Detailing? Car Storage? That`s Just the beginning!
Transcription
Detailing? Car Storage? That`s Just the beginning!
PHOTOGRAPHS BY MATT MAKOWSKI Detailing? Car Storage? That’s Just the beginning! WRITTEN BY MATT MAKOWSKI Collectors Car Corral Pampers You and Your Car COMBINE EQUAL PARTS BATCAVE AND THROWBACK 1950’S LOUNGE; ADD TWO PARTS WAREHOUSE AND STIR IN A 30,000 SQUARE-FOOT CONTAINER; GARNISH WITH WAX AND A CHAMOIS—DON’T SHAKE—YOU COULD BRUISE THE MERCHANDISE. What you wind up with is a facility resembling the Collectors Car Corral. Granted, a cocktail metaphor may not be the most suitable one to use when describing anything to do with cars, but there aren’t many ways to clearly portray a concoction like this. There’s plenty of car clubs, electronically secured storage facilities, and detail businesses that can bring back that fresh-from-the-dealer 16 WashTrends / Summer 2006 shine, but not many – if any – that concentrate on all three. The Collectors Car Corral has an unassuming brick facade with a simple black canopy over the front entranceway. The only distinctive feature that separates this building from the myriad of other warehouses in Owings Mills, MD is the ultra-fancy cursive “CCC” emblazoned on the canopy. Past the portico and inside the characterless walls is where ordinary ends. This is a Mecca for car lovers, hobbyists, and those WHO simply don’t get enough car in their lives. At the CCC, the toys come both small and large. Just behind the tinted glass doors in the lobby are custom-built shelves made for housing scale models of Ferraris, Grand Prix racers, as well as a compendium of other visually venerated vehicles. The rugged diamond-plate aluminum floor of the lobby gives way to a subdued carpet, and a lounge that can renew memories for any nostalgic baby boomer. There’s an eight-foot, gray felt pool table next to the enclosed stogie room, swanky red leather couches, a blackand-white checkerboard bar and coffee table, and why-didn’t-I-think-of-that bar stools fashioned from sterilized chrome rims. Of course the art on the walls keeps consistent with the motif and celebrates all things fast. Among others, two prints from famed motor sports artist Randy Owens adorn the walls near the bar. Despite the retro appeal, the CCC isn’t built for Luddites. We’ve come a long way from 12-inch black and white televisions. The only thing that beats watching the Sunday races on their 62inch HDTV with the surround sound blaring is actually being there, and even that’s debatable. Clubhouse members who pay the $300 yearly fee get to bask in all this as well as a full-service Porsche Tangerine Orange locker room, guest office, extensive automotive library/ conference room, and even a video game room dedicated to the racing game Gran Turismo 4. There is one catch; members also have to donate a vehicle to the scale model collection in the lobby, a book or technical manual to the library, and a piece of automotivethemed and framed artwork. As for the remaining square-footage not used for socialization, that’s where the toys get bigger. “I’m into the car hobby and I started storing my own personal cars here at the facility,” said Randy Moss, president of the CCC. Moss has owned the building for more than 24 years. It was headquarters for Holstein Paper & Janitorial Supplies until he merged the business with a rival company in order to make room for his vision and more cars. “A friend of mine called me; he wanted to put his car here. I let him put his car here. My dad had somebody who asked for a space, and he put his car here. So then I put two and two together,” Moss said. The vast room once dedicated to the storage of paper and janitorial supplies is now a climate controlled, 24-hour electronically secured storeroom for cars, motorcycles and trailers, complete with hydraulic lifts and work bays for those who need to get under the hood. The storage area looks like a poster on an adolescent boy’s bedroom wall. Classic Mustang convertibles, shining Porsches galore, a pair of ’57 Chevy Bel Air Convertibles, an unspoiled 70-plusyear-old Model A Ford, and the list goes on. All in all, the street sign-decorated warehouse is prepared to house 70 cars. Once the CCC hits the 70 mark, buddy lifts will be installed to raise the limit to 100. Although not there yet, the warehouse has already come a long way from being a paper holding tank. Of course not only classic and exotic cars grace the hallowed walls of the CCC. People store cars for any number of reasons, not just to protect them from the elements. “A car is being dropped off next week because a guy is getting a [job] transfer to Ireland,” Moss said, adding, “The red convertible [in storage], it’s owned by a guy who works for the State Department who was transferred to Hungary for three years. He visited the car last August.” Moss recently got a phone call from a family remodeling their home. They needed to store some of their weatherprone cars so they could turn the garage at home into a staging area for the renovation. “With the older cars you can put on all the cover you want, but over time it’s going to deteriorate… We’re trying to offer a solution to these problems,” Moss said. Storing an automobile at CCC runs $175 a month, or $1,800 a year. But you get what you pay for. Yearly storage customers get the added perk of free clubhouse membership. Simple storage solution aside, the CCC also offers battery tending, fluid checks, periodic cleanings and occasional movement of the vehicles to prevent tire flatspotting and infestation problems. Besides the problems listed above and high gas prices, a car’s biggest enemy is dirt. The inevitable fact of the matter is any car taken on the road will get dirty and for most cars, the local carwash is more than fine. But Opposite page: The lounge at Collectors Car Corral featuring pool table, lounge area and bar. Bottom left: PresidentRandy Moss in the library/conference room. Bottom right: Joe Manger detailing a client’s car. (Continued on page 25) WashTrends / Summer 2006 17 Collectors Car Corral (continued) why keep a 40-year-old piece of automotive history in normal condition? The CCC’s other specialty is keeping cars picture perfect. Off to the side of where the cars are stored is a clean checkerboard-floored detail bay where vehicles regain their showroom shine. This is Joe Manger’s area. He’s been detailing cars for more than 15 years. He used to own and operate Distinctive Detailing in Glyndon, MD, where he met Moss. Distinctive was a 3,000 square-foot shop where on top of detailing, Manger stored 10 to 13 cars at any given time. Manger ran out of space before he ran out of clients. “Joe would tell me, ‘I get a call once a month from someone looking to store a car,’” Moss said of his personal trips to Manger’s shop. Between Manger’s additional connections and his expertise in spotlessness, Moss saw a possibility for a business partnership – one that would help separate his facility from other luxury car storage facilities. “I think our business plan is favorable because with a detail shop here on site it gives you staff to take care of the cars that are in storage,” Moss said. And it doesn’t hurt to have someone around who is as good at shining up a sedan as good as Manger. “I used to pride myself on the fact that I liked to go into the garage and scrub my own cars, but after he started doing it I realized what a weak job I did,” Moss said of Manger’s talents. Manger’s new detail bay at the CCC is loaded with high-end cleaning and polishing products, chamois galore, plenty of rags and a healthy dose of bathroom toiletries. Here, the cotton swabs and toothbrushes aren’t used for personal care. Manger uses the Q-tips for wiping the dust off of air conditioner vents and the toothbrushes for any other nook or cranny where dirt may hide. “It’s not uncommon for a halfmillion-dollar car too come in here for a detail,” Manger said before racing from his office to the detail bay on a razor scooter. Before everything is said and done, Manger isn’t happy until he can see the color of his eyes in the glistening surface of a car. “It’s like a black mirror,” Manger said peering into the finish of a BMW Z3. That’s the way it’s got to be when sterilizing top of the line vehicles. They can be a discerning crowd. With three distinct enterprises revolving around the care, collection and commemoration of ground transportation, Moss spots room for more. After a successful Super Bowl party with more than 100 guests, Moss sees additional uses for the site. The site has already hosted a number of car club meetings, which Moss hopes is just the tip of the iceberg. Couple the boom in condo living and single car garages with a growing hobby that requires space, and Moss could have a match made in heaven. “We just want people to be able to relax and enjoy it here,” Moss said. Matt Makowski has toiled in various forms of media over the past six years. He is currently a freelance writer based in Maryland. WashTrends / Summer 2006 25