Posts Tagged ‘manual photography’

CPA Building (Detroit, MI)

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

Detroit's abandoned flatiron CPA building.

The CPA building has a Flatiron design and is located in Detroit’s Corktown area. Entrances are surrounded by ornate relief’s depicting various railroad related scenes. A large clock has stopped working , It’s hands frozen permanently at 10;45.  A drive through window contained panels where window attendants or ATM machines may have been.

It turns out that the CPA is an acronym for Conductors Protective Association, a union organization. I learned the following information about the company (*1) “Mr. William Boss conceived the idea of forming an insurance company for railroad conductors, engineers and officials, insuring them against the loss of their positions on account of discharge, disability or old age, and in June, 1907, organized the Conductors Protective Assurance Company”

 

References

www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM56X2_CPA_Building_Detroit_M…

books.google.com/books?id=OZYUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA266&l…


(*1) The city of Detroit, Michigan, 1701-1922 by Clarence Monroe Burton, William Stocking, Gordon K. Miller. Published by The S. J. Clarke publishing company, 1922. Item notes: v. 4. Original from Harvard University

A46-4 archive

The CPA building is a Flatiron building in the Corktown area at the corner of Michigan and 14th Street. Surrounded by relief’s depicting various railroad related scenes was a dead clock. It’s hands frozen in time and left open to the elements unprotected by glass. A drive through window and panels where ATM machines may have been, hinted that the site may have been related to banking.

Don Valley Brickworks (Toronto, ON). Part 2

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Inside Toronto's abandoned Don Valley Brick Works.

It was a quiet Sunday afternoon at the Don Valley Brick Works. A few people walked their dogs as some wetland birds earnestly called out to each other. An earlier expedition contains information on the history of this site.

Inside the Brick Works subdued shafts of light illuminated the interior like a cathedral of industry. Amongst a row of old kilns, a Parkhill Martin brick machine lay silent as it’s rusted metal surface gleamed in the evening light. It was manufactured by G. Baird, Son & Co. and built in Parkhill Toronto. This soft mud brick machine was placed in the Brickworks after 1956.

Evergreen started renovations at the Brick Works in 2009. Several of Toronto’s landmarks were built from bricks made at this factory. Restoration of this site will leave a piece of Toronto’s history intact.

 

References

(*1)
Rick McGinnis, Don Valley’s Abandoned Brick Works Finally Coming Back To Life, October 8, 2009
www.blogto.com/city/2009/10/

Evergreen Brick Works
ebw.evergreen.ca/

Reference

A60-1 Archive

 

Guild Inn (Toronto, ON) Part 3

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Toronto's Guild Inn hosts a series of architectural monuments from the late 19th to early mid 20th century.

The Guild Inn was originally a private residence built for Colonel Harold Child Bickford (1876-1956), eventually becoming an Arts and Crafts colony in the 1930’s. Spencer Clark and his wife later purchased the land and were known for their art patronage and preservation projects. In 1996 various branches of the City of Toronto took over maintenance of buildings, park facilities and sculptures.

The Guild Inn is nestled within a quiet suburban neighbourhood deep in the heart of Scarborough. This unique park boasts classic Beaux Arts architecture of former bank buildings. Facades and sculptures are from buildings demolished during Toronto`s drive towards modern architecture. The park is a frequent destination for wedding photo shoots. Historical plaques near each piece made research easier.

 

Ionic capitals, from University of Toronto medical building, 1904-1967.
Banting and Best did diabetes research in this building.
Architects – Darling & Pearson.

Bank of Ontario (King & Bay, S. West corner), 1912-1966.
Architect/firm: Carrie & Hastings (NY), Eustace Bird, Toronto Associate.

Ionic columns. Bank of Nova Scotia (39 King St W),1903-1969.
Architect/firm: Darling & Pearson

Robert Holmes, 1881-1930.
Resident Guild sculptor – 1968-1970

Bank of Nova Scotia (39 King St. West), 1903-1969.
Architect/firm: Darling & Pearson

Quebec Bank est 1818 (37 King St. West), 1912-1969
Architect/firm: G Curry

Lions heads and plaques Toronto General Trusts Bldg, 1919-1969.

Pediment – Provincial Paper Building, 388 University Ave.
Architect/firm: Marani, Lawson & Morris – 1930-1968
3 ionic capitals, 394 University Avenue - ABITBI bldg (1930-1968)

Canadian Bank of Commerce (Yonge and Bloor N-West corner), 1899-1972.
Architect/firm: Darling & Pearson

Bank of Toronto – 1912-1966
Corinthian column & capitals (King & Bay, S. West corner)
Architect/firm: Carrere & Hastings (NY), Eustace Bird (Toronto associate)

Toronto Star Building (80 King St. West), 1929-1972 Strong Art Deco influence
Architect/firm: Chapman & Oxley

North American Life Assurance building (112 King St West), 1932-1976Architect/firm: Marani, Lawson & Morris

Temple Building (Bay & Richmond, N. West corner), 1895-1970.Independent Order of Foresters
Architect/firm: G.W Gouinlock

Bank of Montreal (King and Bay N. West corner) 1948-1972.Architect/firm: Chapman, Oxley & Facey/Marani & Morris

Artists who worked on separate panels representing each province of Canada
- Frances Loring (1887-1968)
- Jocobine Jones (1898-1976)
- Emanual Hahn
- Elizbeth Wyn Wood
- Donald Stewart

 

References

City of Toronto archives
www.toronto.ca/culture/the_guild.htm

A59-3 Archive

 

Brush Park (Detroit, MI)

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Detroit's Brush Park Victorian homes.

Brush Park is a 24 block neighborhood east of Woodward Avenue. Mansions and houses are built in the Late Victorian, Empire and Mansard Roof styles. This area is recognized by the National Register of Historic Places, however many buildings have been demolished due to advanced neglect, decay and structural damage. Brush Park was an area which housed Detroit’s wealthy elites until the area’s decline during the Great Depression. Restoration efforts after the 1990′s eventually led to successful renovations of several Brush Park mansions. New townhouses and apartments were also built in the surrounding area.

This area is generally quiet unless there’s a Tigers baseball game or large scale event downtown. A strange gathering of  large Victorian mansions are unevenly scattered amongst empty lots. Plots of land between houses had more in common with prairie fields as giant fluffy clouds hovered over the landscape like impossible castles in the sky.

Reference

A59-2 Archive

Bright Center (Detroit, MI)

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Somewhere in Detroit's west side, is an abandoned school that has seen better times.

Somewhere on the west side is this school and it has seen better times. The steady hum of traffic permeates the open windows devoid of glass. Inside is still and timeless as the entire site gradually falls into ruin.

The Bright Center For Continuing Education was formerly known as the Willard School to honor Frances Willard (educator, temperance reformer and women’s suffragist). A dedication plaque inside the building confirms this. This facility closed in the early 2000’s.

Reference

A59-2 Archive

N.B.C Building (National Biscuit Company/Nabisco), (Detroit, MI)

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Detroit's abandoned National Biscuit Co. building awaits renovation or demolition.

1)The N.B.C building is a seven story fortress like warehouse. This Chicago School style building consists of a concrete structure with a brick facade, and accented by applied masonry. At first the only information available was that it was a bakery before WWII.

After some research a source clarified more details about the building. Apparently the National Biscuit Co. eventually became known as Nabisco during World War I. Quotes from an article by Lu Donnelly for the Young Preservationists Association address the history, function and design of the N.B.C buildings:

(2) “The success of Nabisco’s branding and advertising caused demand to exceed supply and the company launched a building campaign to provide enough bakeries for their popular crackers. The buildings commissioned by now company president Adolphus Green were different from the common manufacturing buildings of the World War I era. Green hired an architect full-time to design factories that would have enough style and dignity to inspire loyalty from the workers and act as shining models of modernity to the communities in which they stood (Cahn, 125). He hired Chicagoan Albert G. Zimmermann (1866-1947) to design the buildings using a soft colored brownish-orange brick with cream-colored brick trim and ranging from three to eleven stories. Zimmermann’s earlier practice had consisted mostly of residences and apartment buildings until his work for Nabisco. His Nabisco designs were featured in the American Architect magazine in both 1912 and 1916.”

Another excerpt from the article indicates when the Detroit N.B.C building was built.

(3) “After the war, between 1918 and 1925 new bakeries were built in Pittsburgh, Detroit, Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York. The new factories had a consistent look, similar reddish brick, multiple stories and stair towers increased the company’s ability to transport products to the grocer and people’s homes. (Cahn, 196)”

N.B.C is located in Detroit’s New Center area and seems to have been abandoned for some time. N.B.C’s close proximity to the railways may have given the company a competitive edge in product distribution to major areas of the American Market.

References
(1) www.emporis.com

(2)(3) Historic Review Commission of Pittsburgh. National Biscuit Company Bakery Historic Nomination, Lu Donnelly for the Young Preservationists Association, Page 3,4

74.125.93.132/search?q=cache:OOPTiGRFGC4J:www.youngpreser…

 

Sources

The American Architect, “The Buildings of the National Biscuit Company,” by W. F. Wilmoth, Volume 101, June 19, 1912, part 2 number 1904, pp. 270-272.

The American Architect, “Building for the National Biscuit Company,” Volume 109, March 22, 1916, part 1, number 2100.

The Builders’ Bulletin, Volume 1, #37 (Supplement) , May 12, 1917: Building Permit issued “National
Biscuit Co., Owners; Turner Construction Co., Contractors; Foundation, Penn & Lambert St., 12 Ward.”
Other relevant issues 1917-1919.

Cahn, William, Out of the Cracker Barrel: The Nabisco Story From Animal Crackers to Zu Zu’s. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1969.

A59-2 Archive

Forest Arms (Detroit, MI)

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Detroit's Forest Arms apartments was built in 1905, and vacant since a major fire in 2009.

Forest Arms apartments was built in 1905, a corner stone beside the front entrance verifies this date. This stately Victorian era building is similar to other residences near the Wayne State University campus. (*1) On February 6, a major fire destroyed the entire site. Forest Arms has no roof or top floor.

This building has a striking design and stands out. Unfortunately its windows are gaping portals to the sky instead of apartments.

References

(*1)
Benefit raises over $6,000 for Forest Arms Disaster Relief Effort
media.wayne.edu/2008/02/14/benefit-raises-over-6000-for-f…

Up from the Ashes: Tracking the Forest Arms Restoration in Midtown
Jon Zemke, May 05, 2009
http://www.modeldmedia.com/features/forestarms19009.aspx

 

Update: Forest Arms Apartments hosted an interesting experiment.

womanaboutdetroit.wordpress.com
hanging-gardens.org

A59-2 Archive

Film Exchange Building (Detroit, MI)

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Detroit's abandoned Film Exchange Building was designed by architect, Charles Howard Crane in 1926.

The Film Exchange Building was designed by architect, Charles Howard Crane. This seven story structure was built in 1926 to safely store volatile and flammable nitrate films. The interior houses several vaults for film storage. A relief above the front door gives a hint to the buildings previous function. Orange panels placed vertically between windows, serve as the only distraction in its monotonous exterior. This building closed the 1970’s.

There have been renovations at the site for the last five years but no occupants taking up permanent residence.

Reference

A59-1 Archive

David Whitney Building (Detroit, MI)

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Detroit's abandoned David Whitney Building.

David Whitney Building

The David Whitney Building was built in 1916, designed by Daniel Burnhan and located in the Grand Circus Park area. It is designed in the Chicago style with classical elements. David Whitney was a businessman who supplied lumber to builders and industrial suppliers. His son David Charles Whitney commissioned Daniel Burnhan to build the 19 story office building to replace an earlier 5 story commercial structure. The building has remained abandoned since the 1980’s.

David Broderick Building, Eaton Tower (Detroit, MI)

Eaton Tower had its name was changed to the David Broderick Tower in the 1945. Louis Kamper designed the 34 story office tower and it was built in 1927. The buildings design is a mixture of Beaux Art and Chicago School styles. The building closed in 1985 leaving a bar on the first floor as the only tenant. The building is currently owned by (*1) Motown Construction Partners LP.

References

(*1) brodericktower.com

http://detroit1701.org/

Reference

A59-1 Archive

Free Press Building (Detroit, MI)

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Detroit's abandoned Free Press office building, was designed by Albert Kahn. It was built by the Spencer White and Prentice firm in 1925.

Detroit Free Press was designed by Albert Kahn and built by the Spencer White and Prentice firm, in 1925. Detroit Free Press is located on W Lafayette in downtown Detroit. Elaborate ornamentation on the exterior of the building has more in common with church design than commercial establishments.

This limestone covered building has a 14 story center tower which is flanked by 6 story wings. Carvings, statues and and building materials used can be found in structures influenced by Art Deco and Beaux Arts design. Classical elements give the building a stately appearane as two goddesses of commerce and communication gaurd the main enrtance . Ulysses Ricci carved several reliefs: Benjamin Franklin, Govenor Lewis Cass, Govenor Austin Blair, General George Custer, James Angel and journaists Horace Greely, CHarles Dana and George Goodale adorn the front of the building. His designs graced other buildings such as the General Motors Building and the Fisher Tower located in Detroit’s New Center Area.

Detroit Free Press abandoned the building in 1996 and the site remains unoccupied in 2009

 

References

Detroit1701.org

A58-1, A59-1 Archives