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By Jack Krost

Painstaking restoration
brings landmark back to life
Have you ever wondered about the former Sinclair service station at 715
East Lake Drive, just off the square at Harmony Park? You're not alone. A
lot of people stop by the attractive art deco building when owner Wayne
Allen is there to ask about it. It turns out, the station has been around
since 1939. Over the years, it's gone through many owners and has been a
car repair shop, a fruit stand and a rib shack in addition to a gas
station. Wayne bought it a year and a half ago and painstakingly restored
it with his friends David Funderburk and Lisa Tenerovich. But the building
now doesn't have anything to do with pumping gas or barbecuing ribs. These
days, it's mostly a hangout. It's a place where Wayne gets together with
buddies who collect vintage cars and motorcycles like he does. He also
uses it as an office. And David uses it as a studio to pursue his hobby,
photography.
The car club is known as the
Georgia Outsiders. Some days, you might notice some of the lovingly
preserved and polished cars from decades past around the station, and a
gang of Wayne's friends inside. "Mostly, we just eat hamburgers and tell
lies," he says. Only a few of Wayne's vehicles are at the station at any
one time. There isn't enough room for all. He's got a 1933 Ford Roadster,
a 1937 Ford Coupe, a 1957 Chevy, 1962 Corvette and a 1963 Comet Fastback
as well as 1941 Indian and 1947 Harley-Davidson motorcycles.
When the building was a real
gas station, Oakhurst had more of a commercial feel to it. There was a
drug store, a hardware store, a shoe store and a supermarket in the
square. The station was built in a design that typified Sinclair stations
in those days, called the castle style. When he was restoring the
building, Wayne examined pictures of Sinclair stations on old road maps
that he's collected, to be as authentic as possible.
At first, the station was
known as Tarpley's Service Station. A number of different owners and names
followed. Wayne discovered advertisements from some of them in old Decatur
High School yearbooks. A common pitch in the ads was, "Personal Attention
to Washing and Greasing." That slogan now adorns a large window in the
station's front room, along with an old phone number, PR3-3739. An artist
friend of Wayne's painted them.
When Wayne bought the
building for $200,000 in December of 2001, it had seen better days. In
fact, it's safe to say it was a true eyesore. The concrete driveway was
crumbling, there were abandoned vehicles in the back, an old phone booth
out front, trash inside and the pungent smell of grease and garbage
throughout. Wayne had been working for years in a Harley-Davidson
dealership. He was thinking of retiring and doing something fun. Fixing
the station up and turning it into a hangout seemed to fit the bill. He
sold his share in the dealership, bought the building and got to work.
When he's not playing
amateur photographer, David is a general contractor at the Schoppman
Freese Co. of Marietta, experience that proved a big asset in the
restoring the 140,000-square-foot building. He, Wayne and Lisa poured
concrete, installed new ceiling beams, put in electrical wiring and
lights, painted everything and looked around in antique shops for old
service station signs to adorn their work. They also enclosed the front,
where cars used to drive through, under a canopy.
We should note that local
authorities at first were skeptical about what the three had in mind. It
took months before they could get all the necessary permits. Today, an old
sign inside again boasts about "clean rest rooms." There's an ancient coke
machine in the office, along with an early television set. A display case
features old maps and other service station paraphernalia, along with a
few pictures of a much-younger Wayne, from when he used to race
motorcycles.
In addition to getting a
hangout, Wayne also got a sense of pride in his work and the contribution
he's made to his community. "It was cool to do it. I was born and raised
here, and I'd hate to see this area fall apart, " he says. "I think the
community liked seeing how we changed this place." Wayne lives in Winnona
Park with his wife, Laura Lee.
The energetic three friends aren't done yet. They plan to add a two-story
addition to the back of the building, to yield more room for Wayne's cars
and David's photography.
Part of the fun, though, is just hanging out and explaining what the
building is to quizzical people who stop by. As if to prove the point, one
woman who was walking her dog poked her head in the door while Wayne was
being interviewed for this article. "Can I ask you a question? What is
this place?" she said. Those same questions are repeated, almost
word-for-word, quite often.
Perhaps this article has
answered all your questions about the place. But even so, be sure to poke
your head in too, or wave hello, next time you pass by. |