I’ve always had an affinity for Coca-Cola history & collectibles. I talked my parents into going to the original location of the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta when it opened in 1990 at the height of my Coke obsession. Even though I’ve since stopped drinking soft drinks, I’m still fascinated by the story of Coke. I’ve also been a fan of Art Deco architecture since high school, so when I heard Indiana Landmarks was hosting a one-time tour of the old Coca-Cola bottling plant on Massachusetts Avenue in Indianapolis in August, I leapt at the chance to go. Luckily I bought tickets well in advance, because the tour sold out soon after it was announced. The property is going to be developed by Hendricks Commercial Properties, with work starting next Spring, so this was a unique opportunity to peek inside the original building before it’s transformed into Bottleworks, featuring a hotel, restaurants, apartments, a movie theater, and retail shops. The company plans to preserve, patch and clean every tile of the glazed terra cotta exterior and also keep most of the interior features of the plant, while ensuring new construction is aesthetically compatible.
The Coca Cola Bottling Plant was designed by Indianapolis architectural firm Rubush and Hunter, who designed almost 200 buildings in Indy, including other well-known landmarks such as the Columbia Club and Circle Theatre which is still in use.
It opened in 1931 with a dazzling white Art Deco exterior, which is still impressive 86 years later. By 1954 it was the world’s largest bottling plant, producing over 2 million bottles of Coke a week. When cans became popular in the 1960s, bottle production waned and the plant closed. Tony Hulman, owner of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, bought the property in 1964 to store his car collection, then sold it to Indianapolis Public Schools in 1968, who used it as a training facility, central kitchen, and bus depot/service center until last year. Hendricks Commercial Properties closed on the purchase from IPS this week.
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Marilee | 30th Sep 17
I too was fortunate to tour the old Coca Cola Bottling Plant. Thanks for pointing out some details I missed! The Art Deco and architecture is remarkable and in amazing condition considering it’s age and years of use. I am so happy they have decided to retain what is usable in the new Bottleworks Development. I am excited to see the finished Bottleworks in a couple years.
Denise Breimeir | 1st Oct 17
I’m excited to see how it turns out too. It sounds like they are really going to preserve the best features. That makes me happy, plus the space will again get a lot of use! Go Indy!
Wendie | 1st Oct 17
How neat! I’m sorry I missed out on that tour, I love stuff like that!
Denise Breimeir | 1st Oct 17
The tour really exceeded my expectations. Thank goodness it was cool for August that day since there was no A/C!