Rubel Castle

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Rubel Castle Historic District
Rubelia -Wide View.jpg
Rubel Castle is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Rubel Castle
Location844 N. Live Oak Ave., Glendora, California
Coordinates34°9′1″N 117°51′17″W / 34.15028°N 117.85472°W / 34.15028; -117.85472Coordinates: 34°9′1″N 117°51′17″W / 34.15028°N 117.85472°W / 34.15028; -117.85472
Built1959 to 1986
Architectural styleFolk art environment
NRHP reference No.13000810[1]
Added to NRHPOctober 7, 2013

Rubel Castle (also known as Rubelia), was established in Glendora, California, by Michael Clarke Rubel (April 16, 1940 – October 15, 2007), and is currently owned and operated by the Glendora Historical Society.[2] It has been called "a San Gabriel Valley version of Watts Towers."[3]

Rubel purchased a 1.7 acre citrus orchard on which the structure resides in 1959.[4] He and his friends completed construction in 1986. Rubelia could be thought of as the first major recycling project in the United States.[5]

Rubel Castle was constructed partly out of concrete but also out of scrap steel, rocks, bedsprings, coat hangers, bottles, and other repurposed materials that Rubel salvaged from the neighborhood as ranches and barns were giving way to tract houses.

Chickens and other animals are frequently sighted.[6]

Background[]

Michael Rubel on his porch, 2000.

In 1959, Rubel bargained for the defunct Albourne Rancho property and took up residence in the huge citrus packing house. Rubel's father, Henry "Heinz" Scott Rubel, had been an Episcopal priest and gag writer for Joe Penner, a radio comedian and movie star.[3] In the 1960s, Rubel's mother, one-time Broadway actress and Greenwich Village Follies dancer[7] Dorothy Deuel Rubel, moved into the packing house with her son. She used the venue to throw parties.[citation needed] Guests arrived weekly by the hundreds, arriving inside a tin fruit packing house which had been transformed into a giant dance hall. Inside, surrounded by art and antique furniture remaining from Rubel ancestors, they mingled and danced to a small orchestra. The parties led to the packing house becoming known as "The Tin Palace."

Notable people who visited "The Tin Palace" in that time include Sally Rand, Dwight Eisenhower, Vivian Duncan of the Duncan Sisters, Woody Strode, Beatrice Kay, Harry Townes, Bob Hope, Jack Benny, Kid Chissell, Angie Dickinson, and Alfred Hitchcock.[citation needed]

Fellow castle builder "Colonel" Jirayr Zorthian was a supporter and friend.

Construction of the castle[]

Though Rubel slept in one of the giant citrus refrigerators, the walls of thick cork were not sufficient sound insulation to allow him peace from his mother's parties. Beginning in 1968, Rubel began building a small get-away house in the empty 1,000,000 gallon concrete reservoir, using cement and discarded champagne bottles.[8] The walls of the reservoir provided privacy and a noise barrier while he built the bottle house. The project lasted twenty years, culminating in what is now called the Rubel Castle.

With the encouragement of people like Odo B. Stade, and with the help of many friends and relations, the castle grew to be thousands of square feet with towers five stories high. Rubel and his associates built the structure without architectural plans, utilizing salvaged river rock, cement, steel, aluminum, telephone poles and wine bottles.[3] Old motorcycles, tires, sand-filled rubber gloves, a camera, a golf club and a toaster are some of the items that protrude from the castle.[3]

A restored 1911 Seth Thomas clock works runs the brass bells and clock that crown one of the high towers, which is 74 feet (23 m) high. In the middle of the property sit a 1940s-era Santa Fe caboose, as well as old trucks and tractors. There is also a cemetery with rejected marble tombstones, but it contains no graves.[3]

Legacy[]

Huell Howser interviewed Rubel for Videolog in 1990 and again in 2011.[9]

The castle has hosted royalty including Prince Philip. Some other notable guests have been Henry Kissinger, the Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie, and Governor George Deukmejian.

In March 2005, Rubel donated the Castle to the Glendora Historical Society.

Many television programs, music videos, and movies have been filmed on castle grounds, including NBC's Heroes and T-mobile's Frankenstein commercial.

Rubel Castle was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2013.[10]

Gallery[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-01-31. Retrieved 2016-01-09.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "Michael Clark Rubel". Glendorahistoricalsociety.org. 2005-03-16. Retrieved 2020-07-01.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e (December 30, 2007). "Trash was turned into a treasure at Rubel Castle". Los Angeles Times. pp. B2.
  4. ^ "Rubel Castle Historic District, National Register of Historic Places Nomination". November 5, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
  5. ^ Traversi, David C. (2003). One Man's Dream: The Spirit of the Rubel Castle. David C. Traversi, dba Strange Publications. p. 211. ISBN 978-0974453200. OCLC 54002102.
  6. ^ Lynda Siminske, “A Castle In Our Town...”, San Gabriel Valley Examiner, March 20–26, 2008, p. 1.
  7. ^ "Wed Minister, But Ex-Star Is Still Dancing". The Telegraph-Herald and Times Journal - Dubuque, IA. November 25, 1928. p. 31. Retrieved 2013-02-28.
  8. ^ LA County Tax Assessor records indicate reservoir measures 124 feet in diameter, and a depth of 12 feet
  9. ^ Glendora, CA - Huell Howser Videolog: Rubel's Castle
  10. ^ "Weekly List of Actions Taken On Properties: 10/21/13 Through 10/25/13". National Park Service. Retrieved November 4, 2013.

External links[]

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