Click on the title above to see photos of my first sojourn to this building.
We had the good fortune to meet an exiting resident of this building today and he invited us in to view the interior.
Plaster walls gently curve to meet the ceiling.
Kitchen grotto: Probably designed as a resting spot for the phone which would have been Bakelite.
Deep mint green tile with a black border that resonates with the black vitrolite on the exterior of the building.
Matching bathtub.
The best: The brass peep hole on the back door of the apartment. There's a U track below the slates with a brass ball.
Slide the brass ball to either side and the slates open.
Presenting a collection of St. Louis bricks, sidewalk markers, and the Fleur-de-lis as architectural detail on and in city buildings, brick collecting, urban exploration, and my life by Christian Herman. Reporting from Tower Grove South in St. Louis, MO
12/30/08
Twin Brick Columns
12/10/08
Top Brick Picks of 2008
Last week I received two emails asking why I haven't been posting.
Winter is when I get my work on and 10 hours a day online is enough.
So here's my top picks of brick for the year and hey, I'll be back on the hunt in early January.
Best of show:
Multi color sand finish
Brain brick
Sand finish brick
Blistering brick with black mortar
Best palette
Wire cut brick in diaper bond
The elusive accordion brick
Honorable Mention for unique color and tidy mortar.
Wire cut brick in situ
Winter is when I get my work on and 10 hours a day online is enough.
So here's my top picks of brick for the year and hey, I'll be back on the hunt in early January.
Best of show:
Multi color sand finish
Brain brick
Sand finish brick
Blistering brick with black mortar
Best palette
Wire cut brick in diaper bond
The elusive accordion brick
Honorable Mention for unique color and tidy mortar.
Wire cut brick in situ
12/3/08
Enright and Goodfellow 1944
11/23/08
11/21/08
Earth Tones
11/20/08
An Art Deco Haven
11/13/08
Holy Family
I attended Holy Family grade school (now Marian Middle School) in Tower Grove South. My favorite room was the third floor library which I had little access to, it was rarely open. I didn't know the room existed until I was in the sixth grade.
My infatuation with abstract expressionist painters Mark Rothko and Ad Reinhardt has roots here:
Rothko painting (he was a brick groupie too):
My infatuation with abstract expressionist painters Mark Rothko and Ad Reinhardt has roots here:
Rothko painting (he was a brick groupie too):
11/7/08
Galloping Gertie
Click on the title.
I asked Bad Tim what went wrong:
Modernists were jumping all over each other to create a sleeker, more streamlined suspension bridge, and this one was the absolute masterpiece. Unfortunately, they neglected to account for the heavy winds thru the narrows and didn't realize that they would create a resonance in the span. it was like striking a tuning fork. Once the vibration got started, the wind kept feeding it until it started swaying like that.
This is why suspension bridges are often double-deckers or have deep, open trusses under their decks. It makes the deck stiffer so it won't oscillate a lot of them also use grates for the deck instead of concrete, so the wind can blow thru without setting off the wave action.
It was a gorgeous bridge, though, wasn't it? It's tragic about the dog.
I asked Bad Tim what went wrong:
Modernists were jumping all over each other to create a sleeker, more streamlined suspension bridge, and this one was the absolute masterpiece. Unfortunately, they neglected to account for the heavy winds thru the narrows and didn't realize that they would create a resonance in the span. it was like striking a tuning fork. Once the vibration got started, the wind kept feeding it until it started swaying like that.
This is why suspension bridges are often double-deckers or have deep, open trusses under their decks. It makes the deck stiffer so it won't oscillate a lot of them also use grates for the deck instead of concrete, so the wind can blow thru without setting off the wave action.
It was a gorgeous bridge, though, wasn't it? It's tragic about the dog.
The Corner Store
Way back in the mid century in Tower Grove South many people didn't have cars (most families just had one) and did their grocery hopping within walking distance. Stillwell's Grocery was on Roger which is currently a furniture restoration business. Smaller 'confectionaries' were on every other corner with glass display cases of candy. They also carried the basic staples.
For the weekend family grocery shopping we drove to Kroger's on Grand (now Jay Asia).
There was a room in our basement called the root cellar where canned food was stored on shelves. Anything on sale was bought and hoarded there along with all the necessary items in the event of a nuclear attack from the Commies. It was my dad's version of a bomb shelter two decades after The Scare.
In the 70's this was called Brawley's Confectionary.
For the weekend family grocery shopping we drove to Kroger's on Grand (now Jay Asia).
There was a room in our basement called the root cellar where canned food was stored on shelves. Anything on sale was bought and hoarded there along with all the necessary items in the event of a nuclear attack from the Commies. It was my dad's version of a bomb shelter two decades after The Scare.
In the 70's this was called Brawley's Confectionary.
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