Holiday home In 1930, the
Orphanages Committee of the
Anglican Diocese of Perth purchased the premises for
£A641, intending to use it as a holiday house for their girls' home. The post office and store were rented from the property owners, and provided some income for the committee. The home was formally opened in 1931 by the
Archbishop. Initially the arrangement was that the girls would stay in the old hotel, and the boys would camp out in the dunes on Coogee Beach, as had been the practice in earlier years. After a few years, it was suggested that the two groups take turns in the hotel, so that each stayed in it for three weeks during the summer. The building lay vacant for the remainder of the year.
Permanent orphanage In 1946, Perth was suffering a severe post-war housing shortage, and
squatting was a constant problem for property owners in affected areas. Orphanage officials were concerned that this would occur at Coogee, and agreed to set up a permanent branch there, under the supervision of Mrs. Ellen Logan. On March 28, 1946, Mrs. Logan and 25 children moved into the hotel permanently. Over the next two years, the property was renovated, adding a bathroom and laundry block and weather-proofing the main building. They were helped out in their remote location by a group of local samaritans, known as the Meat Industries Orphanage Committee. These local business owners, employees, and families took great interest in the welfare of the children, taking them on outings, and raising money to buy them entertainments and furniture, including a projector to play films, a piano, a radio, and a television. The name of the site would change several times over the years, depending on the organisation of the orphanages. At first known as Perth Girls' Orphanage and Perth Boys' Orphanage, the institutions later amalgamated to become Swan Anglican Orphanages, and later still, Swanleigh. All of these names were applied at times to the Coogee property, and in addition the house was called Seaside House, the Coogee house, and the Willie A. Saw Seaside Home, after the death of a long-serving staff member. File:Coogee boys unloading at Seaside House, Jock Stewart presiding.JPG|Boys unloading at Seaside House orphanage, Coogee, Jock Stewart presiding, 1940s. File:Barbecue area at Coogee (Seaside House orphanage) c1948.jpg|Barbecue area at Coogee (Seaside House orphanage) File:Orphans at Seaside House, Coogee 1950.JPG|Orphans at Seaside House, Coogee, with Mrs Ellen Logan, 1950. File:Seaside Cottage at Coogee Beach, September 1946.jpg|"Seaside House" Orphanage at Coogee Beach, September 1946 File:Carriage rides Coogee Beach - West Australian 8 Mar 1945.JPG|The disabled children who used to be entertained by the orphans at Seaside House, Coogee were taken on carriage rides as a day out.
Closure In 1967, the
Main Roads department announced that it was planning to resume the road and surrounding land on which the hotel was built to build a high-capacity road to
Rockingham. They would buy the land and demolish the hotel, starting in 1969. The orphanage board decided that as the number of children in their care was declining, and the Coogee property's managers were considering retirement, they would close the branch and sell the hotel and land to Main Roads. == Modern uses ==