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U-Drop Inn Cafe & Tower Conoco Station

The 1936 Art Deco masterpiece that anchors Shamrock — Pixar's inspiration for Ramone's body shop in Cars and arguably Route 66's most photographed building

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scheduleDaily 8am–6pm (visitor center hours; building exterior viewable 24/7)
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The U-Drop Inn Cafe and Tower Conoco Station is the single most architecturally significant building on the Texas stretch of Route 66 and arguably the most photographed structure on the entire Mother Road — a 1936 Art Deco extravagance of green and cream terra cotta tile, soaring tower finials, neon piping, and curving streamlined geometry that rises from the flat Panhandle prairie at the corner of US 83 and old Route 66 in Shamrock. Designed by architect Joseph Berry and built by oilman J.M. Tindall and partner R.C. Lewis, the building combined a Conoco filling station, a separate cafe, and a retail space under one extravagantly decorated roof, and the locals reputedly named the cafe in a contest won by an entrant whose only contribution was the phrase 'U Drop Inn.'

What separates the U-Drop Inn from every other surviving Route 66 building is the audacity of its design. Most Mother Road architecture is folksy, vernacular, or commercially generic; the U-Drop Inn is the opposite — a fully realized Art Deco statement in a town of two thousand people, with twin towers crowned by ornate tulip finials, ribbed vertical pylons running the full height of the building, and a continuous band of neon tubing that traces the cornice and outlines every architectural feature. The building looked extraordinary in 1936 and it looks extraordinary today, and the fact that it has survived essentially intact for almost ninety years is one of the small miracles of American roadside preservation.

In 2006 the building gained a new generation of fans when Pixar's animated film Cars used it as the inspiration for Ramone's House of Body Art, the customization shop owned by the lowrider Chevrolet Impala in the fictional town of Radiator Springs. Pixar's animators visited Shamrock during their Route 66 research trip in 2001, photographed the building extensively, and translated its tower geometry and color scheme directly into the film. The Cars connection has brought tens of thousands of new visitors to Shamrock since the film's release, and the building today functions as both a working visitor center and an unofficial pilgrimage site for Route 66 travelers and Cars fans of all ages.

The 1936 design: Joseph Berry, J.M. Tindall, and the Art Deco gamble

The U-Drop Inn was conceived in 1935 by Shamrock oilman John Nunn, who envisioned a roadside business that would combine a filling station, a cafe, and a small retail space — a one-stop traveler complex along the brand-new Route 66 alignment that had been carrying east-west traffic across the Panhandle since 1926. Nunn partnered with R.C. Lewis to finance the building and hired Joseph Berry, an Amarillo architect, to design something that would stand out from the wooden-frame commercial buildings then typical of small Texas towns. The brief was open-ended; Nunn reportedly told Berry to make the building memorable enough that travelers would always stop in Shamrock to see it.

Berry delivered an Art Deco design at a scale and level of ornament almost unheard of for a Texas town of two thousand people. The building was clad in glazed terra cotta tile in pale cream and emerald green — colors chosen to evoke the Irish heritage of the town's founders — with vertical ribbed pylons, ornamental finials atop both towers, decorative cast concrete medallions at key transition points, and continuous neon tubing wrapping the cornice. The construction cost in 1936 dollars was approximately $23,000, a substantial sum for the time and place, and the building was finished and opened to the public in April 1936 with a grand-opening ceremony that drew several thousand spectators from across the Panhandle.

The cafe's name came from a community contest. Nunn offered a five-dollar prize for the best name for the new restaurant component, and the winning entry — submitted by an eleven-year-old Shamrock boy named John Wesley Mertz, according to local tradition — was simply 'U Drop Inn.' The name has been continuously displayed in neon on the building's facade for nearly ninety years, and despite numerous changes of ownership and even brief closures, the U-Drop Inn name and signage have remained constant since 1936.

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Joseph Berry was given an open brief by oilman John Nunn — make the building memorable enough that travelers will always stop in Shamrock to see it.

Decline, restoration, and the visitor center role

By the late twentieth century the U-Drop Inn had passed through a long series of owners, suffered through the Interstate 40 bypass of 1980 that crippled Shamrock's Route 66 traffic, and seen its terra cotta tile chip, its neon fail, and its tower finials weather. The Conoco station closed in the 1990s and the cafe operated intermittently into the early 2000s, often shuttered for months at a time. The building survived because Shamrock residents loved it and the City of Shamrock eventually intervened to save it, but by 1999 the structure was visibly deteriorating and at genuine risk of collapse if nothing was done.

Restoration began in 1999 when the First National Bank of Shamrock purchased the building and donated it to the City of Shamrock, which then pursued state and federal grants for a comprehensive rehabilitation. The work — completed in 2003 at a cost of approximately $1.7 million — replaced thousands of broken terra cotta tiles using a Tennessee fabricator who recreated the originals from period color samples, restored every linear foot of neon tubing to working condition, rebuilt the tower finials, and converted the interior into a Route 66 visitor center and the Tower Conoco Museum. The restored building reopened in spring 2003 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

Today the U-Drop Inn functions as Shamrock's official visitor center, operated by the Shamrock Chamber of Commerce with bilingual staff during peak season. Visitors are welcomed at no charge, provided with Route 66 maps and Shamrock-area brochures, and free to walk through the restored cafe space, view exhibits on the building's history and the Cars connection, and photograph the building from every angle. A small gift shop sells Route 66 merchandise, postcards, and Cars-themed items, with revenue supporting ongoing building maintenance and visitor services.

The Pixar Cars connection and Ramone's body shop

In 2001, while researching Route 66 for what would become the 2006 animated film Cars, Pixar director John Lasseter led a team of artists and animators on an extended driving trip along the Mother Road. The team visited every major Route 66 town between Chicago and Santa Monica, photographing buildings, interviewing locals, and absorbing the visual vocabulary that would shape the fictional town of Radiator Springs. The U-Drop Inn in Shamrock was one of the buildings that most captivated the Pixar team — Lasseter and production designer Bob Pauley repeatedly cited it in interviews as an example of the kind of overlooked roadside grandeur the film was trying to honor.

In the finished film, Ramone's House of Body Art — the customization shop owned by the 1959 Chevrolet Impala lowrider character voiced by Cheech Marin — borrows directly from the U-Drop Inn. The shop's twin towers, its vertical ribbed pylons, its dramatic finials, and its overall geometric massing are translations of the Shamrock building into Pixar's cartoon vocabulary. The colors were changed (Ramone's shop is repainted constantly throughout the film, a running gag) and the proportions were exaggerated, but anyone who has seen the film and then stands in front of the U-Drop Inn immediately recognizes the source.

The Cars connection has transformed Shamrock's tourist economy. Where once the U-Drop Inn drew a modest stream of Route 66 enthusiasts and architecture buffs, it now also welcomes families with young children making a deliberate Cars-themed pilgrimage along Route 66 to see the real buildings behind their favorite movie. The visitor center staff field constant questions about the film, and a dedicated wall inside the building documents the Cars production process and Pixar's research trip. For families traveling Route 66, the U-Drop Inn is one of the most magical stops — kids who recognize Ramone's shop from the movie are routinely thrilled to be standing in front of the real thing.

Visitor Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

01Can I go inside the building?expand_more

Yes — the U-Drop Inn now functions as Shamrock's official visitor center, open daily 8am–6pm. Admission is free. Inside you can see the restored cafe interior, exhibits on the building's history and the Pixar Cars connection, a small gift shop, and clean public restrooms. The staff hand out Route 66 maps and answer questions.

02Is this really the building from Pixar's Cars?expand_more

Yes — Pixar's animators visited Shamrock in 2001 during their Route 66 research trip and used the U-Drop Inn directly as the inspiration for Ramone's House of Body Art in the 2006 film. The twin towers, vertical pylons, and overall geometry of Ramone's shop trace directly to the Shamrock building.

03When is the neon lit?expand_more

The full perimeter neon outlines the building from dusk until midnight every night, and on most evenings it is the single most photographed view of the building. If you can time your visit to include both a daylight stop and a nighttime return, you will see two completely different buildings — the daylight Art Deco and the after-dark neon spectacle.

04Where exactly is it?expand_more

At 1242 N Main Street, Shamrock, TX 79079 — the corner of US Highway 83 and old Route 66 (now Business 40) in the center of Shamrock. From I-40 take exit 163 and drive a few blocks north into town; the building is impossible to miss.

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