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Flagler Beach’s Iconic A-Frame Is Getting a Make-Over for First Time in 24 Years

April 1, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Even deshingled and disheveled, the A-frame at the Pier could not hide its iconic letters spelling out the town's name, as if tattooed on the structure for all eternity. (© FlaglerLive)
Even deshingled and disheveled, the A-frame at the Pier could not hide its iconic letters spelling out the town’s name, as if tattooed on the structure for all eternity. (© FlaglerLive)

Every city great and small has its iconic signature: Seattle’s Needle, Rome’s Coliseum, Alliance’s Carhenge, Paris’s Eiffel and Palm Coast’s water tower (give it a break, it’s a city in progress). For Flagler Beach, it’s the Pier and its sharply angled A-frame, its two sides’ 12 white letters spelling out the town’s name to horizons north and south.




Flagler Beach almost lost its identity in late March. The letters were gone, the shingles were gone, though like a tattoo to eternity the eye could still discern the letters’ imprint on the wood frame. The structure is getting its first re-shingling in 24 years, a $9,360 job carried out by Florida’s Best Roofing Inc., the Bunnell company.

It’s the fourth reconstruction of Pier-related structures in the last four years, in time–intentionally or not–for the city’s upcoming centennial. In 2017 the Pier itself, originally built in 1929 and lobotomized down to 637 feet (from 800) by Hurricane Matthew in 2016, reopened after an extensive, nearly $1 million replanking of 600 floorboards and foundational repairs by Construction Co. The Pier had been closed for eight months to accommodate the repairs. Then AWS Roofing put a new roof on the Funky Pelican restaurant in early 2019 for $52,000 (the restaurant is privately run but the city is still its landlord). Those repairs were initiated by then-City Manager Larry Newsom and approved by the city commission. Reimbursements from the Federal Emergency Management Administration in the wake of hurricanes Matthew and Irma defrayed much of the cost.

Early last year, using in part Tourist Development Council money, the city rebuilt the Pier’s and A-frame’s structural underpinning, an elaborate $150,000 job by Samsula Marine Division
that replaced steel plates and through bolts on the A-frame itself.

Back in 1996 Alann Engineering Group renovated the A-frame, pedestrian areas and bathrooms for $19,250. It was time for a reroofing, this time for half that cost.




“This project has been long overdue,” City Commission Chairman Eric Cooley said. “Our pier is the Number 1 landmark of the County. It is important that it looks and is in the condition that displays the pride and love our city has for it. The pier is a reflection of the last five to six years of challenges our city has overcome. The timing of addressing needed repairs and the facelift falls right in line with methodically moving forward. I see the pier every day from my business and I am excited about the changes.” Cooley owns the 7-Eleven on South Oceanshore Boulevard, a few steps down from the Pier.

The roof will get new letters. A literal signature to the project, those are appropriately being done in-house by the city’s maintenance crews, who have cut new letters from pressure-treated plywood and are about to paint them white before installation. The letters haven’t always been white: images from the late 1950s or early 60s, framed in gas-guzzling finned cars of the era, show the city’s name in scarlet letters. Between that and the structure’s shape perhaps the association was too evocative of poor old Hester Prynne, and the city wisely switched to white.

“Our maintenance department took them down. They’ll put them back up once they’re painted,” City Commissioner Rick Belhumeur said. A builder himself, he’s been keeping a personal, daily tab on the work. “I thought it was pretty essential, especially the hardware upgrade, to maintain our icon. I’m extremely happy to know the A-frame will be there for a while.”




An undated photo of the A-frame in the late 1950s or early 60s. (Florida Memory) flagler beach
An undated photo of the A-frame in the late 1950s or early 60s. (Florida Memory)

flagler beach a-frame
Re-shingled. (© FlaglerLive)

flagler beach a-frame
(© FlaglerLive)





flagler beach pier
(© FlaglerLive)

flagler beach pier bolts
(© FlaglerLive)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. James M. Mejuto says

    April 1, 2021 at 11:54 am

    re: Flagler Beach iconic A-frame: I notice that workers were not wearing life-lines but depending
    on unstable ladders to guard their lives.

    James M. Mejuto

  2. Brian says

    April 1, 2021 at 2:19 pm

    Very cool – thanks to everyone involved.

  3. TR says

    April 1, 2021 at 9:46 pm

    Look again at the picture, all the workers on the a frame and ladders have a rope tied to them.

  4. compaqrat2020 says

    April 2, 2021 at 6:26 am

    If you are referring to image in article look again.

  5. Sad Times says

    April 2, 2021 at 11:17 am

    It’s so satisfying to observe that Flagler Beach is maintaining our landmarks!

    It’s such a shame, on the other hand, that they plan on ruining our classic, small town feel with a hotel and duplexes.

    Once more…greed wins out, don’t forget.

  6. James M. Mejuto says

    April 3, 2021 at 2:05 pm

    TR says: Yes, I agree and I apologize for my mistake . . . they are all wearing lifelines.

    James M. Mejuto

  7. Andy says

    April 3, 2021 at 9:02 pm

    Where is hotel going and what type?

  8. James M. Mejuto says

    April 5, 2021 at 8:36 am

    re: Sad Times: Yes, you’re correct . . . “greed wins out!”
    Concerned citizens must go to community meetings and actually research candidates
    running for office. Vote for these politicians who are really concerned with
    the town.
    We have to make the them own-up to their vote.
    It makes no sense to stay home, election day, then complain later!

    James M. Mejuto

  9. Joan Tardif says

    April 6, 2021 at 7:03 am

    On the green where the full farmers market used to be across from Tavalocci Realty.

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