Advertisement

Bankruptcy Has Artificial Sun Setting on AstroTurf

Manufacturer of the nylon grass-mimicking playing surface that had its pro start in Houston's Astrodome 37 years ago will go out of business.

The Nation

February 22, 2004|Lianne Hart, Times Staff Writer

HOUSTON — It took the Astrodome, an air-conditioned refuge from the brutal Texas heat, to create the need for AstroTurf, an artificial grass that could survive an artificial environment. But 37 years after its professional sports debut, the ersatz turf has reached its end.

Southwest Recreational Industries Inc., the Texas company that made AstroTurf, last week filed for bankruptcy to go out of business -- citing over-expansion and a shrinking market for nylon lawns.


Advertisement

For a certain generation of Houstonians, the Space Age wonder helped define this city in the 1960s. Moonshots, the Astrodome and AstroTurf brought a new image to a town then known mainly for big-bellied oil tycoons.

The space-race era is "part of our history that should be valued and remembered," said Linda Streicher, who spent much of her youth wearing orange hot pants while working at the dome as a ball girl, tour guide and "spacette" -- the futuristic term for a female usher.

"The newer people don't appreciate it, they just want to go on to the next thing," she said.

Ed Milner, known as Mr. AstroTurf for his role in creating the faux fields, sighed when he talked about the bankruptcy.

"You hate to see anything really well done get messed up," said the retired chemical engineer for Monsanto Co. and former president of AstroTurf Industries. Southwest Recreational bought his firm in 1994.

The Astrodome opened in 1965, built by millionaire Roy Hofheinz so that Houston fans could enjoy professional sports in comfort. But the natural Bermuda grass tended to wilt and die inside the covered building, so chemists at Monsanto in St. Louis came to the rescue.

Their synthetic product, then called ChemGrass, had been developed as a covering to turn asphalt lots in urban areas into playgrounds for children. In adapting ChemGrass for professional sports, the scientists studied large open fields, examining the texture of the blades and the springy quality of the sod.

They tried to mimic nature, but couldn't do much about AstroTurf's startling green color. "We were limited ... because when you're working with nylon, there wasn't a huge list of pigments that would take," Milner said.

Milner, 75, talks about the development of what was called "the magic carpet" as if it had happened yesterday.

Monsanto trademarked the AstroTurf name before Hofheinz had a chance to appropriate it for himself.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|