
…
The first time I saw it, I almost rear-ended the car in front of me. Who would expect a gigantic basket on the side of the highway?
I was on my way to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, had left my home in Columbus, Ohio late in the afternoon. The structure I saw beside the highway, was not even an hour away from our house. We had just moved to Ohio two years earlier and back then I was still learning my way around. Wherever we go in life, whatever places we see, there is always history that needs to be explored. Everything tells a story.
Back then, the basket-building was still in use; today, it’s empty. Once the pride and joy of the Newark neighborhood, the Longaberger Company closed its doors in 2018 after struggling to sell these beautiful, overpriced baskets for years.
…

…
I had never even heard of the baskets but I remember very well how my neighbor reacted when I chuckled a bit after she told me she wanted $40 for a used empty basket. Virginia, an older lady had three of these baskets lined up in front of her at our yearly community garage sale. When I left her driveway, I felt sorry for her. Surely nobody in their right mind would even consider buying these baskets. As so often, I was wrong. She sold them all. Today they resell for $20-$30, some rarer ones even for hundreds of dollars. The baskets are not collectors’ items.
I don’t know if you can call a building in the form of a picnic basket an attraction, yet it interested me right from the start, and over the years I learned more about it.
The Longaberger Company has an interesting history, but in the end, it’s just another story about a business that was founded by a hard-working man and driven into bankruptcy decades later, by his children. A changed marketplace, poor management decisions, overspending, lack of a succession plan, and a decline in the popularity of decorative baskets.
The ‘Basket building’ known in the area as the BIG BASKET is an exact replica of a Longaberger basket, scaled up 160 times. The construction was finished in 1997 and cost about 30 million US dollars. It was sold in December 2017 for $1.2 million, plus over $800,000 in back taxes (property taxes).
Sadly, it’s now just another empty building on the side of the highway. They talked about turning it into a luxury hotel but they never even started. In 2021 it was put back on the market for a whopping $6.5 million, but nobody bought it.
It is an unusual structure. A perfect example of novelty architecture. A building designed to physically mirror their purpose. The seven-story, 180,000-square-foot office building resembled a typical Longaberger basket. The basket handles weigh 150 tons and can be heated during cold weather to prevent ice from falling onto the building’s glass roof.
“I figured if Walt Disney could build an empire around a mouse, the Longaberger home office building could resemble a basket,” Dave Longaberger writes in his memoir. “Whenever I talked about it, people looked at me like I was nuts,” he writes.
The BIG BASKET has a 30,000-square-foot atrium topped with a glass ceiling. Two 725-pound, 25-foot-wide, gold-leaf tags are attached to each long side of the building. It even has glass elevators.
It’s inside and outside a beauty and I find it shameful that beautiful constructions like that are vacant. I see endless possibilities. Hotels, shelters, convention centers. It’s a BASKET CASE, use it for mental rehabilitation, give it to a charity organization or veterans, and turn it into a school.
One day I will get off the highway and I will explore on my own.
…

I just went to a thrift store that had a dozen or more of these baskets for sale. Beautiful baskets, but not worth the extra dollars padded onto the price tag because of the name. It is a shame the building now just sits vacant.
It’s interesting to know that you can find them in thrift stores now. Perhaps some of them will find a new home?
This is an interesting story. I just hope the building will be used for some other purpose.
I hope so too. It’s a shame that its empty.
I remember when the baskets were absolutely coveted they were so popular. I didn’t know the company had closed its doors. Now that building is amazing. It looks like it belongs in a movie!
They were very popular (and very pricey). The building is stunning, especially at dusk and dawn. 🙂
I know I had one at one time. I likely didn’t take care of it as I should have! 😢
Gruselig, allein in dem großen Haus😱
Wow, that’s something! Thank you for sharing. Funny title, too. 🧺
Thank you, Michele Lee. I am pleased you liked it.
I’ve herad of this building. I’d love to see it! Thanks for the video.
It’s an impressive sight when you drive down the highway.
I bet it is!
So sad…I had a friend in Ohio who was a devoted sales rep for Longaberger for years and the story of how the company and its leaders lost their way is so sad. Thanks for the post and pic…I’m shocked the home office/basket still stands. 😉
You mean the basket/office in Dresden? Yes, I believe it’s still standing. Longaberger was so important in that area, it’s very sad that it all wasn’t managed right.
Yes…that one. In Dresden…near Zanesville. Agree…so sad! 😔
Absolutely fascinating. That I watched the whole video says it all
Thank you, Derrick for letting me know that you actually watched the video. From the moment I saw the basket building for the first time, I was fascinated as well. I heard you can take a tour on Sunday and I think I need to do that.
What a building! As you say, what a shame!
Thank you, Jo. How is the weather in Portugal?
A bit mixed, Bridget. We’ve had quite a lot of rain but it’s sunny now xx
A fascinating story of a vision fulfilled and then dashed. I cannot see anyone bold enough to take on the resurrection of the building in its present state.
“A vision fulfilled and then dashed,” so true. I am afraid you might be right, it’s not an ‘easy’ building to sell.
That’s amazing. It reminds me of the Lego HQ here in CA that looks like a big Lego set.
The founder of the Longaberger baskets surely had a vision and it sounds like he was a great boss too. It’s not always easy to adapt to changed times.
The story about the Longaberger Company was quite interesting. It’s a shame it was mismanaged after
Longaberger’s death. If prospective buyers have money to burn, they could make a basket museum out of it and include other artsy things. People could even weave their own baskets-kind of like paint and sip parties. 🙂
It was brutally mismanaged, by kids that grew up in million-dollar-mansions.
A basket museum is a splendid idea. I am sure it would attract many visitors.
Any cold fried chicken in there? Red and white plaid vinyl tablecloth?? 😆
I am sure it could be arranged.
I can see why nobody has purchased the building, it’s so novel that it may be torn down in the future.
I hope not. It has possibilities, even as a museum.
I agree, it should be used for something, there’s got to be a use for it.
How interesting, thank you for sharing!
Thank you for stopping by. I am glad you enjoyed the post.
Yes, I did.