Tiki Central / Locating Tiki
The Polynesia, Spokane, WA (restaurant)
Pages: 1 13 replies
M
Mo-Eye
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Nov 4, 2009 2:11 AM
Name:The Polynesia Description: |
M
Mo-Eye
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Nov 4, 2009 2:39 AM
Found this photo in the November 11th, 1964 Spokane Daily Chronicle of the construction of the Polynesia Restaurant. Could not find a whole lot of info on this place. It overlooked the Spokane River Upper Falls and was located near the corner of Bridge and Lincoln. It was owned by David L. Cohen, who also owned the Polynesia in Seattle. Construction on this place was supposed to start in the fall of 1962, when it was stated it would be delayed until Spring of 1963, but actually didn't start until the fall of 1964. It was being built at a cost of $350,000 and Raymond Peck was the architect. At the time of this photo, it was slated for completion on March 1, 1965, but who knows if that actually happened. In the photo you can see the A frames lying on the ground. Anyone got any other images? |
TM
Tipsy McStagger
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Nov 4, 2009 5:05 AM
you better check the recent posts to the other polynesia thread.....has much more info for you there. |
D
Dustycajun
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Nov 4, 2009 7:23 AM
Tipsy, This is a different one in Spokane - not Seattle. First I have heard of a second one, would love to see some more info. DC |
M
Mo-Eye
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Nov 4, 2009 12:12 PM
Yeah, I saw the other posts on the Seattle location. One interesting thing - both places were designed by the same architect, and those A-Frames on the ground in this photo look quite similar to the ones used on the Seattle location. Wonder if the architect got lazy and just used the same plans on both? |
W
woofmutt
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Aug 4, 2010 7:25 AM
"you better check the recent posts to the other polynesia thread.....has much more info for you there." -Tipsy McStagger- I couldn't locate anything on the Polynesia in Spokane in the one Polynesia thread I know of. If there's another other thread with the Spokane info I'd like to know. "...both places were designed by the same architect, and those A-Frames on the ground in this photo look quite similar to the ones used on the Seattle location. Wonder if the architect got lazy and just used the same plans on both?" -Mo-Eye- It was probably identical to the Seattle location because the owner wanted it that way. The Seattle joint was pretty swell: |
J
JoeB
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Mar 30, 2011 4:40 AM
This restaurant is now Anthony's. Related to the Anthony's chain in Seattle I believe. The City bought the restaurant a few years back for the purpose of building a bridge across the river so that a person could exit I-90 onto Lincoln Street and drive directly north across the river without the cumbersome zigzagging using other routes. Look at the google map, you'll see what I mean. But the bridge would have gone directly over the region's most famous landmark -- the Spokane Falls. That didn't bother the politicians or downtown business interests but the people rebelled and the City Council was forced to abandon the bridge idea. They then leased the site for special events for a year or two, and ultimately leased it to Anthony's. There's a fantastic view from the restaurant of the river as it enters the falls. Very impressive during the spring runoff in late March, April, and early May. Massive volumes of water. Not a bad place to have a steak or lobster tail dinner. Best restaurant view in Spokane. Not polynesian though. Dinners run $20-$35. |
B
bigbrotiki
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Mar 30, 2011 3:29 PM
Looks like the triple A-frames are still standing, cool: |
D
Dustycajun
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Dec 27, 2011 2:50 PM
Found some more info digging around on google news archives. The restaurant was completed in 1965 and was a copy of the Polynesia in Seattle. Here is a news article about the new manager with picture of a nice PNG mask on the restaurant wall.
Always wondered why there has been no trace of ephemera from this place. Turns out that it was sold to the Black Angus chain just a short year later in 1966 and remodeled with a "western" theme.
Wonder what happened to all of the south seas artifacts? DC |
T
tikicoma
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Dec 28, 2011 10:34 PM
DC, what a remarkable and rare find! aloha, tikicoma |
D
Dustycajun
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Sep 7, 2012 7:58 AM
Spotted these old Tiki door handles on ebay that came from the Polynesia in Spokane. One is marked inside and one is marked outside. Maybe from the front door? Looks like maybe the same carver as the Tiki in the press photo I posted earlier. DC |
B
bigbrotiki
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Sep 7, 2012 10:19 AM
And they went for a pretty penny, too. I am glad, cuz they are worth it, being from an actual Tiki temple. I believe they are O.A.-made, the mask in the photo is also. |
D
Dustycajun
Posted
posted
on
Wed, Feb 10, 2016 11:20 AM
News archive photo of the Polynesia Restaurant triple A-frame structure in Spokane that sold on ebay a while back. Cant' quite figure out what the Tiki mask-like pole sign is, maybe a torch with the gas pipe in the back? DC |
T
tikicoma
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Jun 13, 2016 11:59 PM
Spokesman-Review photo from 1965 nearing completion. |
Pages: 1 13 replies