Featured: Mulholland Meets Cars And Coffee At ‘Highway Earth’

Mulholland Meets Cars And Coffee At ‘Highway Earth’

By Patrick Stevenson
July 9, 2019
3 comments

Photography by Patrick Stevenson

It is 6am on a Sunday and I am wide awake. Well, mostly. Alarm silenced for the second time, coffee cup emptied for the third, I am up and out the door for the only good reason to rise with the sun on a weekend: cars. Soon enough the caffeine feels unnecessary, as I am clipping apexes on a blissfully empty Mulholland Drive just as the sky fills with orange and gold. A light fog hugs the ground and starts to dissipate with the warmth of the day, and driving in the canyons above Beverly Hills it feels like it will be a particularly good one at that.

I am headed to the Highway Earth car show held in Franklin Canyon Park—a special mix of natural and mechanical scenery awaits. On most weekends I find myself at parking-lot-hosted Cars & Coffee events or else some other random car show, but none of them prime you like taking a tear across Mulholland en route.

Highway Earth is not your typical weekend morning car show. Hosted by the automotive photographer Evan Klein, the goal is to create a lifestyle experience for people to tour the amazing car culture that Los Angeles has to offer along with some of its best topography. Rather than finding a large strip mall parking lot and having all the cars in one place with a Jamba Juice constantly in the background, Highway Earth uses the 1.2-mile loop road at Franklin Canyon Park to sprinkle cars around the beautiful water reservoir. The park has several turnouts around the road, and Klein organized groups of marques from around the world in these little pockets.

At one corner I am stood admiring a circle of Alfas, the next I’m drinking in the details of a converted Porsche 912 with an electric engine, and better still was the Lancia Stratos in the next lot within shouting distance from a group of vintage domestic vans. Later in the morning, I was passed by what looked like Bonnie and Clyde in their blacked out early Ford, while standing next to a mint Rosso Corso Ferrari 328. The winding loop of a road makes for a unique show venue, and though I’m not much of a hiker, this nature walk was quite good. Walking around this tranquil park also gave me the chance to picture Los Angeles before it became so built up and developed, the narrow park road conjuring daydreams what it might have been like to tear through the hills in the 1960s.

At the end of the show I find myself wondering why more car shows aren’t this well executed, but thankfully the trend does seem to be moving in this direction, wherein the location is given careful thought rather than just the list of cars that show up.

On the way out I came upon my favorite of the day; parked in the dirt lot was a well used Mercedes Benz 300SL Gullwing. Seeing one of these cars is a rare sight, even in Los Angeles, and sporting a patina’d red on red suit, this car had plenty of character to back up the shapely bodywork. I was surprised that it wasn’t parked in the show itself. Just goes to show that the parking lot is always worth a visit, especially at events as special as this one.

Join the Conversation
Related
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
3 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Acacia Hary
Acacia Hary
3 years ago

Car image is very beautiful and outstanding. I love seeing the looks of these cars.
directions maps

David Ellmaurer
David Ellmaurer
4 years ago

Finally a MG showed up in one of your stories!!

Bill Meyer
Bill Meyer
4 years ago

Nice write up Patrick. Being a card-carrying Geezer I spent countless hours tearing through Mulholland Drive in the sixties. There was a wide “run off” area flanking an S bend just about a mile east of Coldwater Canyon. On warm nights that area was the meeting ground of the Mulholland Racing Association. Typically there would be 6 to 12 cars hanging out all evening from about 9 to 11 or later. When the group broke up the custom was to head east to Laurel Canyon and then down the hill to Dupars on Ventura Blvd.

Yes, it was wildly dangerous and irresponsible but I’m sure none of us will ever forget those youthful adventures. I certainly haven’t.

Petrolicious Newsletter