given the resort’s consistent employment base.
Patoka Lake and the Recreational Property Market
Patoka Lake, created by the Army Corps of Engineers dam on the Patoka River completed in 1978, is Indiana’s second-largest reservoir and one of the state’s premier outdoor recreation destinations. The lake’s 8,800 surface acres, extensive shoreline, and surrounding Hoosier National Forest land draw boaters, anglers, hikers, and campers from across southern Indiana and the Louisville metropolitan area. The lake generates a meaningful recreational and seasonal property market — lakefront cabins, off-water cottages marketed for recreation access, and residential properties in lake-adjacent communities — that operates on different economics from the conventional residential rental market in Paoli or French Lick.
Landlords with recreational properties near Patoka Lake should understand the seasonal character of this market. Peak demand is concentrated in summer months; winter occupancy drops substantially. Short-term and seasonal lease structures are more common in this segment than in conventional residential markets, and lease drafting should specifically address the recreational use expectations, cleaning responsibilities, and permitted activities. FEMA flood zone designations apply to some Patoka Lake-adjacent and low-elevation properties; Indiana law requires flood plain disclosure before lease execution for applicable properties (IC 32-31-1-21).
Paoli and the County Seat Market
Paoli, with approximately 3,600 residents, is Orange County’s county seat and commercial hub. The Paoli courthouse square preserves a classic Indiana small-town commercial character, and the surrounding residential neighborhoods contain the county’s conventional working-class rental inventory. Employers in the Paoli area include Orange County government, Orange County Schools, Paoli Hospital, and a modest manufacturing and commercial sector. Paoli Peaks, a ski area on the outskirts of town, provides additional seasonal employment and recreation attraction. The Paoli rental market operates as a standard rural Indiana county seat market: limited inventory, stable low-turnover tenant base, rents reflecting local wage levels.
The Eviction Process in Orange County
All Orange County evictions file in Orange Circuit Court or Orange Superior Court at 205 E. Main Street, Paoli, IN 47454, phone (812) 723-2649. The 10-day pay-or-quit notice must be properly served before filing any nonpayment eviction. Uncontested cases typically proceed in 30 to 60 days from notice service through sheriff execution of a Writ of Possession. Indiana’s prohibition on self-help eviction (IC 32-31-5-6) applies fully; lock changes or utility shutoffs without a court order create liability. Lead paint disclosure is required for all pre-1978 rental properties — Paoli, French Lick, and West Baden Springs all contain older housing stock requiring documentation. Patoka Lake-adjacent flood zone properties require flood plain disclosure before lease execution under IC 32-31-1-21.
Orange County rewards landlords who understand the two-track nature of its rental market — the resort workforce segment in French Lick and West Baden Springs, and the conventional county seat market in Paoli — and who bring the right strategy to each. The resort economy provides stable employment-driven demand that most comparable rural Indiana counties lack. Patoka Lake adds a recreational property segment with its own distinct lease and management requirements. Indiana’s lean statutory framework provides consistent legal tools across both segments. For the right operator with the right properties and a genuine understanding of Orange County’s distinctive economic character, it is a more interesting and rewarding market than its population might suggest.
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