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Favorite Historic Buildings or Places

Deco-Doll-1928

Practically Family
Messages
803
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Bannerman's Castle (1901)
Pollepel Island, Hudson River, New York

The king of this castle was military surplus king Francis Bannerman VI (1851-1918) who built it as a warehouse for his vast stocks of weaponry and munitions.

http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/07/bannermans-castle-abandoned-military.html

evening.jpg

I want to live there! Beautiful!
 

Deco-Doll-1928

Practically Family
Messages
803
Location
Los Angeles, CA
For places that I would like to visit, but are not around anymore:

446369023_11a0b1da3b.jpg


The L. L. Bradbury Mansion - Los Angeles (it was torn down in 1929). Harold Lloyd once referred to the mansion as "pneumonia hall" because of it's drafty hallways. lol I would still loved to have seen it (and I'll bring some serious winter gear!)

For places that I would like to visit (but have not gone to):

large_DohenyMansion.jpg


DragMeToHell_DohenyMansion.jpg


pompeianroom.jpg


The Doheny Mansion - Los Angeles (Now home to Mount St Mary's College)
 
Messages
13,376
Location
Orange County, CA
I would love to have seen Bannerman's Castle in its heyday back when it was a veritable treasure trove of Civil War artifacts. Today the original Bannerman army surplus catalogs are prized by collectors.
 
Messages
13,376
Location
Orange County, CA
Walmart goes Art Deco

Walmart located at Crenshaw Plaza in L.A. in what was originally the Broadway department store. Built in 1947, Crenshaw Plaza was one of the first modern shopping centers. These images were captured from Google Earth. On a grisly historic note: The body of Elizabeth Short, aka "The Black Dahlia" was found just a few blocks from Crenshaw Plaza.

walmart4.jpg


walmart3.jpg


walmart2.jpg


walmart1.jpg
 
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Gregg Axley

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,125
Location
Tennessee
I agree, very weird.
Sam really went all out on that one.
Wow that Hearst pool is just incredible, it's the only word I can use to describe it.
 

birkie

Familiar Face
Messages
50
Location
Syracuse
I've never been in it, but surprisingly there is an art deco masterpiece in the middle of Syracuse: The Niagara Mohawk building:




The exterior lighting is amazing. They are somehow able to change the colour emitted by the light strips in middle "tower" of the building, and tend to match the theme of various holidays or seasons (e.g. red for Valentine's day, green for St. Patrick's day, purple for Easter, etc).





The detail is impressive:
 
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Messages
13,376
Location
Orange County, CA
I used to live fairly close to there, on E 6th street, in the late '70s. I always wondered what it was like inside.

Cheers,
Tom

Before the war many of the admirals lived in the Villa Riviera back when the Navy was based in Long Beach. During the war the Navy used the tower as an observation post.
 
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Unlucky Berman

One of the Regulars
Messages
180
Location
Germany
One of my favs is the Villa Esche in Chemnitz. I once saw it nearly ruined in the early 1990s and after the restoration it became a very nice museum and place for events. As a big fan of art nouveau and van de Velde this villa is a treasure trove in itself.

rest152.jpg

http://www.villaesche.de/

Besides that the whole Kaßberg in Chemnitz is remarkable for anyone who loves art nouveau and "Gründerzeit". There are complete streets with buildings of the early 20th and late 19th century.
pic_inv_leben_wohnen_haus_k150.jpg
kassberg1.jpg


Another favorite place of me is the August Horch Museum in Zwickau (it's near Chemnitz) in an old industrial building of the same era. That's a place for all the people who love old cars, esp. Audi, Horch and their history.

dauerausstellung11g.jpg
dauerausstellung3g.jpg

http://www.horch-museum.de
 
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Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
I've never been here, but I think THE BUND on the riverfront of Shanghai is just beautiful...

U2150P461T5D16857F154DT20070712193624.jpg


For those who are unfamiliar with it, The Bund is the collection of colonial-era buildings that run along the bank of the Huangpu River that cuts through central Shanghai in China. It's long been a famous landmark of the city.

The Bund back in the Golden Era, photographed here in 1930:

OLD-SHANGHAI2.jpg


Despite the military and political turmoil that has rocked China for the past 150 years, the roughly fifty Victorian-era buildings that make up the Bund have survived everything to live on into the 21st Century.
 
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Messages
13,376
Location
Orange County, CA
Shangas said:
I've never been here, but I think THE BUND on the riverfront of Shanghai is just beautiful...

Whitey Smith's (Shanghai) Majestic Hotel Dance Orchestra -- Nighttime In Old Shanghai (1930)

[video=youtube;6g8yjzPD5cs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6g8yjzPD5cs[/video]
 

Deco-Doll-1928

Practically Family
Messages
803
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Sorry, I haven't posted in a while. I never have enough time to make my rounds on the Lounge.

For a place that I would like to visit, but is not around anymore (sort of) is the Brown Derby. I want to eat in a hat!

brown-derby.jpg


The dome actually is still around. It sits on top of a shopping mall.

brown_derby.jpg


Speaking of quirky architecture (and Wilshire Blvd) this have always been a favorite of mine:

darkroom.jpg


darkroom_historic.jpg


Again, thanks to everybody that posted. You all give me places to dream about. :)
 

Deco-Doll-1928

Practically Family
Messages
803
Location
Los Angeles, CA
One of my favs is the Villa Esche in Chemnitz. I once saw it nearly ruined in the early 1990s and after the restoration it became a very nice museum and place for events. As a big fan of art nouveau and van de Velde this villa is a treasure trove in itself.

rest152.jpg

http://www.villaesche.de/

Besides that the whole Kaßberg in Chemnitz is remarkable for anyone who loves art nouveau and "Gründerzeit". There are complete streets with buildings of the early 20th and late 19th century.
pic_inv_leben_wohnen_haus_k150.jpg
kassberg1.jpg


Another favorite place of me is the August Horch Museum in Zwickau (it's near Chemnitz) in an old industrial building of the same era. That's a place for all the people who love old cars, esp. Audi, Horch and their history.

dauerausstellung11g.jpg
dauerausstellung3g.jpg

http://www.horch-museum.de

This is like your version of the Nethercutt Museum! Thanks for posting this! I love the pictures!

http://nethercuttcollection.org/
 

HadleyH

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,811
Location
Top of the Hill
William R Hearst owned many houses/castles, as we all know, my favorite one is Wyntoon Villa Estate it was built on 50,000 acres of forested land near Mount Shasta in Northern California, it was designed circa 1930 by famed architect Julia Morgan, who also designed Hearst Castle "San Simeon".

Three sets of buildings were sited along the McCloud River. The first was a "Bavarian village," with three half-timber, three-story guesthouses arranged around the midst of the forest. The back of the guesthouses overlook the river. Half a mile downstream, the swimming pool, tennis courts, croquet court, and a building for dining and movies were located...

The architecture is a matter of taste( i am not complaining, no sir) The setting takes my breath away .... I have no words! The beauty of it all almost makes my heart ache. ``` big sigh```

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William walking between the Faery House and the Cinderella House on the Wyntoon property being followed by lil Ghandi.
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