At the dawn of the automobile age, Americans' predilection for wanderlust prompted a new wave of inventive entrepreneurs to cater to this new mode of transportation.
Starting in the 1920s, attention grabbing buildings began to appear that would draw in passing drivers for snacks, provisions, souvenirs, or a quick meal. The architectural
establishment of the day dismissed these roadside buildings as 'monstrosities'.
Yet, they flourished, especially along America's Sunbelt, and in particular, in Southern
California, as proprietors indulged their creative impulses in the form of giant, eccentric constructions from owls, dolls, pigs, and ships, to coffee pots and fruit.
Their symbolic intent was guileless, yet they were marginalized by history. But, over the past 40 years, California's architectural anomalies have regained their integrity, and are now
being celebrated in this freshly revised compendium of buildings, California Crazy.
Brimming with the best examples of this arc