Manning’s Coffee sign being restored

The historic Manning’s Coffee Store rooftop sign in the Highland Park neighborhood of Los Angeles is being restored, reported the Highland Park-Mount Washington Patch.

Manning’s Coffee went out of business in the 1960s, and the sign’s neon lighting hasn’t functioned for many years. Las Cazuelas restaurant now occupies the building.

The area is part of the North Figueroa Street corridor in Los Angeles, which contained Route 66 from 1931 to 1934 and again from 1936 to 1960.

Here is an image of the unrestored Manning Coffee Store sign.

According to the story, a cost-share grant from the Route 66 Corridor Preservation Program is being used to restore the sign. Community leaders and volunteers are covering the rest of the cost.

“It turns out, it’s kind of important in terms of signage history because it combines neon with opal glass, and there’s very few of those in existence,” said Amy Inouye of Future Studio. “As well as the fact that there’s not any signs like this from Manning’s that we know of at all on the entire West Coast.” […]

Richard Ankrum, a neon restoration expert, is currently working on painting the sign and is scheduled to install the neon lights later this week. A note on the flyer for the relighting ceremony taking place at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 10, states that original materials will be used in the restoration and only missing and broken pieces will be replaced.

According to Future Studio, the Manning sign was erected in 1933.

The newspaper also says the groups consulted with the Museum of Neon Art to ensure that the original neon colors are used in the sign.

Nearby, the historic Highland Theatre rooftop sign was restored and relit to much fanfare in May.

2 thoughts on “Manning’s Coffee sign being restored

  1. Hopefully I will see some 66’ers there on 1/10/12. If you don’t know who I am I promise you will be able to find me anyway. It will be well worth it to see the second in a string of signs getting re-lit in the Figueroa corridor.

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