The hotel opened as a
Ramada Inn in 1971, primarily on land owned by Earl Clark, owner of the
Dutch Wonderland theme park located close by. The motel ran into financial trouble and was sold to Michael Gleiberman in 1974. The Gleiberman family renamed the motel the Continental Inn. The hotel consisted of 165 hotel rooms, along with a tennis court, an outdoor and indoor pool, free breakfast, a game room, and a fitness room. It operated until January 2018 when Palace Entertainment, the owners of nearby Dutch Wonderland, purchased the hotel for $4.7 million with the intention of remodeling it into a family-friendly resort. In October 2018, a partnership formed between
Turner's then-owned
Cartoon Network and Palace Entertainment to convert the former Continental Inn into the first Cartoon Network Hotel, to open in Summer 2019. In March 2019, despite the dissolution of Turner Broadcasting System, the hotel retained the Cartoon Network brand with an agreement with
WarnerMedia. In January 2020, after delays, the hotel opened. The Cartoon Network Hotel's first year of operation was significantly disrupted by the
COVID-19 pandemic. The hotel, which had just opened on January 10, 2020, was forced to close temporarily due to public health restrictions, remaining shuttered for almost five months. It officially reopened on August 3, 2020, with numerous new COVID-19 safety measures. ==Closure==