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El Parador Restaurant


 

If you've seen the news, El Parador Restaurant at Broadway and Treat is closing after 40 some years. Since they had a little history about the restaurant, I thought I'd tell you a little bit about the building itself.

Go back in the Tucson Time Machine to March, 1946....

Walter Hartwig, Tucson interior decorator, will open an upscale shopping plaza at the southwest corner of Broadway and Treat. Designed by architect W. H. Carr, in cooperation with Mr. Hartwig (the paper said Cahn, but my research only showed a W. H. Carr), Country Club Plaza will feature a dress shop, beauty shop, children's shop, epicurean and candy shop, and a woman's shoe shop. It will be of modern style with a classical influence, white painted brick and projecting canopies, to protect the windows and the window shoppers from the sun.

M. M. Sundt won the construction contract and broke ground early last week. The center is laid out so that all shops face a flagstone patio. At present, two units will be constructed and each will house 5 shops. A third unit at the rear, forming a U-shaped building, will be added at a later date.

A feature of the new shopping center will be a landscaped and paved parking area directly in front of the buildings which will provide space for 24 cars, thus eliminating congestion on Broadway.

Completion of the new center is scheduled for mid-August or early September.

(Excerpt from Arizona Daily Star, March 10, 1946)

Sure hope that even with the drippy roof and any other construction issues, this building won't see the wrecking ball as so many other landmarks have. I'm going to keep my eye on it.

Catherine


 

There's a feature with photos in a vintage Arizona Highways magazine of a fashion show going on in the inside patio of the building.? It's all bright and light, so I'm assuming at one point the interior patio was open to the sky rather than roofed in and painted green for the restaurant.?

The shops that are around the perimeter of the inside of the restaurant looked to be originally outdoor entrances -- pretty much the way they appeared after it became the restaurant.


 

Catherine,
Thank you for including the 1946 newspaper article info. At that time I can imagine there were many WW2 veterans in Tucson looking for work and new construction projects provided well needed jobs.
It is sad to know the El Parador will be closing . We had many dinners there and would sometimes treat our out of town visitors to their first taste of real Mexican cuisine.
It was an interesting in that old newspaper story when it said the parking lot of the new construction project would have room for 24 vehicles to lessen the congestion on Broadway.....what a difference that was compared to the what it's like now!!
-Deb


 

I remember my parents taking us to this building as a child. They went window shopping and my brothers and I ran around like crazy. That might have been part of the plan to wear us out before bedtime. I don't remember it being roof in but open to the sky in the early years. Keep in mind, I'm talking the early-mid '50's, so the memory might not be accurate.

Sorry, too, about the closing of El Parador. We had my Dad's 80th birthday celebration there. Wasn't there another restaurant there in the early '70's? I remember meeting Max Gottschauk, the furniture designer there in about '72 and buying a chair from him.?

Ken

Kenneth A. Ethridge, AIA, RAS
C 214/316-2476


Michael Horton
 

Hi,

Which issue of the AZ Highways is that fashion show in? I have every issue from 1949 through 1970.

Michael


 

Yeah...I am sorry, I can't recall.? I would have said already if I could.? LOL :D? There is an issue with a fashion feature in it, including venues in Phoenix; and I think it's included in that.? It's not too early; could in fact be 1970's, because I also have a vintage collection from the 1940's on through this year.

Jeri