He owns one of the largest Corvette collections. Here’s a peek behind the locked door

Country music legend Loretta Lynn’s tour bus made its way down a long road on the Hendrick Motorsports campus in Concord, North Carolina. She was unannounced, but her bus glided past the General Motors Charlotte Technical Center and came to a stop on the far side of the compound in front of a hulking white building.

It was August 2019 and Lynn, now deceased, had heard about NASCAR legend and mega car dealer Rick Hendrick’s massive and unique car collection housed inside the white building he calls the Heritage Center. She wanted in.

See the collection:Top 10 most unique cars in Rick Hendrick’s private garage

” ‘Loretta Lynn is in the parking lot wondering if she can come in? ‘ ” Hendrick recalls an employee saying to him that day. Hendrick laughs about the situation in a recent interview with the Detroit Free Press, adding that comic and late-night host Jay Leno and Nicko McBrain, the drummer from heavy-metal band Iron Maiden, did something similar.

“They said, ‘Nicko wants to give you a drum from Iron Maiden,’ and I said, ‘Who’s Iron Maiden?’ ” Hendrick says with a laugh.

Rick Hendrick talks inside of the second-floor room where dozens of signed guitars and photographs and other memorabilia are on display inside the 58,000-square foot Heritage Center in Concord, North Carolina, on July 25, 2023.

Hendrick is recounting the stories in late July in a large, wood-paneled room on the second floor of the Heritage Center, which is about 900 miles from Michigan but deeply connected to Detroit. Inside that room, he has more than 230 guitars signed by famous rock stars and celebrities. Footballs autographed by every Super Bowl-winning quarterback in the last decade line a wall and there are guitars and other autographed instruments in glass cases on the floor, on the walls and atop cabinets.

He strolls past a guitar signed by Garth Brooks, and over there is Sammy Hagar’s autographed guitar he used to play a version of “I can’t drive 55.” Hendrick casually points to a baseball bat in a glass case in the corner that Babe Ruth used to hit two home runs (he says he co-owns the bat with former baseball star Reggie Jackson). On a shelf sits the Emmy he won in 2010 for outstanding editing in HBO’s “24/7 Jimmie Johnson: Race to Daytona.”

A guitar signed by Sammy Hagar is on display inside the 58,000-square-foot Heritage Center in Concord, North Carolina, on July 25, 2023.

Lynn got inside that day, but her price for entry was an autographed guitar and a private performance in that room singing “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” That’s how celebrities get inside the Heritage Center. For anyone else, it is invitation-only.

The Detroit Free Press spent an afternoon with Hendrick inside the 58,000-square-foot building. He built it in 2010 and it has grown to be more than a collection of notable cars and famous guitars. It is Hendrick’s tribute to his family, representing his life’s struggles and successes. Everything in there takes him back to his roots.