Talk:Brubaker Box

Latest comment: 9 years ago by The stuart in topic Section moved from article

Section moved from article

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This section was removed from the main article because it is written in an unencyclopedic style, contains original research, has no sources, and is possibly copied from another source. It still contains good information that could be used in the article, so I've moved it here. --The_stuart (talk) 21:42, 5 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

Confirmed, this whole section was copied from here: http://www.rodster.com/articles/BrubakerBox.htm --The_stuart (talk) 16:45, 6 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

The Brubaker Box (which debuted in 1972 and was made on and off by various companies until the mid/late seventies, and even briefly re-entered “production” dreams in the late nineties — these days, the molds are sadly decaying and few originals exist) is arguably the true birthplace of the mini-van. Inspired by dune buggies and surf culture, and a car-designer with no interest in joining a big corporation, it had features like the sliding door (to say nothing of the general “mini-van” concept) long before the big players ever considered building them. Oh, and ironically, it was largely resistance from the car companies (VW in this case) that killed off the original company…. THE CAR: Brubaker Box The original minivan by John Matras "We were chugging along looking for clients, trying to survive with a small design office, when it occurred to me that there were a hell of a lot of surfer kids getting around in old beat-up Volkswagen vans." That was Curtis Brubaker's epiphany. A trip to Newport Beach yielded a photo with eight or nine vans in it. "I thought, damn, there is something here." For most that something would have been just a lot of battered old vans, but Curtis Brubaker isn't just anyone. Like most young southern Californians in the early '60s, Brubaker had a passion for cars, adding a reputation for pinstriping and painting them. "It infuriated my dad because there were always car part patters silhouetted on the concrete." A stint working on aircraft in the Navy was followed by the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles--interrupted by a period helping Bill Lear design his executive jet--and a year-and-a-half at the advanced research group at General Motors, designing Cadillac interiors and small car concepts. "But I don't think I was cut out to be a corporate guy, so I came back to California and set up my own studio and actually did more work for General Motors, Volvo, Ford and the Japanese here than I did in Detroit." PHOTO CAPTION: GRAPE APE AND THE GANG would feel right at home aboard the bizarro Box, a vehicle that hoped to simultaneously tap into the hip '70s van and VW scenes. It was then that the idea for an alternative vehicle developed in Brubaker's mind, combining his aircraft experience with elements of the economical and somewhat countercultural VW Beetle, the surfer vans and Bruce Meyer's fiberglass Manx dune buggy. The result was "A new kind of crossover vehicle." "It was a one-box design. We did a mock-up right there in our little office and brought in investors and people got excited and we ultimately raised a small amount of funds," Brubaker recalls. With the $160,000 nest egg, the 31-year-old Brubaker intended to manufacture a kit car "to fit in the...business model that had been crudely established by others." At the Los Angeles International Motorsports Show, the reaction to a prototype of the alliteratively named Brubaker Box convinced Brubaker that his decision to build completed vehicles was right. Negotiations with VW to acquire knock-down chassis, however, proved fruitless, with VW concerned about liability. As a result, Brubaker had to buy complete VWs from dealers, selling off unneeded parts. Awkward and labor-intensive, it was almost a wash financially, Brubaker says. He leased a 17,000-square-foot building in Los Angeles to assemble Boxes with plans for five per month, priced at $3,995, beginning in March 1972, and 400 per month by year's end.

Alas, VW's recalcitrance made additional financing difficult. One of the investors was, as Brubaker says, "unruly." So the company filed for bankruptcy without making very many Boxes. One of the investors tried to sell the Box as a kit, but the molds wound up being shuffled around the country as one entrepreneur after another tried to make a go of Brubaker's bold design. Most successful, perhaps, was Automecca, circa 1974, with its "Sports Van." It's still the Brubaker Box, though, to those who remember it. To those who've never seen one, it's something special. Driving a Box owned by Dick Miller turned more heads than an Italian exotic. The front bumper isn't original, but out back the stock '72 VW four-banger behaves like any Beetle engine, and the Box, weighing about the same as a stock Beetle, accelerates similarly. The only really strange thing is the way-out-there windshield, not unlike the first Pontiac Trans Sports. The seating position, with its raised pedals, is simply peculiar. Today the "minivan" is ubiquitous. In '72, the "mini-van," as one publication called it, was not. The Brubaker Box was the only one.