Advertisement

GM’s Pebble Beach Motorama, and a Big Red Bus

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

GM’s Motorama exhibit at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance included 19 of
the company’s historic show cars and one ‘Parade of Progress’ Futurliner
(background), one of the big red buses that carried GM’s science and technology
shows to small-town America in the 1950s. In the foreground is the 1954
Firebird I, a turbine-powered airplane-with-wheels ‘Dream Car.’ An earlier
version of this car nearly killed GM development engineer Charles McCuen
in a high-speed crash.

Some of them went off to junkyards to rust quietly for decades before being rescued. Some were spirited off into the night by GM employees who didn’t have the heart to send them to the crusher. Some slumbered nearly forgotten under tarps in GM warehouses. It wasn’t until the mid-’80s that General Motors realized it needed to move fast to locate, preserve and restore the surviving Dream Cars from its Motorama era.

Advertisement

The truth is, no one really knows how many Dream Cars GM built in the 1950s -- the record-keeping was lousy back then -– so it’s hard to know the actual losses. But it’s remarkable that so many pristine examples found their way to the lawn at Pebble Beach for GM’s Motorama display, part of its centennial celebration at the recent Concours d’Elegance.

(Click for Motorama: GM’s 1950s’ Dream Cars photo gallery)

Among the cars were GM design czar Harley Earl’s personal car, the Buick Y-Job, which is still the best concept car the company ever made (though, strictly speaking, not a Motorama car). Others on display included Chuck Jordan’s first car, the bubble-top Buick Centurion (with rear-view camera); Pontiac’s riff on the early Corvette, the Bonneville Special; and the three Firebird cars. With technical innovations such as turbine engines, intelligent highway guidance, air brakes, titanium construction, air-oil suspension, joystick operation and magnetic keys, the Firebirds –- though a bit silly in their aping of rocket-era styling –- were real laboratories for future technology, some still out of our practical reach.

A few years ago, at a high-bank track in France, I had a chance to drive the Cadillac Le Mans Motorama car. It was great to see it again at Pebble Beach, to be reminded of just how enormous the two-seat car is (196 inches). It had Cadillac’s first wraparound windshield. Words fail to convey how cool this car is.

Lording over all was GM’s big red bus, a beautifully restored Futurliner, one of 12 built by the company to move its Parade of Progress exhibits as they barnstormed across America. This bus, restored and owned by the National Automotive and Truck Museum of the United States, is the most correct and accurate of the 10 remaining Futurliners.

For a quick history of Futurliners, click here. Well worth it.

-- Dan Neil

[Photos: General Motors]

Advertisement
Advertisement