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Bortz Auto Collection Archives.
RESCUED GM
MOTORAMA CONCEPT CARS TO BE SHOWCASED AT 2008 PEBBLE BEACH CONCOURS
d'ELEGANCE
The latest discoveries by Auto Archeologist Joe Bortz will be among the many
historic GM Motorama "Dream Cars" on display
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: PCGCampbell - Jeff Green (310) 224-4961 (jgreen@pcgcampbell.com)
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (April 22, 2008) - Fifty-three years ago, the LaSalle
II Roadster and the Chevrolet Biscayne were among the concepts that
showcased General Motors' vision of the future in its traveling Motorama.
After the debut of this automotive eye candy, these cars were not only
discarded but destroyed.
Joe Bortz, who was a young boy when he saw these "dream cars" at the 1955
Chicago Auto Show, found their remains decades later in a Detroit-area
junkyard and worked laboriously to resurrect them. Now Bortz will bring
these rescued vehicles to the Aug. 17 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance as
part of the 100th anniversary celebration of GM.
Throughout the 1950s, the General Motors Motorama took concept cars on tour
to cities throughout the United States, inviting the public to enter the
future by stepping through the doors of a GM automobile. After each
cross-country show was concluded, these futuristic cars were relegated to
the trash heap. In fact, since most of these vehicles had not been road
tested, GM often ordered their total destruction to prevent legal problems.
"A GM executive was required to watch each of the dream cars get cut into
pieces and crushed," said Bortz, who is retired and living in suburban
Chicago. "The GM exec took the LaSalle Roadster and Biscayne to the
junkyard, and he figured the guys at the junkyard would finish the job
properly, so he took off early to go Christmas shopping. The junkyard
workers never crushed the LaSalle, instead leaving it in many pieces."
The Biscayne's chassis was crushed, but the junkyard owner managed to save
all the pieces of the original body. "I felt like an automotive
archeologist," said Bortz, who first showed some of his concept cars on the
upper lawn at Pebble Beach in 1989 and 1990, drawing a crowd that couldn't
believe any of the cars still existed. "I had to dig pieces out of the
ground. The body of the car was fiberglass, so it didn't oxidize, but
other remaining parts were almost hopeless. The body had to be glued
back together from all the bits and pieces; it was like resurrecting a
dinosaur.
"I've been doing this since '78 - being a treasure hunter and restoring
concept cars. These cars are a treat for the eyes and a study in
history, and I'm excited to bring several of these gems to Pebble Beach."
"These and other historical treasures from Motorama demonstrate the
forward-thinking that led GM to the front of the pack," said Sandra Kasky
Button, Chairman of the Concours. "Joe Bortz has somehow managed to
rescue and resurrect concept cars from that era, allowing us to see the
sometimes-radical GM designs that influenced industry styling for decades."
General Motors will also be bringing nearly a dozen dream cars that the
company itself has saved, and these cars will join the Bortz Collection and
Motorama treasures owned by other collectors during the Concours'
celebration of the General Motors Centennial. "These Motorama cars fit
perfectly with Pebble Beach's history of showing only the rarest vehicles
and they allow us to emphasize the importance of preserving our automotive
history," said Button.
Lines from the 1955 LaSalle II Roadster can be found in such icons as the
'56 and '57 Corvette, while lines from the 1955 Chevrolet Biscayne are
visible in the 1960 Corvair.
The Chevrolet Biscayne was considered "one of the most desirable and
beautiful concept cars of all-time," said Bortz, who's restoring all aspects
of the Biscayne in collaboration with Kerry Hopperstadt and Fran Roxas.
"It was called the 'Miracle Car' inside General Motors because it drew the
largest crowds of any of the concepts shown in Motorama.
"Pebble Beach will be the first time the Biscayne will be shown publicly
since 1955. Since the windows weren't flat, we had to create a wraparound
windshield. And the door mechanisms are made with the help of Swiss
clockmakers. It's not fully restored. It's still a work in progress."
The "junkyard fresh" LaSalle II Roadster has been seen in public only a
couple of times since 1955. In addition to the Harley Earl-led
stylists, GM engineers got involved in creating this car. The LaSalle
II was equipped with an aluminum-block, lightweight V-6, double overhead
cam, fuel-injected engine and independent rear suspension. While innovations
of this type were features that would appear in European cars in the '50s
and '60s, GM would not incorporate them for decades.
The Motorama cars that will be appearing at Pebble Beach will be joined by a
rare assortment of GM Woodies, Cadillac V-16s and GM-powered sports cars.
Other featured marques for 2008 include Lancia and Lamborghini. |
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