Skip to content

Food & Drink

How Elephant Car Wash Became an Unforgettable Icon

The rotating pink neon sign is said to be one of the most photographed landmarks in Seattle

By Lara Hale and Lyra Fontaine May 16, 2016

A neon sign that says car wash at night.

This article originally appeared in the June 2016 issue of Seattle magazine.

You know what they say: Washing your car is the surest way to bring on rain.

If that’s the case, many of Seattle’s drizzly days must be caused by Elephant Car Wash. The business traces its roots back to the 1940s, when Richmond Beach native Eldon Anderson and his business partners opened the Five Minute Car Wash, one of the country’s first semi-automated car washes. Over the years, Anderson used some of the skills he learned as a heavy equipment operator and builder (he reportedly worked on the construction of the Deception Pass bridge) to invent the first truly hands-free car washing system. In 1951, he convinced two of his younger brothers, Archie and Dean, to partner with him on a new enterprise: Elephant Car Wash.

Although the first location (there are now 14) was at Fourth and Lander in SoDo, the second location, opened in 1956 on Battery Street downtown, is the best known. Its rotating, pink neon sign—which has appeared in movies, music videos and ads, and has attracted patrons ranging from the Secret Service to Elvis Presley—is said to be one of the most photographed landmarks in Seattle.

 

Follow Us

Bellevue Arts Museum Shuts Down

Bellevue Arts Museum Shuts Down

Aggressive fundraising campaign falls short

The struggling Bellevue Arts Museum (BAM) has closed to the public. Its last day was Sept. 4. “Unfortunately, the financial model in the new building has never been sustainable and it has relied too heavily on ‘one-time’ big donors,” says Kate Casprowiak Scher, who was appointed permanent executive director early this year. “We are caught…

Modern Love with a Jane Austen Twist

Modern Love with a Jane Austen Twist

Author Christina Hwang Dudley brings a classic tale to modern Asian America

It’s universally known that a good enemies-to-lovers story never gets old. Among the most famous literary pairs in this genre are Lizzy Bennet and Mr. Darcy from Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice...

Why You Might See Mario and Pikachu in Seattle This Weekend

Why You Might See Mario and Pikachu in Seattle This Weekend

PAX West, one of the world’s biggest video game conventions, celebrates 20 years in Seattle

If you see Mario, Lara Croft, Link, or even Pikachu wandering around downtown Seattle this weekend, you can thank the West Coast’s most popular gaming event, PAX West. Think of it as the Burning Man for gamers — PAX West is celebrating its 20th anniversary at the Seattle Convention Center from Aug. 30 to Sept.

Seattle Once Banned Underaged Dancing — This Podcast Explains It All

Seattle Once Banned Underaged Dancing — This Podcast Explains It All

Written by local journalist Jonathan Zwickel, Let the Kids Dance traces the origins and legacy of Seattle’s Teen Dance Ordinance.

Nearly 40 years ago, in 1985, the city of Seattle passed Ordinance 11237, the Teen Dance Ordinance (TDO) — a piece of legislation that essentially banned teen dances outside of schools and barred anyone under the age of 18 from attending a concert without a chaperone. If visions of a young, tank-top-clad Kevin Bacon clandestinely