More photo to my instagram:
www.instagram.com/dendorff_bw
You may be thinking of Butler Square, a former warehouse and office building in Minneapolis. The building is located within the Minneapolis warehouse district and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971. The walls are masonry but the interior is built with heavy timber posts and beams, cut from Douglas fir grown near Aitkin, Minnesota. The columns are 24in wide at the bottom level, gradually diminishing to 9in wide on the top level. Wikipedia has an article on Butler Square with more information and a photograph.
Interesting - I just read about the building.
Megapixel,
At the bottom of your comments on Butler Square is a link to PhotoMidwest.org. I clicked on that link for info on PhotoMidwest, and got a dose of reality. The site, in listing its programs, included ". . .alternative processes (film and related processes. . . ." It made me realize that film itself is an alternative process. Didn't like it, but it is true.
Keith
Butler Square is one of the few "grand old buildings" still remaining in Minneapolis. Many were torn down during the so-called revitalization effort of the 60s and 70s. These building had large, open areas in the center, from floor to roof, to allow light and ventilation (before air conditioning). These open areas made them inefficient as office buildings later in life. One example: http://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistor...03p112-115.pdf
This thread has been dormant for a little while, perhaps it is time to bring it back. About a year ago I had the wonderful opportunity to do the HAER documentation of one of the engine and propulsion systems test stands at NASA's White Sands Test Facility in New Mexico. It was my first time in NM, and my first chance to do any photographs in the desert. It was a hoot, I had a great time, and the test stand was a fantastic subject to photograph.
The facility was built in 1963-64, and the subject of my work was first built in 1964 and then substantially altered in 1965 when a circular altitude test chamber was added to the top of it. It is rather distressing that something younger than me is now historic, but there you are. It certainly did have an important part to play in the Apollo program, where elements of the lunar excursion module and the lunar command and service module were tested. Here is a rather stately view of the test stand and its surrounding buildings, seen across what was originally the wastewater drain.
Horseman L45, TMAX 400, g-claron 305mm.
Not exactly a Historic Building but it is a historic site. This Nacoochee Indian burial mound sits just outside of Helen GA. This mound is a reconstruction as the original was excavated by the Museum of the American Indian, Heyes Foundation, and the Bureau of American Ethnology of the Smithsonian Institution. The contents of the excavation suggest the mound was probably a traditional burial grounds for Native Americans of South Appalachian Mississippi Culture. They lived in the area between 1350-1600 and the burial mounds were characteristic of their culture. After the excavation former Georgia governor Lamartine Griffin Hardman had the reconstruction of this mound built at his estate. On a more personal note, I visited this site shortly after having purchased my first 135 format camera in 1984 and it was one of the first 8x10 images I ever printed and was framed vertically. Today I used my 5x12 camera and will likely crop it to 5x10.
5x12 FP4+ in Pyrocat-M
The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
http://www.searing.photography
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