| Tin-Can Treasures
Are Quonsets, steel hangar-like huts
left over from WW II, worth preserving?

Story from the archives
by Tricia Vita / May 21, 2004

Printer-friendly
version

 |
|
This Quonset hut in Fort Collins, Colo., has become a house. (Historitecture,
L.L.C.,
for the City of Fort Collins)
|
Every Wednesday, elderly veterans of the Navy's
Construction Battalions, the Seabees, gather in Davisville, R.I.,
in a World War II-era structure called a Quonset hut, one of six
that they are helping to restore. They meet at the Seabee Museum
and Memorial Park, just north of Quonset Point, R.I., the town
where these corrugated steel, semi-cylindrical prefabs were first
constructed in 1941.
During the war, the U.S. Navy erected more than
160,000 Quonset huts on four continents and throughout the Pacific.
"A team of eight Seabees could assemble a barracks in eight hours
by just driving nails through the ribs," says Commander James
Monroe, the Seabee veteran who heads the museum.
Designed for the Navy by architects and engineers
of the George Fuller Construction Company, the units measured
20-by-48 feet or 40-by-100, and came with blueprints for over
40 different uses. Wryly described as "tin cans" by GIs, these
lightweight, portable buildings were later sold to the civilian
world. Surplus huts eased the post-war housing shortage in American
cities and university campuses, where veterans studied under the
GI Bill. Before long, the term "quonset babies" entered the popular
lexicon.
Today, many communities question what to do with
their surviving Quonset huts. (No one knows how many exist today.)
Some say the structures should be preserved; others describe them
as "eyesores" that should be torn down.
 |
| Demolished in Bowling Green, Ky. (Amber
Ridington) |
Last month, for example, the demolition of historic
Quonset huts in Kentucky and Colorado made local headlines. In
Bowling Green, Ky., a quarrel erupted at the Oct. 16 demolition
of the former Quonset Auditorium when workers prevented the man
who built the once-popular music venue on the Dixie Highway from
salvaging glass blocks from the facade. Used as a tire store since
the 1970s, the property was destroyed before the expansion of
a water-treatment plant. In the Quonset's place, the utility plans
to install a commemorative plaque.
 |
|
St. Petersburg's Royal
Theatre (Rick Smith)
|
In St. Petersburg, Fla., however, the c. 1948 Royal
Theatre, a designated local landmark, is undergoing a $600,000
renovation funded by block grants and private donations. Fitted
with a marquee, the theater was one of the city's few movie houses
for African-Americans. "The community still fondly recalls going
to the Royal with their soon-to-be husbands and wives on dates,"
says Rick Smith, the city's preservation planner. "So it
has as much a social and cultural affiliation as an architectural
one."
A group of residents in Parker, Colo., lost a lawsuit
to prevent the mayor from demolishing a 52-year-old Quonset hut
to make way for park improvements. Now the group is petitioning
to recall the officials who approved the demolition. While the
mayor contends the group stepped forward at the last minute to
save the disused community center, some residents fail to see
what all the fuss is about, calling the building ugly.
"If it's a high-style Victorian, we can always appreciate
why it's significant, but if it's something modest, or something
we associate with more recent architecture, then it becomes an
uphill battle," says Karen McWilliams, a preservation planner
in Fort Collins, Colo., one of the few communities that has surveyed
its Quonset huts. Because the city has five Quonsets in an area
that is ripe for redevelopment, McWilliams commissioned Adam Thomas
of Historitecture, a consulting firm based in nearby Estes Park,
Colo., to compile the report, which was published last summer.
"When I first started knocking on doors and said,
'I'd like to see your Quonset hut and take a picture of it,' people
thought I'd landed on Earth from Mars," Thomas recalls.
 |
| Fort Collins, Colo. (Historitecture, L.L.C.,
for the City of Fort Collins) |
Many of the 200 huts sent to Colorado State University
in 1946 were later resold to farms and other businesses in the
area. Thomas discovered that Fort Collins' 33 prefabs came in
quirky shapes and sizes: A half-quonset resembled a quarter of
a pie. Gambles department store sold a kit-built wood frame.
Despite their history and quirky charm, few Quonsets
are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Thomas
says the Register's standard of "integrity of location" didn't
readily apply to Quonset huts, which he says "were manufactured
in one place to be assembled someplace else, and were meant to
be easily disassembled and moved somewhere else."
In an emergency rescue effort, the Seabee Museum
had to relocate two of the 17 Quonset huts from Camp Endicott's
Davisville Historic District, the original home of the Seabees,
which was listed on the National Register in 1977. After the base
closed in 1994, the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation
began marketing the site as an industrial park, and the World
War II-era buildings were slated for demolition. In 2002, the
corporation signed a $1 per year, 25-year lease with the museum,
which is expected to invest $1.3 million in construction and site
improvements.
Last summer, the Wednesday Seabees crew got some
help—447,000 man-hours' worth—from a group of reservists. The
Department of Defense also pitched in when it gave the group $100,000
to rent equipment and sent over a lieutenant commander who was
an architect to help with the restoration. Commander Monroe says
he looks forward to showing off the six restored Quonsets to his
fellow Seabees at their national reunion in Rhode Island next
July.
Oddly, the only National Register-listed Quonsets
no longer exist. When the airport in Lansing, Mich., expanded,
Darlene Smith, commander of the Civil Air Patrol squadron there,
spent three years dismantling, packing, and moving the three huts,
which were added to the Register in 1991. Then a tornado tore
and twisted them, leaving nothing to reassemble. Still, her efforts
were worthwhile, Smith says.
"The simplicity of the huts is what caught
my attention," she says. "Otherwise, why would anyone
give a hoot about a tin-can sort of thing?"
For information on the museum, visit www.seabeesmuseum.org
Tricia Vita is a freelance writer living in New
York City.
Recent Stories
Focus on historic bathhouses
- May 14, 2004
Jens Jensen's historic landscapes
- May 7, 2004
Historic horse-racing tracks struggle to stay afloat
- Apr. 30, 2004
A preservation debate brews in Yonkers, N.Y.
- Apr. 23, 2004
What does a listing on the National Register really mean?
- Apr. 16, 2004
Finding new uses for old prisons
- Apr. 9, 2004
Frontier Village: gone but not forgotten
- Apr. 2, 2004
Jersey
City accidentally paves a historic cobblestone street
- Mar. 26, 2004
New Orleans faces off with Wal-Mart
- Mar. 19, 2004
Hitting homers in Cardines Field, America's oldest ballpark
- Mar. 12, 2004
How America's Carnegie libraries adapt to survive
- Mar. 5, 2004
Stiltsville, an aquatic neighborhood
of seven houses in a National Park, lives on
- Feb. 27, 2004
Italy
will return an Ethiopian obelisk stolen by Mussolini
- Feb. 20, 2004
Is leaking water destroying Tucson's historic adobe?
- Feb. 13, 2004
Architectural conservators solve mysteries of old buildings
- Feb. 6, 2004
Coney Island's parachute jump rebounds
- Jan. 30, 2004
Preservationists hop on board to save Harvey Houses
- Jan. 23, 2004
What
will happen to empty big-box stores?
- Jan. 16, 2004
Theme parks struggle to make a comeback
- Jan. 9, 2004
A deadly Civil War clash off the coast of Normandy left behind artifacts and art
- Jan. 2, 2004
A modern
compromise between IKEA and New Haven, Conn.
- Dec. 19, 2003
Best
& Worst of 2003 - Dec. 12, 2003
More
Stories of the Week >>
|