Monday, August 30, 2010
Rite Aid Pharmacy, Albany
Obviously it is currently a Rite Aid Pharmacy but just as obviously it was something else before that.
Can anyone fill me in on the history of this interesting store?
Sunday, August 29, 2010
former Perth Girls' School, East Perth
The school closed in 1962 with the Police Department taking over the building early in 1963, staying until 1966 when a new Police Headquarters was constructed. The former school is still used by the Police Traffic Department.Reference:
Register of Heritage Places - Assessment Documentation: Perth Girls' School (fmr), East Perth, 28 Feb 1995
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Buffalo Acadeny of Science Charter School
The Buffalo Academy of Science Charter School (BASCS at 190 Franklin Street was built in the early 1950s as the Buffalo premises for the Young Womens Christian Association of Western New York.
For a time, prior to the construction of the modern streamline building for the YWCA of WNY, part fo the site was occupied by a house where Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States, had lived from 1831-1858.
The YWCA used the building until 2006 and their emblem of a bar across an inverted triangle is still visible on the facade.
180-190 Flanklin Street - Then & Now, wnyheritagepress.org
Friday, August 27, 2010
National Australia Bank, South Melbourne
The National Australian Bank branch in Clarendon Street, South Melbourne was, in a former life, a Maples Furniture store.
The company founder, Benjamin Nathan, started trading in a small shop in South Melbourne in 1887 and by 1946 there were three Maples stores in Clarendon Street and many others in suburbs across Melbourne and rural town across Victoria.
This building was designed by prolific Melbourne architect Harry Norris
Reference:
The Butcher, The Baker, The Bicycle Maker: Clarendon Street 1855-2006, City of Port Phillip Online Exhibition
South Melbourne Walk, Art Deco & Modernism Society
Thursday, August 26, 2010
1580 Beach Street, Marina
As part of its 2003 Historic Preservation Awards, the Art Deco Society of California includes this apartment building at 1580 Beach Street, Marina. Designed by R R Irvine, it was built around 1931 and in 2003, over seventy years later, it was still owned by the same family.
It is not difficult to see how the building was chosen for a preservation award. The floral panels at the roofline above the window bays are stunning.
I find the paintwork on the small metal balcony a little twee. I suppose it does allow the decoration to be seen more clearly but I would have prefered to see the metalwork all the same colour and probably the beige colour rather than the blue.
The entrance, on the other hand, with its combination of colour works for me and I think it would look even better when the flowers are in full bloom.Reference:
Historical Preservation Award Winners - 2003, Art Deco Society of California
Monday, August 23, 2010
Empire Court, Durban
Empire Court in one of many Art Deco style buildings in the Grey Street district of Durban. It is a substantial building with shops at street level and apartments on the two upper floors.
Grey Street is the Indian part of town and that is reflected in many of the buildings from the 1930s and 40s that bear the family names of the local businesses. Another common theme for building names in this area is the British Empire as is the case here. Of course both South Africa and India were part of the British Empire.
Empire Court dates from around 1937 and the facade has a rich mixture of Art Deco elements. Diamonds, horizontal stepped lines and many other patterns comprising of geometric shapes. Also of note are the decorative flagpole holders and it is a shame that the flagpoles themsleves are no longer present.
The building addresses its corner site with a curved verandah and balcony but the roofline maintains the rectangular lines of the rest of the building. This reminds me of the corner section of Wikianos Supermarket in Asmara, although in that case the roofline extends over the lower floors provding shade for the balcony area where Empire Court appears to have an open terrace above its curved balcony.
Reference:
Durban Deco Directory
Sunday, August 22, 2010
A House in Massawa, Eritrea
OK it is a little rundown but lots of Massawa in Eritrea is (or at least was, in 2003 when I was there).
This is a great house all the same. Three storeys with open and open, curved terrace and a flat roof.
The boxed section at the front of the house has two vertical rectangular panels of windows cut into the corners plus a third panel topped with a semi-circular section of windows. The central panel of windows differs from the other two in that it starts at ground level and the panes are offset rather than in the more usual grid pattern.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Motor Works, South Yarra
This interesting building in South Yarra dates from the early decades of the 20th Century.
The main part of the garage dates from 1912 but the facade at the rear was probably redesigned in the 1920s giving us the bold lettering spelling out "MOTOR WORKS" above the large entrances at either end of the building and the series of seven panels with concentric circular patterns between.
It is a very bold facade in a somewhat residential street and in recent years has found a useas a Creative Arts Centre for Melbourne Grammar School.
South Yarra Walk Booklet, Art Deco and Modernism Society, 2003
Friday, August 20, 2010
Melbourne Art Deco Wins Best Publication
What a thrill!
At the 2010 Victorian Community History Awards yesterday, Robin Grow's book Melbourne Art Deco won the Best Print/Publication category.
I am very proud that Robin chose so many of my pictures for the book and that it has been so well received.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Pioneer House, Chippendale
Broadway in Chippendale was widened in the early 1930s leading to a series of Art Deco style buildings being constructed.
Pioneer House, designed in 1934 by Wright & Apperly, is one such building.
The ground floor has been altered so there is no longer a bank or the shops opening onto the street. I don't know if the decoration has been modified from the original installation but the colour scheme is a bit dull for me.
The decoration along the roofline, on the other hand, is stunning, especially when lit by the mid-winter late afternoon Sydney sunshine.
There are several different decorative panels and each spandrel has a series of ridges and bars. There is decoration above the windows including a shaft of triangular windows stretching amost the height of the building from the central entrance.
Pioneer House Significance Statement, Heritage Branch, Dept of Planning, NSW
Deco-Blog, DecoWorks Pty Ltd
Monday, August 16, 2010
Notman Photography and Associated Screen News Building, Montreal
William Notman was a Scottish-born photographer who established his photography business in Montreal in December 1856 and continued to take photographs until his death in November 1891. Two of his sons continued the firm with William taking over in 1891, working through until his death in 1913 and Charles, who joined his brother in 1894, maintaining the business until he sold it to Associated Screen News in 1935.
In 1995, the building became part of the nearby Holt Renfew department store also designed by Ross & Macdonald in 1937.
References:
William Notman, Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
Centre-Ville Tour Booklet, 10th World Congress on Art Deco, Montreal, May 2009
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Flats, Pacific Heights
Many of the elements of Art Deco and Moderne buildings are part of this buildng. The 'blconies'with metal railings. Glass bricks providing privacy at ground level yet allowing light to reach the interior spaces. And, although not visible in the photo, the porthole windows in the garage doors.
These flats date from 1938.
Reference:
Deco by the Bay: Art Deco Architecture in the San Francisco Bay Area ~ Michael F Crowe
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Broadway Court, Durban
Reference: Broadway Court, artefacts.co.za
Friday, August 13, 2010
Newsagent, Portland
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Cinema Roma, Asmara
According to Asmara - Africa's Secret Modernist City, the design for the Cinema Roma was originally proposed in 1937 by Roberto Cappellano under the name Cinema Dux and although originally rejected the cinema was built soon after 1937 and for a time was known as Cinema Excelsior. The Roma name was adopted later.
The authors do not go into details of alterations to the cinema in 1944 by Bruno Sciafani but the plans reproduced in the book show an enlarged front facade similar to the current building and therefore, perhaps, a larger cinema overall.
The latter plan does not include the flagpoles so they may have been added realtively recently. They are similar to the flagpole on these Shops and Apartments in Harnet Avenue.
Asmara: Africa's Secret Modernist City- Edward Denison, Guang Yu Ren & Naigzy Gebremedhim
Monday, August 9, 2010
Block Arcade, Ballarat
Sunday, August 8, 2010
École Louis-Hébert, Rosemont
The École Louis-Hébert is in the Rosemont area of Montreal. It was designed by Charles David and built in 1936.
The building is three storeys high with entrances and stairwells at each end sitting out from the rest of the façade. The upper floors are identified by bands of close-set windows while the ground floor has large windows with a large square pane in the centre with smaller panes arranged around the outside and separate, narrow windows on either side angled back into the wall. Raised bricks provide decoration at the outer edges of these windows.
The wings at either end of the building are decorated at the lower level by bold horizontal lines and each bears a relief above the windows.
The reliefs are by Alice Nolin and each is surrounded with a pattern consisting of raised bricks. One relief shows a man and a woman, labourers on the land, while the other shows a woman siting under a tree reading to two children.Reference: Rosemont Tour Booklet, World Congress on Art Deco, Montreal, 2009
Saturday, August 7, 2010
The Wroxton, Elizabeth Bay
Friday, August 6, 2010
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Last Ditch Effort to Save Glenelg Cinema
The Adelaide Chapter of the Art Deco Society are making a last ditch effort to save the former Wallis Cinema in Glenelg.
As reported in the Guardian Newspaper today, they have already collected over 1100 signatures and are trying to have the building listed on the South Australian Heritage Register.
Convenor of the Adelaide Chapter, David O'Loughlin, says the cinema is incorrectly recorded as being built in 1956 in a Holdfast Bay Council heritage review undermining the historical importance of the building. The cinema was actually designed in 1936 by F Kenneth Milne.
For more information you can visit the Adelaide Chapter Facebook page or go directly to the online petition and add your name Save the Glenelg.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Malloch Apartments, San Francisco
Malloch Apartments were designed by Irvine Goldstine and built in 1936-37. They are Streamline Moderne in style with views over the bay but the silver decorative figures by Alfred du Pont on the exterior walls set this building apart.
At one end there is a Spanish explorer peering through a telescope towards the other end of the building where a male figure holding a globe stands over the Bay Bridge
The apartments were used during the filming of the 1947 Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall movie Dark Passage.
Reference:Malloch Building: suave delight on storied hill, SFGATE.com
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Electra House, Casterton
I couldn't leave Casterton, a small town in rural western Victoria, without posting this outstanding building. It is a little way up Henty Street from the Town Hall but to me the lettering and the colours put it in a different league altogether.
I haven't been able to find out any details about the architect or when it was contructed however there is a reference to Electra House in The Argus newspaper from November 1938.
So I don't know how this building ended up in an historic Australian country town but it did and what a wonderful sight it makes.