Structural steel girders were all that remained of the old Hinsdale Road & Bridge Butler building early this week as workmen dismantled the 1955 structure to make way for the new county operations building. This week witnessed the last vestiges of the 69-year-old 2,800-s.f. Butler metal building adjoining Hinsdale County Courthouse which from 1955 until 1994 served as the headquarters for Hinsdale County Road & Bridge Dept.
A crackerjack demolition crew comprised of Wally Hays and his assistant, Briggs Jones — grandson of longtime local seasonal residents Elwyn and artist Jane Jones — incrementally dismantled the building, with plans by Hays to re-erect the 80’ by 35’ structure on his property high on a bench he has created on his property overlooking County Road 30 on the upper Lake Fork.
Fenced yard, employees’ vehicles, fuel storage tanks and metal shop building are pictured at left in a 1989 aerial view. The metal building was enlarged in the late 1970s with an addition to house fire fighting equipment, pictured immediately adjacent to Hinsdale County Courthouse. Shown at left are a succession of photos showing incremental dismantling of the building over the course of the past summer, including Hays pictured beside the mammoth diesel-burning heating furnace which originally heated not only the county shop building but also the next-door courthouse via underground ducting.
Also pictured opposite page is a crane used by Hays to lower the furnace chimney and demolition assistant Jones carrying numbered panels of the exterior metal sheathing prior to early this week when only the cast metal framework of the building remained.
Removal of the old county shop building clears the site in advance of next year’s planned spring start of construction on the county’s new 6,409-s.f., $4-million operations building with combined space for Hinsdale County Sheriff, emergency services, and county administration.
Pictured bottom left is a c. 1900 overview photo of the southwest corner Henson and 4th Street with courthouse far left and land to the north where the now-demolished Butler building was located and where the new operations building will be built. A notable feature in the 1900 overview photo is the two-story frame Hinsdale County Jail building which was built in 1892 and burned to the ground in 1946. The smaller gabled building adjacent to the jail was Town of Lake City’s first library dating to the 1870s and later offices and laboratory for the Elmendorf & Schaffer Sampler.
Also pictured near left on opposite page is yet another massive fire which was the immediate impetus for building the fire-proof metal Butler building to house Hinsdale Road & Bridge in 1955. Prior to the early 1950s, the county’s road equipment was housed in a rambling frame 1-1/2-story building with false front on the northeast corner of Gunnison Avenue and 2nd Street which was originally used by freighters Samuel Watson and Sherman Williams.
Later acquired by the county, the building burned to the ground in a spectacular January, 1952, blaze. Also destroyed was $50,000 in uninsured county road maintenance equipment.
County Commissioners thereafter looked to build a fire-proof county shop and in May, 1955, contracted with S & M Supply in Grand Junction to erect a 36’ x 80’ Butler metal building. The original building with various additions and alterations remained headquarters for Hinsdale Road & Bridge — much of the time when the late Jack Vickers was road supervisor — until 1994 when it was replaced by the current county road facility north of town.
Vacant since 1994, the now demolished county shop building was used for storage both by the county and other local non-profit organizations over the past 30 years.
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