Did
you know that Bridgeport was once the home of “the car of the future”? It was the Tesla of its era, but only three
were ever built.
This
mystery vehicle? The Dymaxion Car. The designer?
Buckminster Fuller.
Best
known for his pioneering 1940’s architectural design of the geodesic dome, a
decade earlier Fuller was already inventing other things. It was the 1930’s and the country was struggling
through the Depression. Fuller saw the
need for innovation, for “doing more with less”, and conceived of a
mass-produced, pre-fabricated circular house modeled after a grain silo.
Built
with aluminum, Fuller only saw two prototypes of the dwelling constructed and
even they weren’t actually built until 1945.
Fuller called his design The Dymaxion House…
Dy for Dynamic, Max for Maximum and Ion for tension. It was a major flop.
Next
Fuller moved on to transportation, conceiving of The Dymaxion Car, an 11
person, three wheeled vehicle that he hoped might one day would even be able to
fly using what he called “jet stilts”… and this was decades before the
invention of the jet engine.
Indeed,
The Dymaxion Car looked a lot like a stubby zeppelin with a forward-facing
cockpit and tapered, aerodynamic tail.
Equipped with a rear-mounted engine that could run on alcohol, it could
go 90 mph and get 30 miles to the gallon.
The car had dual steel frames while a wooden lattice work held the
outside aluminum panels in place. The
single rear wheel could pivot 90 degrees making parking a breeze.
Bankrolled
with $5000 from wealthy investor and socialite Philip Pearson of Philadelphia,
Fuller needed a place to build a prototype and ended up at the old Locomobile
plant on Atlantic Street
in Bridgeport’s Tongue Point neighborhood. Don’t bother looking for this piece of
history. It’s long gone as the land is
now home to the PG&E power plant.
When
Fuller set up the auto workshop in March 1933 he hired naval architect Starling Burgess
who recruited 27 workmen, many of them from Rolls Royce, from the 1000
applications he received. In just three
months the first prototype was completed and rolled out onto the streets of
Bridgeport on Fuller’s 38th birthday.
The car was immediately shipped to Chicago for display at the World’s
Fair.
Sadly,
the prototype was totaled after it was involved in a car crash, flipped over
and killed its driver and left VIP passengers injured. Initial orders for the Dymaxion started to
evaporate over safety fears even though it turns out the Fuller car had been
sideswiped.
A
second prototype emerged from the Bridgeport plant six months later. Fuller had hoped to display the Dymaxion at
the 1934 New York Auto Show but pressure from Chrysler locked him out,
literally. Not to be outdone, Fuller
parked prototype #2 right
by the front door of the show
and got more attention than he might have on the exhibit floor.
Fuller
even brought the car back for the last year of the Chicago World’s Fair in 1934
but public curiosity didn’t turn into sales.
Fuller eventually sold this second prototype to his plant workers while
a third model, this one equipped with a stabilizing vertical fin, went to
conductor Leopold Stokowski.
Only
one of the three Dymaxions survived… car #2, which is now at an auto museum in
Reno NV. But Bucky Fuller fans have
built replicas, some of which are still on the roads today 80 years later.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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