Sioux City is a big bigger than we usually do, but it’s good to visit places with lots of stuff, instead of the same sad parade of two- or three-story brick buildings from 1908.

The old in the new:

 

Gabberts is a furniture chain, high-end, not too many outlets now.

Hold on do I have a fever is this some sort of a strange dream

 

 

Everything about this shot is so well-composed I have to thank Google once more for this gift.

 

Banal, but well-composed.

LET'S MAKE UP FOR THE DISUSE OF CLASSICAL ELEMENTS BY BRING THEM BACK REALLY HUGE

 

 

You know when you walk in the air conditioning will be going full blast.

The 80s had different ideas, didn’t they?

 

Someone should paint that light-post red, so it makes people think the turkey is done.

“What should we do for the ground floor, to let the building interact with pedestrians and street activity?”

 

“Eh, some grates. Suck or blow, I don’t care.”

Bob here saw something that night, scared him half to death. Hair went white. Hasn’t said a word since.

 

 

I’m starting to think this city is just a really good Sims mod

 

 

Possibly a motel. (Once again, for the record, I’m doing this ages after I snapped the originals, and probably came here for a motel.) The brick design is from the downtown two-story motel era.

Different views of the obligatory old red-brick 20s structure. Original windows - but the marble?

 

 

It has the look of a latter rehab. But not necessarily.

 

Downtown malls, that’s the ticket. That’ll bring the shoppers back.

 

I wonder if that was a ballroom up there.

 

 

Another ground-floor postwar renovation for which no one today is particularly grateful:

 

 

Well, it’s something.

 

Sometimes I'd almost prefer nothing to these Roman Forum ruins.

What the -

 

 

It’s rare that the upper floor is a more modern style than the lower floor.

From the Somber Serious Machine-Age Federal style. It’s nice. We were one of the few countries that could do Fascism Style well.

 

Oh ABSOLUTELY that fits on a terra-cotta classically-detailed building. What sort of coke-fueled disco hell was this for?

 

 

Ah, now I see - that was a hotel awning. I mean, this has to be a hotel, right?

 

 

The Warrior.

The building was designed by Kansas City architect Alonzo H. Gentry in the Art Deco style.

NO

The brick exterior features terra cotta ornamentation. The hotel opened on December 20, 1930, built by the Eppley Hotel Company. Eppley was bought by Sheraton Hotels in 1956, and the hotel was renamed the Sheraton-Warrior. Sheraton remodeled the hotel in 1962, moving the lobby from the second floor to the ground floor and converting the hotel to a motel, renaming it the Sheraton-Warrior Motor Inn. Sheraton sold the hotel to Gotham Hotels Limited in 1968 and it was renamed the Warrior Motor Inn. The hotel closed in 1971 following a strike by employees, but was sold and reopened the following year as the Aventino Motor Inn. It closed permanently in 1976.

 

It was gutted for . . . senior housing! But that didn’t go through.

Now it’s on track to be an actual hotel again.

 

 

 

Oh My LORD

That’s some high-line Italian fascist stuff, right there.

Also from the Authoritarian School of architecture, but home-grown in its decorative motifs:

Justice and Humanity don’t seem to be on speaking terms.

 

What in the wide world of sports is this strange alien Egypto thing

Has to be a FLW or a student or colleague . . . Ah. Elmslie + Purcell.

Stunning piece of work for 1916.

 

Finally:

What a peculiar visit that was.