Western Room, Ver 2.0
Great colletion of Western themed furniture and collectables. Also mixed in are some National Parks and WPA collectables. Great conversation room.
Great colletion of Western themed furniture and collectables. Also mixed in are some National Parks and WPA collectables. Great conversation room.
My hometown of Columbus had a Happy Chef. As kids we would go up and press th button on the bottom of the base that the Chef stood on. He would mumble something (I don’t remember). As kids we also believed that from time to time his arm would swing down and swip you with his big wooden spoon, so we would always push the speaker button and run for out lives. This remaining Happy Chef is righ along highway 169 in Mankato, MN.
For the few remaining examples of playground inspired equipment, that has not yet been removed from public places, here is a fine example of a rocket ship in Bracket Park in Minneapolis. Many parks had ‘rocket slides’ or basically this structure with a slide coming out one side. This one has obviously fallen victum to the "dangerous" playground equipment hysteria sweeping the country. Amazingly in this same park, in the kiddie playground area, was a 2 story spiderweb type climbing thing. Now tell me honestly which looks more dangerous to you? A jungle gym type rocket ship all enclosed or a 2 story web of rope that kids can climb to the top of without safety gear?
A Landmarked Omaha building! Constructed in 1942 and designed by Omaha architect Rheinholdt Henning, the concrete block apartment buildings represent a late example of the Prairie style of architecture. Each building is two stories in height with a low pitched hipped roof and wide over-hanging eaves. The central entrances feature and enclosed vestibule on the first floor with narrow band windows. The second floor features open glass vestibles with multi-paned windows in simple geometric forms. An integral planter is loacted on the left side of the entrance on each building . The strong horizontal lines of yhe buildings is reinforced with a second floor belt course projecting overhang above the main entrances and casement windows.
The Selby Apartment are significant at the local level under National Register Criteria A for their association with Social History. The buildings were constructed with restriction imposed by the World War II Production Board, which nation-wide, monitored and regulated building construction according to necessity or contribution to the war effort. War workers or military personnel were given preferential status as renters when the buildings were completed in 1942. Appropriate to its period of construction, the Marcy Street unit contains a former air raid shelter in the basement.
In 1978, the fountain was renamed after Ira C. Keller (1899-1978), civic leader and first chairman of the Portland Development Commission (1958-72). Keller pushed through the renewal plan for the South Auditorium area of downtown which included the construction of the Forecourt Fountain. It has been said that "it was Keller’s enormous energy that made urban renewal work in Portland." (City of Portland website)
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