A Rescued Bell Service Van

Any and every vehicle has a story; some are just more interesting than others. The most fascinating car at a cars and coffee, a formal show, or even a auction preview is not guaranteed to bring the highest sale price, though. Example number one is this 1974 Ford Econoline Bell service van that sold on Bring a Trailer last week. If the sheetmetal of this van could talk, it would probably have more than 50 years’ worth of stories to tell, but the only one we know for sure is how it ended up for sale.

A Rescued Bell Service Van
Shervin Nakhjavani/Bring a Trailer

The listing caught my eye for two reasons: The price was still under $1000, so I figured the van had to have something interesting going on, good or bad. Second, I have always thought vans were cool. I’ve owned a couple over the years, including a 1961 Corvair Greenbrier. When reading up on the history of my flat-six-powered surf wagon, I learned of the Bell service vans that Chevrolet built. These models could often be found hiding in the wild by those who knew to look for the panel on one side and windows on the other. The two Corvair 95 van models were either Greenbrier sport vans, which had full windows, or panel vans with no windows. The combination of a panel down the driver’s side and windows on the passenger side were unique to the vans ordered by the Bell telephone company for its fleet.

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There are a bunch of other features unique to Bell service vans, but I didn’t learn most of it until I watched the video in the listing. The paint colors are a giveaway, but those colors are often hidden under a repaint given to a van in its second life, after it had retired from the service industry. Just hints of the paint were showing when Shervin Nakhjavani saw this crusty van listed on Craigslist and decided he had to have it. He dedicated the following year and a half to carefully removing the layers of junk covering both the outside and inside.

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Carefully, he scraped, sanded, and polished away all that had been layered atop the original Pacific Northwest Bell paint scheme. Like anyone who takes on such an ambitious project, Shervin was enabled by his friends and family: They let the van occupy space in their driveways and storage spaces, and in the process, the van was recorded on Google Maps.

While the process of reviving the original appearance of the van is interesting, it is actually the research and documentation of the history of these vans and how they came to look the way they did that is most compelling to me. A lot of car enthusiasts document the specific history and production story of their specific car with items like Marti reports or build sheets, but rarely do we dive further back like Shervin did.

He dug into the history of the designer who created the rebrand of the vans for Bell. Saul Bass was the designer with a golden pen brought in by Bell to revive the image of the company. Bass decided what colors would be used, how the stripes would be laid out, and more. He was behind a total revamp of the company image, a monumental task that would change Bell from drab to stylish. How many of us know the name of the person who created the color code for our favorite vintage car?

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This van still needs heaps of love and work, a need that is reflected in the final sale price of just $4000. I may not have chosen to return this van to its former glory, but I sure respect the work done to not only save an interesting piece of history but also to document that history in an interesting and well-presented manner. Shervin’s story is a prime example of never knowing where the history thread could lead when you start pulling.

Shervin Nakhjavani/Bring a Trailer
Shervin Nakhjavani/Bring a Trailer

Report by Kyle Smith for hagerty.com

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