11 Jun

It’s the real thing…

By Silver Blue | 4 comments

4

First off, a note about comments: If you wish to comment (and I welcome them), you have to click on the name of the post, which will open it, and the comment box is at the bottom of the screen.

I like to travel. I love to find old buildings and capture them before the ravages of time cause us to tear them down and “renew”, for the buildings of today have no charm as the buildings of yesteryear did. That’s why when I moved back to Hampton Roads in 1980, I discovered a building that I could not believe. Then, almost overnight, it changed. Abandoned. Sold, repurposed. Altered. Then, that tenant moved out. The building sits, waiting to be destroyed. But, wait! Some of the alterations have come off over time! Quick, to the camera, before it’s gone forever….

Well, you can see SOMETHING has been covered up. But why? Perhaps it was copyrighted? Identifiable with a company or brand?

Why yes! The former Newport News Coca Cola plant, owned by the Brown Family.

Even the other side of the factory has those endcaps covered.

But not the middle! There we go! Precisely what I remember. The stone Coca-Cola bottles. In fact, everything is carved in stone here.

Though, honestly, I don’t know why the windows on this end were closed off. I don’t even know when the plant closed.

You can sort of see the holes that were drilled (look inside the B, between the g and C, and inside the final c on the bottom line) to cover up the identification on the building.

Here, the holes drilled to conceal the logos/ads are far more obvious.

The “holy grail” I was after with the camera. You can see the drill holes where the outer cover (as shown in the first two photos) was attached to conceal. You don’t see stonework like this any more.

Evelyn McCormack Brown, heiress to the local Coca Cola fortune lived in this mansion on Chesapeake Avenue in Hampton until just a few years ago. It had an asking price of about $1.2 million, and I do believe sold for close to that amount. The home is classical in appearance and overlooks the Hampton Roads harbour. (Thanks to the Brown’s Granddaughter for leaving a comment and correcting my faulty memory on Mrs. Brown’s first name!)

Before we close, however, let me show you the only remaining building to the left of the old plant…unique in its own right.

Sure, you see buildings with curves these days, but made out of REAL brick? Most of the facades these days are cast to look like brickwork, but aren’t. This is the real thing. Not sure how much longer IT will be standing, either. (The photos were shot in 2007, and I’ve not been back down there since, so that all may have been torn down already.)

Silver Blue, who is really more of a Dr. Pepper kind of guy.

(N.B.: As of early 2013, when I returned by the old plant, it’s still standing, but the covers on the endcaps (where the bottles were hidden) have finally come off, exposing all the bottles. Maybe I will be able to return to capture the entire building uncovered…. (Updated 3/23/13))

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4 comments

  • 01 Have a Coke and a smile. « The Eyes of Silver Blue 03/12 20:07

    […] NewsOriginal PlantPerry'sRebel T3iSignSt. Vincent de Paul Churchurban decayContinuing from this post, I thought it best to show you a new found treasure, the current state of the building, and what […]

  • 02 Catherine Brown Strachan 03/22 21:17
    Catherine Brown Strachan

    Hi This is Raymond Brown’s grandaughter. I appreciate the great blog about the history of the Coca Cola buildings in Newport News! I want to point out that Raymond’s wife, is Evelyn, not Ruth. The full name is Evelyn McCormack Brown. Thanks!

    • Donna Whitley 12/11 07:20
      Donna Whitley

      Evelyn’s mother’s name was Ruth. That may explain the error.

      Donna Whitley, former daughter-in-law.

  • 03 Connie R. 02/18 09:02
    Connie R.

    February 2024 – I’m happy to the report the Coca-Cola bottling plant building located in Newport News, VA still stand and all four bottles are visible. Today I saw it for the 1st time ever and couldn’t help but take a picture of it using my cellphone camera. When I got home I sought out website info and found your blog. I’m surprised the building isn’t a protected landmark. The architecture is absolutely gorgeous.


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