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Bakersfield Sign

Bakersfield Sign
The Bakersfield Sign
The Bakersfield Sign, facing west on Sillect Avenue.
Alternative names Bakersfield Arch
General information
Type Sign
Architectural style Arch
Location Bakersfield, California
Coordinates 35°23′10″N 119°02′31″W / 35.386°N 119.042°W / 35.386; -119.042
Completed 1949 (1949)
Renovated 1999 (1999)
Owner City of Bakersfield
Technical details
Structural system Steel support

The Bakersfield Sign (also known as the Bakersfield Neon Arch) is one of the most recognizable landmarks in Bakersfield, California. It is located over Sillect Avenue, where the street intersects with Buck Owens Boulevard, to the northwest of Downtown Bakersfield. The sign can be seen from State Route 99 (Golden State Freeway) and is just past the freeway off-ramp. It is also next to the Buck Owens Crystal Palace.

This sign is a yellow arch in which blue letters spell out the name of the city. It is supported by two towers, which were inspired by the Beale Memorial Clock Tower design. The sign is illuminated by indirect lighting. Typically, the letters are transparent and the lights, which are underneath the letters, shine through them. With indirect lighting, the letters are solid and the light, which is still underneath the letters, shines down onto the arch. The result is the letters appear black on top of a lighted backdrop. Then, the light used is green. Built by California Neon Sign Company.

The sign was originally constructed in 1949 and was over Union Avenue, just south of California Avenue. That road was a part of the Golden State Highway (US 99), which was the main connector between Northern and Southern California by the San Joaquin Valley. The Bakersfield Inn wanted to expand across the street. The sign was constructed as a footbridge to connect the two halves of the hotel.

The construction of the sign also served another purpose. Most of the Central Valley communities along US 99 had an arched sign spanning the highway to welcome drivers to the towns and cities that they were entering. The Bakersfield sign became the arched sign for the city.

By the late 1990s, the sign had fallen into a state of disrepair. The Bakersfield Inn had closed down and no one was maintaining the sign. California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), fearing the sign could collapse onto the road, wanted to remove it. The original sign was demolished, and a new sign and towers were built by Sampson Steel (Duncan Sampson) in their steelyard, just north of the sign's new location; Rob Mann was Sampson Steel's project manager. Once the towers were built, the arched steel sign truss was carried down the street by crane in the early morning hours and stored on country singer Buck Owens' property to allow other trades access to perform their work.


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