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Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

'Pic'-ing the Ruins


As someone who has had a long time obsession with the Chernobyl ruins in Pripyat, I sort of love this website, Opacity, which photographically archives abandoned structures.

But, not only does it display beautiful photos of buildings in decay, it also digs deep into the history of each location. If you peruse the pages, you can find information about Rathen State Hospital, for example, which was founded by noted social reformer Dorthea Dix in 1848. The entry on Rathen goes on to tell us that Dix actually spent the last years of her life as a patient at the institution she helped establish. And, of course, the biography explains why the various buildings became abandoned, as well as their architectural styles and motifs previous to the slow creep of decline.

Other recent additions include the Buffalo Central Terminal and Lowe’s Kings Theatre in Brooklyn. This project is incredibly worthy for obvious reasons. Remarkable buildings worldwide are under constant, if necessary, threat. So, at least their images should be preserved on the internet. One lesson we’ve surely learned, ad nauseum, since and before the San Francisco quake is that evidence of the past can be obliterated rather quickly. Perhaps we should each “save” what we can.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Old Chicago Water Tower


Urban dwellers,
Who among you does not love it when some architectural anachronism pops up amidst a block of slick post-modern buildings?


This is the Old Chicago Water Tower, a limestone edifice located right near the heart of the Magnificent Mile. It looks a lot like a medieval cathedral, but it is in fact not a place of worship, nor is it quite that old. Still, seeing it in reality is disorienting, like someone stuck an odd piece in the wrong puzzle. I mean, there's a Macy's right across the street.

According to my research, the Tower is one of the last remnants of pre-2oth Century Chicago. Unlike most other nearby structures, it managed to survive the Great
Fire of 1871. It is not, however, still operational. Chicagoans dumped the old H2O matron when electric water pumps were introduced. Now, it serves as an informational tourist attraction.

Oscar Wilde, who is the patron saint of dandy aesthetics, called the tower "a monstrosity."


Clearly, Wilde was unfamiliar with Chicago's parking deck.