 Jeff Clark '83 admires the object of his desire, a 1939 Bugatti Type
57C roadster once owned by the Shah of Iran. He matched his knowledge
of the community with a friend's car connections to organize the annual
Concours d'Elegance in Kirkland. Photo by Hannelore Sudermann.
The object of Jeff Clark’s desire once belonged to the Shah of
Iran. The shiny black 1939 Bugatti Type 57C was originally
commissioned by the French government and given to the Shah as a
present on the occasion of his first marriage. Today the roadster
is part of the Petersen Automotive Museum collection in Los
Angeles, and in September spent a night in a covered concrete
parking garage in Kirkland.
Clark is there when a driver brings it in and parks it next to
Fred Astaire’s Rolls-Royce, just up the ramp from the Porsche 917
Steve McQueen drove in Le Mans.
“It’s my favorite,” says Clark, who stands gingerly near the
Bugatti’s curved flank. Out of nearly 80 vintage automobiles that
arrived for the 2006 Kirkland Concours d’Elegance, this car’s
bodacious curves caught the architect’s eye. He was happy just to
see it up close, a benefit of being chairman of the charity
event.
Pebble Beach it’s not. But at the Kirkland Concours, you’ll find
many of the same MGs, Stanley Steamers, Rolls-Royces and
Duesenburgs that made the California Concours famous—and some of
the same people wandering among them. “Eighty of the best darn cars
we can find,” says Clark.
The tradition of a Concours d’Elegance started in Europe in the
1920s, when the new luxury vehicles of the day were paraded in
front of enthusiasts. Today, the Concours d’Elegance is a show of
some of the rarest and most beautiful cars ever made, privately
owned vehicles with a market value of $200,000 to several million,
but priceless to collectors and fans of vintage cars.
 Hannelore Sudermann
For Clark, 48, the pleasure comes in bringing them to his
hometown. The Kirkland native graduated from Washington State
University with an architecture degree in 1983. With his wife,
Sharon '80, a young child, and an invitation to work for an
architecture firm in Portland, he had no plans ever to return to
Kirkland. But just as he was ready to start, the Portland firm’s
business slowed.
Instead, he took a job with an architect in Kirkland who paid
him $5 an hour to work on an addition to the city’s post office.
Not the most auspicious start, he admits, but it offered him plenty
of experience. Today he owns the business, Architecture Werks,
Inc.
And the town he planned to leave behind? He’s more a part of it
than ever. Since moving back, he’s been a city councilman, chair of
the city planning commission, and president of the chamber of
commerce.
A few years ago Clark met car collector Peter Hageman when their
daughters played softball in the same league. Hageman, who shows
his own cars in events like Concours D’Eleganza Villa D’Este in
Italy, would inquire after an older Porsche he knew Clark kept.
Soon they were toying with the idea of having such an event
locally. Hageman had the car connections, and Clark knew the
community.
Two other such concourses had been attempted in the Seattle
area. The first, on Mercer Island in the 1960s, didn’t draw enough
cars to get started. The second was at the Naval base in Everett.
“Guess why that one failed?” says Clark. “Lack of venue.”
They joined up with a few other local businessmen and solved
their venue problem by planning their event at the posh Woodmark
Hotel on the east shore of Lake Washington. Then they focused on a
mission—to raise money for uncompensated medical care for children
in Kirkland and Seattle, with the proceeds to be split between
Evergreen Healthcare and Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical
Center.
“I’m on the foundation board for the Evergreen Hospital,” says
Clark. “I do all right, but I can’t donate $200,000 a year.” He
pauses for effect. “I can do this,” he says, waving at the
cars.
The event takes a full year to organize, and when it finally
arrives, Clark and his fellow volunteers throw themselves into
organizing the cars and the thousands of people who come to see
them. The Concours has managed to draw some big names in the
boutique car world, including actor Ed Herrmann, an avid collector
who serves annually as a judge and the honorary chairman, Glenn
Mounger, former co-chairman of the Pebble Beach Councours
D’Elegance, and Keith Martin, founder and publisher of Sports
Car Market magazine. A fancy gala the night before included an
auction with tickets to Jay Leno and a private tour of his
collection.
Increasingly, the Pacific Northwest is a home for beautiful cars
and their collectors, says Clark. That works in the organizers’
favor. Besides attracting some great cars from local owners like
Carl Schmitt of Walla Walla, who brought his 1904 Pierce Arrow, and
the Le May Museum in Tacoma, which sent a 1930 Stutz DV-32
Speedster, the show draws from internationally known collections
like that of John Mozart in Palo Alto. He sent a pair of 1930s-era
Packards.
“This is not just a car show. It’s cars and art and people,”
says Clark the morning of the event, as he guides the entrants to
the Woodmark grounds. They zoom, steam, and roar by. Clark squints
at the sky, hoping for a break in the rain. He looks down the road,
hoping the precious antiques can easily navigate their way in. This
is probably his busiest, most stressful weekend all year, he
says.
But, he admits, as the angry whine of a Ferrari rips through the
air, it’s also his favorite.
--Hannelore Sudermann
Washington State Magazine Home
|