The Signal

Tesla wants you to charge up, fill up at the same time

- Zlati Meyer

Having created an electric-car “Supercharg­er” network around the country, Tesla is creating a filling station of a different sort.

While Tesla CEO Elon Musk may be known as a visionary for dreaming of rockets to Mars or tunneling under cities, his latest idea is downright retro.

Tesla is planning to open a drivein-style restaurant — a concept straight out of the sock-hop 1950s — next to a charging station in Santa Monica, Calif. The city confirms the proposal on its website where Tesla has filed for the applicatio­n.

Though it may sound like a throwback, it likely would have an updated twist: Your car would be charging as you munched on your burger and fries behind the wheel.

The plans come as no surprise to Musk watchers. In January, the billionair­e entreprene­ur tweeted that he was going to “put an old-school drive-in, roller skates & rock restaurant at one of the new Tesla Supercharg­er locations in LA.” The Palo Alto, Calif.-based automaker declined to provide more details.

Musk isn’t the only person in his family with an interest in food. His brother Kimbal co-founded the multistate Kitchen Restaurant Group in 2004, and Square Roots, an urban farming incubator based in Brooklyn, N.Y., with plans to open sites in cities across the U.S. Kimbal Musk sits on Tesla’s board of directors.

The site of Tesla’s proposed Santa Monica Supercharg­er station plus drive-in is a lot previously home to a Volvo dealership. Santa Monica is a progressiv­e, eco-oriented community with high-income residents early to embrace hybrid and electric cars. It’s about 10 miles north of Tesla’s design studio in Hawthorne.

Tesla currently has 1,130 Supercharg­er stations with 8,496 Supercharg­ers. The one in Kettleman City, Calif. — about 50 miles south of Fresno — is one of the largest and features a customer lounge that includes vending machines.

Jim Heimann, author of Car Hops and Curb Service: A History of American Drive-In Restaurant­s 19201960, said the drive-in’s appeal historical­ly was the convenienc­e of not having to get out of your car. But time-savers — today known as life hacks — are valued nowadays, too.

“It’s a novelty and probably will be very popular. You can sit with your iPhone while you wait for you food,” he said. “From my point of view, it’d be great to see an old-fashioned drive-in.”

 ?? TESLA ?? Tesla’s Supercharg­er station in Kettleman City, Calif., is one of its largest and features a customer lounge that includes vending machines.
TESLA Tesla’s Supercharg­er station in Kettleman City, Calif., is one of its largest and features a customer lounge that includes vending machines.

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