What color is your Space Needle?

For the 50th anniversary, the Needle is going classic orange, but many color schemes were considered for the original Needle, from battleship gray to rainbow. And the original orange? It was probably a mistake.

A promotion for the 1962 World's Fair envisioned a red Space Needle

A promotion for the 1962 World's Fair envisioned a red Space Needle

Spreading around the Galaxy Gold, the Space Needle's original color. Left to right  are C. David Hughbanks, Stuart Rolfe, Mauren Wright, and Jeff Wright.

Rod Mar/Rod Mar Photo

Spreading around the Galaxy Gold, the Space Needle's original color. Left to right are C. David Hughbanks, Stuart Rolfe, Mauren Wright, and Jeff Wright.

This week, the Space Needle started to dress up for its 50th anniversary. Its owners began painting the top of the Needle orange, a color known in history as "Galaxy Gold." It doesn't make much sense to call it gold when it's more tangerine. The color has always been somewhat controversial. Some observers in 1962 didn't like it much. Prince Philip of Great Britain thought it looked like bridge primer waiting for its coat of real paint. Tom Robbins, new to town, wrote that it made the Needle look like a Howard Johnson's.

The last time the top house was Galaxy Gold was 2002 for the 40th anniversary. People get excited about it at first. At this week's start of painting the top, the head of the Needle corporation, Jeff Wright, son of original Needle investor and general contractor Howard S. Wright, daubed the slanted pagoda with paint, along with his teenaged daughter Mauren, brother-in-law Stuart Rolfe, and former Seattle World's Fair's staffer C. David Hughbanks, together representing three generations of Needle history. Wright told an interviewer that he liked the orange, but after a while he says it's like one of those old '60s refrigerators colored "Avocado." It doesn't wear well with time. The Needle will go back to white in six months. Most of Seattle is used to seeing the Needle in neutral shades.

When Seattle first saw the Needle's legs rising in 1961, it was bright yellow. That's because the steel beams came from Pacific Car and Foundry's Structural Steel Division painted with industrial primer. In the meantime, the Needle's designers were trying to figure out a color scheme.

A model for a large steel structure on the West Coast was the Golden Gate Bridge. Part of the goal of Century 21 boosters was to launch Seattle into cosmopolitan status, and San Francisco, a city built from Seattle trees, was a model. The first name announced for the Space Needle restaurant, for example, was Top of the Needle, but the public hated that partly because it was so obviously derivative of San Francisco's Top of the Mark. Promoters came up with Eye of the Needle instead, which is how it was known during the fair.

In the same spirit, the designers experimented with a Needle that was painted Golden Gate Bridge red. There were even brochures produced by the Washington State Department of Commerce and Economic Development that promoted the fair with a scarlet Space Needle. I had always thought such paintings were simply artistic license, impressionistic attempts to add flair to the fair. But, while researching the history of the Needle, I came across slides from John Graham & Co., the Needle's architecture firm showing a six-foot-tall Needle model painted bright red. The Needle in some images has a saffron top — a color much more likely to be called Galaxy Gold.

There's some indication that the original orange was supposed to be a different color. The paint was mixed in Chicago with sealant, and the Needle's first president and investor, Bagley Wright, said "It just didn't come out the way we expected." In mid-April of '62, just before the fair opened, he said, "Although we're not satisfied with the present orange color on the top of the Needle, it does contribute to the bright flavor of the fair. When the fair is over, we will completely repaint the entire structure to obtain a more muted look consistent with permanency." The Needle being a rush job as it was, there was no time to repaint before the fair. When I interviewed Bagley last year, he had no recollection of being dissatisfied and said he loved the original colors. Most people grew used to them, and the Needle grew famous with them.

In addition to Galaxy Gold, the colors said to have been named by the Needle's promotion-minded first manager, Hoge Sullivan, were Orbital Olive (for the core), Astronaut White for the tower, and Re-Entry Red for the halo and highlights. The floor of the Observation Deck was painted a metallic gold, as were the original Needle elevators. The "white" of the base was more a yellowish cream color, but such impressions could change with the weather, light, and artificial lighting. And remember: The Needle originally had a multi-colored natural gas flame on top.

The basic color scheme wasn't changed until the late '60s when it was repainted neutral shades of white and gold. The change was not universally well-received. One letter writer to The Seattle Times in 1968 complained that the Needle "no longer had the jewel-like appearance it once had, especially at night. It is plain dull."

Trying to match the exact original hue is difficult these days because so much of the color film, prints, and slides of '62 have faded, gone purple, and otherwise morphed. In the last four decades, Seattleites have grown to prefer their Needle to be a kind of blank slate color-wise, a canvas for Northwest light and the occasional Angry Birds or King Kong promotion.

The Needle could have been both bolder and blander. In the John Graham & Co. papers, I found a sketch showing a rainbow colored Needle starting out with white at the bottom and going to yellow, orange, and red toward the top. Architect Victor Steinbrueck, whose elegant feminine tripod gave the Needle tower its indelible character, wrote that he spec'd a Rust-Oleum off-white and a gray for the Needle when asked for his suggestion. I've also seen references to "battleship gray." Steinbrueck's ideas are closer to the Needle of modern times and Bagley Wright's concept of "permanency," but the Needle of '62 was more festive, more of its era. And, as on the gray day when the Needle paint-job was started this week (it'll take two coats to cover the roof), Galaxy Gold actually looks quite lovely against the color-blotting power of the clouds.

The color and shape of the Needle were suggestive of forms other than a saucer or a rocket ship. George Ross Leighton, a writer for Harper's covering the fair, wrote that "The Needle has been described as 'sheaf-shaped' and that is so, but in some respects it suggests a flower. The graceful off-white enamel of its legs soar up and burst into flame color at the crown and the effect on a bright day is enchanting."

In 2002, descriptions were less romantic when the orange re-appeared after a nearly 30 years absence. Jean Godden wrote that people referred to the color as looking like "steamed crab," "carrots steamed in butter," or a "traffic cone left out in the weather too long."

Since the Space Needle was, and is, a unique structure, there was, and is, no rule book for what to paint it. But as someone who knew the Needle in it's '60s garb, I have to say I'm glad that the old enchanting flower is back to bloom until fall.

Disclosure: Knute Berger was hired by the Space Needle to write their 50th Anniversary history. His book, Space Needle: The Spirit of Seattle is due to be released on April 21.


About the Author

Knute Berger is Mossback, Crosscut's chief Northwest native. He also writes the monthly Grey Matters column for Seattle magazine and is a weekly Friday guest on Weekday on KUOW-FM (94.9). His newest book is Pugetopolis: A Mossback Takes On Growth Addicts, Weather Wimps, and the Myth of Seattle Nice, published by Sasquatch Books. In 2011, he was named Writer-in-Residence at the Space Needle and is author of Space Needle, The Spirit of Seattle (2012), the official 50th anniversary history of the tower. You can e-mail him at mossback@crosscut.com.

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Comments:

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 7:51 a.m. Inappropriate

I loved the original color and am excited to see it come back, hopefully just as it was then. The orange against the bright blue sky was just WOW!

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 8:19 a.m. Inappropriate

When the Space Needle's roof was originally painted orange, many press releases described the color as "International Orange". Interestingly, this designation is the same as that of the Golden Gate Bridge. It is formulated to prevent rust, or maybe just to prevent a rusty aging look. Despite this, the Space Needle's original color did not resemble that of the Golden Gate Bridge. It was much brighter and closer to another standard color designator, "Safety Orange". My guess is that phrase was a little too queasy for the Space Needle, since no one wanted to bring up the question of safety, and the Needle flacks figured no one would know what International Orange was anyway. I can't remember ever hearing about "Galaxy Gold" until yesterday. However the original color was named, I liked it and still do.

gabowker

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 8:23 a.m. Inappropriate

According to Wikipedia, Aerospace's International Orange is lighter and brighter than Engineering's International Orange. The Golden Gate Bridge has the Engineering version.

gabowker

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 9:19 a.m. Inappropriate

Painting the roof the original color is fine, as gimmicks go. But it would be really nice to see the Space Needle again in all of its original colors. The main tripod was definitely a pale yellow, and it made the bright orange of the roof less jarring in that context than the current overcast gray does. I was really hoping for the original colors to reappear for this anniversary. Maybe, if I'm lucky, I'll live to see it again for the 100th.

As far as Bonnie Price Chuck goes, I've heard some of his pronouncements on architecture. I'm sure that in his mind, the perfect Space Needle would have a vaulted crypt surmounted by a rough-hewn stone basement. From that would rise a 500 foot tall Corinthian column supporting a round temple reminiscent of the Tholos at Delphi. Atop that would be a dome modeled after the Pantheon, and above it all a bronze statue of Zeus. Frank LLoyd Wright he ain't.

dbreneman

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 9:54 a.m. Inappropriate

Paint rainbow slashes like the gas tank in Dorchester, Boston.

http://www.underconsideration.com/speakup/archives/kingsley_corita_gas_tank.jpg

might be kinda skinny for that, though.......

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 11:59 a.m. Inappropriate

On clarification, dbreneman: It was Price Philip, not Prince Charles, who disliked the Needle original orange top (contrary to the P-I blog). But I love your fantasy of Charles-and-Philip-friendly Needle architecture. Maybe a gargoyle on top? Or was that Dark Angel?

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 1:24 p.m. Inappropriate

Thanks for the clarification, Mossback. I had also heard well-known architectural dilettante Price Charles mentioned this morning on the radio as the Needle's denigrator (might have been KUOW). So when I read about Hohenzollern carpetbaggers mouthing off on the Colonial architecture, I naturally thought of him, not his old man. But it did get me thinking about what his Glorious Space Needle of Empire might look like...

dbreneman

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 2:39 p.m. Inappropriate

dbreneman's dynastic history is flawed, but but like many of my fellow geezers who remember Century 21, I'm with him on his originalist color choice for the Needle. Mossback's descriptions of the variants are adequate and all, but a gallery would be even nicer. That rainbow selection no doubt has to be seen to be fully appreciated. If the original scheme is considered too dated, how about a certain-to-be provocative Sounders scheme, with the top in Sounders blue and the legs in Rave green? Who needs Starbucks with that kind of jolt on the skyline?

NickBob

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 2:43 p.m. Inappropriate

NickBob: My upcoming book will show some of the color variations, including the rainbow sketch and the photo of the red Needle model with the gold top.

dbreneman: Prince Philip also made fun of the Horiuchi Mural, so young Charles comes by his traditionalism honestly.

Posted Wed, Apr 18, 5:46 p.m. Inappropriate

All Things Considered had a nice piece tonight about the Needle's 50th and paint job.

http://www.npr.org/2012/04/18/150887020/back-to-the-future-seattles-space-needle-turns-50?sc=tw&cc;=share

Posted Thu, Apr 19, 6:59 p.m. Inappropriate

KOMO-TV had a piece on tonight's news about the fate of the fabled Bubbleator, now employed as a greenhouse at Redondo. The owner bought it disassembled for $1000.

NickBob

Posted Thu, Apr 19, 7:54 p.m. Inappropriate

I wish someone would put it back together and bring it back to life. You'd think Paul Allen could find a place for it.

Posted Sat, Apr 21, 8:12 a.m. Inappropriate

Memory is always imperfect, but I'm thinking the new orange is not quite the same as the paint job in 1962. The new paint seems darker.

gabowker

Posted Sat, Apr 21, 3:30 p.m. Inappropriate

I think I've read that the last time the Golden Gate used high-lead orange paint was 1965; was it used on the Space Needle the first time round?

hank

Posted Sun, Apr 22, 6:44 a.m. Inappropriate

Not sure what kind of paint was used originally. Also, I should have checked my notes more carefully. Victor Steinbrueck did suggest specific shades--charcoal gray and clover white Rost-Oleum shades.

Posted Sun, Apr 22, 6:56 a.m. Inappropriate

@gabowker: The shade does seem different. I'll try and compare swatches. But the light also changes it--with the sun yesterday, at some angles, it did almost look gold. The great thing about that color is it looks so good against both gray and blue. As a kid, I remember thinking that it looked like Campbell's cream of tomato soup, my favorite. That also kind of lends a subliminal Warhol, pop-feel.

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