Ford Rotunda
Ford Rotunda | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Destroyed |
Town or city | Dearborn |
Country | United States |
Inaugurated | 1933 |
Destroyed | 1962 |
Owner | Ford Motors |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Albert Kahn |
The Ford Rotunda, was a tourist attraction located in Dearborn, Michigan. At one point, it was the 5th most popular tourist destination in the United States in the mid-twentieth century. This futuristic structure received more visits in the 1950s than did the Statue of Liberty.[1] The Rotunda was originally built for the 1934 World’s Fair–“A Century of Progress International Exposition”–in Chicago, Illinois. After the World’s Fair, the Rotunda was dismantled and rebuilt in Dearborn, serving as the visitor center for what was then the equivalent of Ford Motor Company’s “World Headquarters”. Albert Kahn, who originally designed the Rotunda for Ford’s exposition at the World’s Fair, was also called upon to update the design for its new purpose. Its ultra-modern design, elaborate shows, and spectacular Christmas displays contributed to the Rotunda’s extreme popularity amongst tourists during its existence. The Rotunda was destroyed on November 9, 1962, due to a fire.
1934 Chicago World’s Fair
The Ford Rotunda (also referred to as the Ford Pavilion, and the Ford Exposition Building) was built by the Ford Motor Company for the 1934 World’s Fair to house installations depicting man’s developments in transportation. The Rotunda was situated within 12 acres of the Lake Michigan shoreline near South Side, Chicago. The building itself was a 900-foot-long building with a 12-story glass rotunda at its center, hence the name. The building also contained 65 towering pylons at one end and a large exhibition hall at the other, requiring enough steel to erect a skyscraper 125 feet square and 22 stories high. Since the emphasis was on the automobile, part of the tour of the Rotunda took place in automatically operated Ford-built convertibles riding on a special roadway. The pavilion featured a number of exhibits designed by Walt Disney.[2] This exhibit was seen by over 12 million visitors.[3]
Rides/exhibits:
- Magic Skyway: Fair-goers, seated in convertibles, were first taken for a ride through plastic tunnels around the outside of the Rotunda for a sweeping view of the grounds, then onto the exhibit building and the fantasy-land within.[2]
- City of Tomorrow: a futuristic city with towering metal spires and the glittering glass of bubble-shaped buildings.[2]
- Hall of Science: highlighted Philco-Ford laboratory research projects, like laser light, sound of stars being picked up with a radio, and a display of new materials Ford would use in later cars.[2]
- Ford World: a 20-foot-diameter, 12-ton, rotating globe highlighting the Ford Motor Company’s operations around the world.[2]
- Drama of Transportation: a collection of chronologically-arranged vehicles–from an Egyptian chariot, to horse-drawn carriages, to the latest automobiles of the day.[2]
Relocating To Dearborn, Michigan
Late in 1934 it was announced that, following the World’s Fair, The Ford Rotunda was dismantled and shipped to Dearborn, Michigan where it was to act as a visitor center and be reconstructed using more permanent materials. It was constructed on a 13 ½ acre site across Schaefer Rd. from the original Ford Administration Building and near the later Ford World Headquarters. It was constructed with a steel framework weighing one thousand tons with 114,000 square feet of Indiana Limestone attached to it to match the administrative building. It stood 10 stories high and measured 210 feet at the base and had a center courtyard with a diameter of 92 feet. Two additional wings were also added to the permanent location in Dearborn that anchored the center section.
The Rotunda had a completely new look after being reassembled at its new permanent location, the building resembled a stack of four gears stacked decreasing in size to the top. Inside the Rotunda were murals showing the River Rouge assembly line. On the grounds of the Rotunda was a ¾-mile track were 19 “reproductions” of what Ford called the Roads of the World: the Appian Way, the Grand Truck Road, the Oregon Trail and Detroit’s Woodward Avenue where visitors would be driven in the latest ford vehicles. The Rotunda was reopened to the public on May 14, 1936 after more than a year of construction, Fred Waring’s big band played for more than 22,000 visitors at the grand opening. Movie stars, celebrities, business leaders, heads of states, and millions of ordinary people came to learn about and celebrate the Ford Motor Company.
It became the 5th most popular tourist destination in the 1950s behind Niagara Falls, The Great Smoky Mountains National Park, The Smithsonian Institution and the Lincoln Memorial. It was more popular than Yellowstone Park, Mount Vernon, The Washington Monument and the Statue of Liberty. During World War 2, attendance dwindled due to gas rationing[4] so the Rotunda was closed to the public and served as office space and a school for the Army Air Corps, with barracks set up across Rotunda Drive. There was a theatre inside the Rotunda that was used as a movie hall to entertain the soldiers, in 1946, ten young army officers, soon to be known as the Whiz Kids first met Henry Ford II over lunch at the Rotunda.[5]
In anticipation of re-opening in 1952 the Rotunda underwent extensive remodeling. Seeking to enclose the open center court with a roof, Ford engineers calculated the weight of a conventional steel-framed dome at 160-tons,[6] which the Rotunda structure could not support. In its first real-world application, inventor R. Buckminster Fuller designed a lightweight geodesic dome weighing 18,000 pounds,[5] solving the problem and becoming a tourist attraction in its own right.[7] On June 16, 1953 the rotunda was reopened to the public as a part of Ford’s 50th Anniversary celebration and as a highlight included 50 huge birthday candles, mounted and lit along the rim of the rotunda.
Ford utilized the Rotunda’s popularity to call attention to new model introductions and was used as a special place to photograph its automobiles and hold special events. The Rotunda was used for Dealer presentations, press events and other business meetings. In the first 12 months of re-opening nearly 1 ½ million people visited the Rotunda to see the displays, ride the cars, and tour the Rouge. In 1958 the new Continental was introduced to the press under a 100-foot-tall model of the Eiffel Tower and in 1959 just after Alaska became the 49th state a display was built featuring mountains, fisherman and a stuffed grizzly bear in the Rotunda. Flower shows and custom car shows were also held in the Rotunda.[5]
One of the vehicles introduced at the Rotunda was the ill-fated 1958 Ford Edsel which was introduced during the late 1950s, a depressed econimic period where buyers wanted smaller, more economical cars. This was the start of the American compact car race and the Ford Edsel was discontinued shortly after the 1960 model and a production run of two years.[5]
In 1953 the annual Christmas Fantasy was held for the first time at the Rotunda and nearly half a million people visited that year. A 37-foot-tall Christmas tree was displayed. An elaborate Santa’s workshop and a life-size nativity scene that the National Council of Churches called the “Largest and finest” in the country, as well as animated characters from children’s stories, a 1/2” per foot scale 15.000-piece miniature circus with 800 animals, 30 tents, and 435 toy figurines of circus performers and customers. The Christmas Fantasy was held for nine years at the Rotunda and in that time nearly 6 million people visited.
Destruction
On Friday, November 9, 1962, shortly after 1pm, a fire began on the roof of the Rotunda. The fire started as workers were waterproofing the building in preparation for that year’s Winter Spectacular. The alarm rang at 1:12pm and, despite efforts of the entire Dearborn fire brigade, the walls of the Rotunda collapsed at 1:55pm.[8] The official report from the Dearborn Fire Department read: "Plastic dome on light aluminum construction over interior court of building collapsed spreading fire to combustible content (Christmas Fantasy display).".[9]
A group of 118 school children from South Bend, Indiana had just exited the building and, from the parking lot across the street, witnessed the first flames as they appeared, along with two students skipping school from Detroit who were arrested at the scene.[10][11] Around 60 employees escaped safely, with the only casualty being John Riley, 58, of Dearborn, a building engineer, who suffered a burn on his arm and shoulder and was treated for smoke inhalation.[12]
It was estimated that damages totaled over $15,000,000[12] (equivalent to nearly $115,500,000 in 2013 when adjusted for inflation). Along with the destruction of the Rotunda, the fire consumed each of the 1963 Ford models which were on display, several one-of-a-kind “dream cars,” each valued at $100,000 each in 1962, and $250,000 worth of Christmas decorations intended for the Winter Spectacular,.[1][12] The Ford Rotunda also housed the Ford Archives, which survived the blazes intact due to a special carbon monoxide fire protection system.[10] These archives–then considered the most complete single collection of its kind–consisted of over 14 million items, including business papers, memorabilia, and over 250,000 photographs. A year later, in December 1963, these archives were donated to the Edison Institute[13] (known today as the Henry Ford Museum).
The site of the Ford Rotunda was left empty until the Michigan Technical Education Center (M-TEC) opened on the site in 2000.[14]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Nolan, J. (1996, June 1996). When Flames Consumed a Christmas Fantasy. Retrieved from The Detroit News: http://blogs.detroitnews.com/history/1996/06/12/when-flames-consumed-a-christmas-fantasy/
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Stanton, J. (1997). Ford Pavilion. Retrieved May 17, 2013, from New York 1964 World's Fair: http://www.westland.net/ny64fair/map-docs/ford.htm
- ↑ Weber, D. (2009, December 24). Ford Rotunda Meant Memories for Thousands of Visitors. Retrieved from @Ford Online: http://www.at.ford.com/news/cn/pages/fordrotundameantmemoriesforthousandsofvisitors1.aspx
- ↑ http://www.worldsfairphotos.com/nywf64/ford.htm
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/sun-sets-on-the-ford-rotunda
- ↑ "The birth of the geodesic dome; how Bucky did it.". The Futurist, Nov-Dec 1989 v23 n6 p14(5).
- ↑ "Dymaxion Man". The New Yorker, ELIZABETH KOLBERT, JUNE 9, 2008.
- ↑ Nathanson, M. (Writer), & Woods, J. (Director). (1996). Detroit Remember When I: Motor City Memories and Hometown Traditions [Motion Picture]. United States of America: DPTV Media.
- ↑ Ford Rotunda–Glory and Tragedy. (n.d.). Retrieved May 16, 2013, from Automotive Mileposts: http://automotivemileposts.com/autobrevity/fordrotunda.html
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Fire Destroys World Famed Ford Rotunda. (1962, November 10). Los Angeles Times, 5.
- ↑ Ankony, Robert C., The Ford Rotunda
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 Fire Levels Ford Motor Display Hall: Fire Destroys Ford Rotunda. (1962, November 10). Chicago Daily Tribune, N1.
- ↑ Ford's Archives Given Institute. (1964, December 31). The New York Times.
- ↑ Heritage Moment: 50th Anniversary of the Ford Rotunda Fire in Dearborn. (2012, November
External links
- Famed Ford Rotunda in Dearborn Burns. (1962, November 10). The Washington Post, Times Herald, A1.
- Heritage Moment: 50th Anniversary of the Ford Rotunda Fire in Dearborn
- Ford Rotunda - Glory and Tragedy
- The Ford Rotunda