Powerhouse Restaurant & Brewery
by Mike Doyle
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", October 2000, page 32
It was a crisp, clear January morning in the Sumner foothills of Mount
Ranier. The majestic glacier-crowned mountain watched in powerful silence, as
the small towns, clustered at its base, slowly awoke to another beautiful
Northwest morning.
The casual dinner guests and enthusiastic insulator
collectors receive a
welcome filled with electricity!
Possibilities for the upcoming appointment turned over and
over in my head, while my friend Pete navigated his sedan through the drowsy
morning streets of Puyallup, Washington. In the back seat behind us, Nola
relaxed, quietly humming to a popular tune playing on the sound system. This
would be the second time we had visited the Powerhouse Restaurant & Brewery.
Would the interview go well? I would certainly be allowed to photograph the
artifacts, wouldn't I? What if the Saturday morning staff had not been advised
of my impending visit? I resolved not to worry. Then I smiled, reliving the
first time Pete and Nola had taken me there for lunch. The whole visit had been
a well planned surprise. Blown away by the brass and glass electrical equipment,
I had excitedly declared that I would soon return for pictures and the story of
this vintage collection.
Puget Sound Electric Railway Company had built the
Puyallup substation in 1907 to provide power for the southern leg of the
Interurban Electric Trolley, connecting Seattle to Olympia. By 1957 the obsolete
facility had been reduced to a storage warehouse and was ultimately vacated by
Puget Power in 1969. A Tacoma architect, named Dusty Trail, with a penchant for
preserving the past, had a couple of ideas for the neglected ruin when he
purchased it at public auction in 1994.
Inspired by Ed Sellberg --- a friend and
well known Vancouver, WA, insulator collector --- Dusty transformed the decrepit
hulk into a breathtaking electrical museum. This million dollar renovation gave
birth to the Powerhouse Restaurant & Brewery, in August of 1995. It was this
monument to Puget Power which had so energized me one Saturday afternoon in
April of 1999.
Just after the rail crossing, Pete turned right into an empty and
freshly painted parking lot, took a space near the street and turned the engine
off. Braced by a startling rush of cold winter air, I returned to the present,
climbed out of the open passenger door, and readied my camera to snap some quick
shots of the insulators along the railroad tracks by the parking lot.
Unfortunately that was not to be, as Mother Nature had other plans for me.
Showcase of colorful glass and porcelain pin type
insulators flanked by
strings of suspension disks.
Three strands of a dozen carnival Pyrex suspension insulators
hang
dramatically from the large ceiling beams.
Brass and copper meters mounted on the walls, glass encased
gauges and highly
polished switches in every direction.
Suddenly, I was sitting on the tarmac. I wasn't sure what had happened, until Pete stoically explained the phenomenon of black ice.
"This is, after all, Washington-In-Winter", he said carefully. As I
rubbed my bruised pride and checked for anything broken, I decided that the
outdoor pictures could wait until after the interview.
As I gingerly headed off
toward shelter from the cruel ice, I admired two prominently placed electrical
relics, guarding the parking lot. One huge gray oil-damped switch wearily
declared from its weather worn enamel plate, "CAUTION May Explode Upon
Impact." The other, a large ribbed transformer, announced the street
address in dark gray spray-painted lettering, and declared that this was the
Powerhouse Restaurant & Brewery.
Magnificent glass supports for the balcony filled with tables.
Pete takes in the view of the restaurant's
displays from the balcony level.
Looking up, I was taken once again by its
striking facade. The building engineers, Stone and Webster, had erected all of
the century-old Puget substations using a hard and beautiful, dark crimson brick from Far
West Clay, in Clay City. Huge through-wall bushings, high on the building's
side, stared down at us like great empty eyes as we carefully crossed the icy
parking lot. The massive tubes were ringed by intricate raised brick collars.
Distinctive brickwork arches of window and door added historic strength to the
venerable power station. Ascending a short flight of brick steps, I noticed two
inverted porcelain station standoffs, filled with recently sifted sand, flanking
the entrance. The Powerhouse would not open for another hour and a half, but as I had hoped, the weekend staff had remembered to leave the front
door open.
Stepping inside, onto the hardwood plank flooring, I immediately felt
the old weight and quiet power around me. I could almost smell the hot steel and
machine oil and feel the vibration in my feet of the huge turbines that
spun out the electron life blood of industrial expansion, so many decades ago.
The clang of stainless steel cookware echoed from a kitchen, beyond the glass
display case on my right, while Nola, Pete and I took in the incredible
assortment of artifacts displayed in the entryway. There were brass and copper
meters mounted on the walls, glass encased gauges and highly polished switches
in every direction. Needing to see everything at once, yet loathe to tear my
eyes away from each relic, my gaze lingered for just a moment on a glass display
case full of insulators, high on the left wall. To my right a brightly colored
chalkboard cried out the Lunch Special, while all around it fantastic old DC
measuring devices, rheostat boxes and assorted electrical treasures, rested
quietly in comfortable retirement. Pete led the way, as Nola and I moved through
the reception area into the ground floor dining room, where I was astounded by
the vast array of electrical treasures.
Seeing the full panorama of the main
dining area open before me was a vision that will stay with me forever. I found
myself surrounded from above and on all sides by a terrific assortment of glass
and porcelain insulators, custom cut steel, and copper industrial art pieces in
the shape of the Powerhouse's lightning bolt logo. Along the wall to my right
were scores of electrical measuring devices, indicators, surge arrestors, and
warning signs. To top it all off, the designers had placed a 12,000 volt Jacob's
Ladder in the center of the wall, complete with two 10-foot long electrodes
reaching toward the ceiling. I just knew how cool it would look with a sizzling
arc of juice climbing toward the roof.
Securely anchored in the massive,
rough-hewn redwood beams, thirty feet above, were three long strings of Ed
Sellberg's signature suspension disks. Flanking the bar to my right, and at
various points throughout, I saw huge glass station posts supporting tables and
railings. Behind the bar all of the beer-pulls were adorned with a colorful
assortment of pony insulators. Ahead of me on a dividing partition were more
glass communication pieces. Everywhere I looked, generously proportioned booths
were highlighted by strings of twinkling lights strung between power insulators. Near the far end of the
bar, before me, an industrial strength steel stair ascended to a landing,
switched back, and rose to the balcony level where the spectacle of glass and
porcelain seemed, from my vantage point, even more impressive.
Were I to
continue this story for a few more pages, to describe our tour of the balcony
and the absolutely fantastic dining experience that Pete, Nola, and I shared
that Saturday morning, I might leave you with little reason to visit the
Powerhouse for yourself. So this is where I stop. For those of you who may never
have the opportunity to visit Washington I hope that the pictures will finish
the story for me.
To those of you fortunate enough to find yourself in or near
the greater Seattle-Tacoma metropolitan area, and to those of you who are lucky
enough to get to the Enumclaw show, I heartily recommend taking the rare
opportunity to drive down Main Street Puyallup and stop into the Powerhouse
Restaurant & Brewery for a jolt of cold Amperage-Amber microbrew and a
sizzling slice of Circuit-Breaker Pizza. Or, if you like something less
electrifying, perhaps the Lime Chicken Salad or the Smoked Salmon Pasta with a
Meridian Chardonnay, or may be a Bleu Cheese Mushroom Burger, or maybe...
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