OPINION OF THE COURT
This is a petition for allowance of appeal from an order of a panel of the Commonwealth Court (Williams, J., dissenting) reversing an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County and reinstating an order of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (Board) which denied a requested retail-dispenser eating-place license. Having concluded that the Commonwealth Court applied an erroneous standard in determining that the proposed establishment was not located *78 within a resort area, we grant the petition, reverse the order of the Commonwealth Court, and reinstate the order of the court of common pleas.
In 1979, appellant Mildred Myers filed an application with the Board seeking a license for an establishment to be located in the northern end of Lehigh Township, Wayne County, which would sell pizza and six-packs of beer. Because the statutory quota for Lehigh Township for retail establishments dispensing alcoholic beverages had been filled, appellant sought to come within the “resort area” exception provided by the Liquor Code. 47 P.S. § 4-461(b).
1
After a hearing, the Board denied the application without making findings of fact and without providing reasons in support of its conclusions that the proposed establishment was not located within a resort area and that an additional retail liquor license in Lehigh Township was not necessary. After a hearing de novo, the court of common pleas reversed the Board, finding (1) that there existed several thousand campsites and vacation home lots in the vicinity of the proposed establishment, inhabited primarily by seasonal residents; (2) that Lehigh Township contained numerous recreational facilities attracting seasonal visitors; (3) that the only licensed establishments in Lehigh Township consisted of one restaurant and three hotels, all located in the southern part of the township more than 3.5 miles from the proposed establishment; and (4) that a petition requesting appellant to apply for a license to sell beer had been signed by over 1200 people. On the basis of these findings, the court of common pleas determined that appellant’s proposed establishment was located in a resort area and that an additional license had been shown to be necessary. Accordingly, the court concluded that the Board had abused its discretion in denying the application and ordered that the license be issued. A divided panel of the Commonwealth Court re
*79
versed on appeal.
Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board
v.
Myers,
The definition of the term “resort area” in 47 P.S. § 4r-461(b) has been left by the Legislature to judicial interpretation. See
Application of El Rancho Grande, Inc.,
“an equitable distribution of licenses in areas wherein, at certain seasons, the ‘population’ is greatly increased, ‘making it quite obvious that the usual number of licenses would not be adequate to serve the people.’ It is apparent that the legislature contemplated the seasonal influx of a large number of temporary inhabitants and the presence of suitable accommodations for this ‘transient population.’ ”
Bierman Liquor License Case,
Here, the Commonwealth Court panel implicitly agreed with the court of common pleas that the need of the population for an additional license had been shown.
Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board v. Myers,
supra, 62 Pa. Cm with, at 572 n. 2,
In our view, the approach of the Commonwealth Court, which looked solely to the number of hotel and motel rooms available in the area, creates an unreasonable standard of review for “resort area” applications which does not accord with the present realities of recreational travel. The thousands of campsites and vacation home lots in the vicinity of appellant’s proposed establishment clearly constitute “suitable accommodations” for the Township’s transient population, notwithstanding the absence of hotels and motels in the area.
Thus, in the absence of any findings of fact by the Board, and on the basis of its own extensive findings of fact, the court of common pleas correctly determined that the Board had abused its discretion in denying appellant’s application for a “resort area” license, and the Commonwealth Court erred in reversing that determination.
Order of the Commonwealth Court reversed. Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County reinstated.
Notes
. The Commonwealth Court stated: “Concerning the issue of necessity, we are mindful of our holding in
Application of Dorothy R. Hohl,
