Los Angeles Times

Disney tower scraped skies of N.Y.

Ten-story Tower of the Four Winds had a fling with fame at the 1964 fair

- SCOTT HARRISON scott.harrison@latimes.com

The Tower of the Four Winds is not as famous as some of Walt Disney’s other iconic attraction­s.

But in 1964 it got worldwide attention — in New York. And because of this geographic difference, it became destined for the dustbin of amusement park history.

In the Jan. 27, 1964, Los Angeles Times, staff writer Lance Brisson wrote:

New Yorkers may know how to build the world’s tallest skyscraper­s, but they had to come to Los Angeles for the world’s tallest mobile.

Mobiles, as everyone knows, are those wire artifacts which usually dangle and twirl from the ceilings of avant-garde living rooms.

This particular mobile, 10 stories or 110 ft. high, was designed for the Pepsi Cola Pavilion at the New York World’s Fair by Walt Disney. It was constructe­d by Zeon Corporatio­n, 1100 N. Main St.

Titled the “Tower of the Four Winds,” the structure will not dangle but will be planted atop a two-story building housing exhibits of UNICEF, the United Nations’ Children Fund.

Constructi­on of the $200,000 tower required more than 200,000 lb. of steel and more than 100 blends of paint, according to Zeon officials.

“The colors of every flag in the world will be represente­d somewhere on the mobile,” Disney said last week after inspecting the completed product.

“We have attempted to combine an It’s a Small World theme with a salute to the world’s children for the Pepsi people,” he said.

Three primary columns support the mobile, which has over 100 spinning, swiveling and oscillatin­g elements. All these moving parts — animals, birds, insects, a carousel and a representa­tion of the sun — depend on the wind for locomotion.

The mobile, currently at the Zeon plant, will be disassembl­ed this week and trucked in seven chartered vans to the fairground­s on Long Island’s Flushing Meadows.

Disney is also designing and constructi­ng a boat ride for the Pepsi Pavilion which will be located behind the eye-catching mobile.

The boat ride, It’s a Small World, was brought back and opened at Disneyland in 1966. The tower was left in New York. Eventually it was torn down.

But this year, a virtual simulation of the tower reappeared at the D23 Expo.

 ?? Los Angeles Times Archive/UCLA ?? THE TOWER of the Four Winds, a 110-foot mobile, was designed for the PepsiCola Pavilion by Walt Disney for the World’s Fair in New York in 1964.
Los Angeles Times Archive/UCLA THE TOWER of the Four Winds, a 110-foot mobile, was designed for the PepsiCola Pavilion by Walt Disney for the World’s Fair in New York in 1964.

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