Nebraska city set to take over quirky Carhenge site

Carhenge, western Nebraska's automotive replica of England's famed Stonehenge, is located near Alliance, Neb.  The Alliance City Manager and the Alliance Visitors Bureau are considering taking over the site after the Friends of Carhenge offered to give the attraction and 10 surrounding acres to the city.
Carhenge, western Nebraska's automotive replica of England's famed Stonehenge, is located near Alliance, Neb. The Alliance City Manager and the Alliance Visitors Bureau are considering taking over the site after the Friends of Carhenge offered to give the attraction and 10 surrounding acres to the city.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - While it lacks the cultural significance of the original prehistoric monument found in England, western Nebraska's junk-car tribute to Stonehenge remains a top tourist draw in the state - even if it is more likely to attract gearheads than Druids.

If officials vote next week as expected, the western Nebraska city of Alliance will take control of Carhenge, the 26-year-old mashup monument to English prehistory and the American automobile.

The Alliance City Council is expected to accept the monument and a surrounding 10-acre site as a gift during its meeting July 25. If the deal is approved, the city in October will assume ownership of the Stonehenge lookalike, once labeled the No. 2 wackiest attraction in America.

Carhenge was built in 1987 by Jim Reinders and several relatives on land the family once farmed just north of Alliance, in western Nebraska. A few years later, Reinders donated Carhenge and 10 acres around it to a nonprofit group, Friends of Carhenge.

The monument is comprised of 38 automobiles arranged in a circle to closely resemble the stones at England's Stonehenge, the mysterious prehistoric landmark and UNESCO World Heritage site. Several cars are planted upright in the dirt, with other cars placed on top to form archways. All the cars are painted gray to further the resemblance to its ancient inspiration.

The monument was put up for sale in 2011, with an asking price of $300,000. Marcia Buck, president of Friends of Carhenge, said at the time the quirky tourist attraction lacked volunteers and had limited capital.

The site attracts an estimated 75,000 to 80,000 visitors per year, drawing many travelers on their way to South Dakota's Black Hills and Mount Rushmore, said Kevin Howard, director of the Alliance Visitors Bureau. Howard says the replica, about four miles north of downtown Alliance, has helped steer business into the town of about 8,500.

Carhenge received national recognition in 2009, when the travel advice site TripAdvisor named it among the nation's 10 wackiest attractions. The only site deemed wackier was a toilet seat museum in San Antonio, which has more than 800 decorated toilet seat lids but no bathroom.

The monument's nonprofit owner, the Friends of Carhenge, decided to sell the replica because of the rising cost of gift-shop merchandise, insurance and property taxes. The group will remain intact but shift its focus to fundraising, said Buck.

Buck said initial upgrades could include a new paint job and gravel for pathways. The partnership with the city will help add awnings for shade, new trees and an RV campsite around the otherwise desolate monument.

The monument routinely attracts visitors from around the world and all 50 states.

As of June, Carhenge this year already had drawn visitors from at least 48 states and 14 countries. The owners charge no admission fee, and visitors are allowed to walk up and touch it. Last year, visitors from Canada, England, German, France and Italy signed their names to the log book, to name a few.

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