Its wiki starts: "Plainview began when Z. T. Maxwell and Edwin Lowden Lowe established a post office in March 18, 1887. The town received its name due to the vast treeless plain surrounding it."
I imagine they had a good reason for establishing a post office. Or perhaps they just stopped because the horses were tired, and said "You know, this would be a nice place to get a letter."
Twenty-thousand souls. Will it be a charming quiet slumbering hamlet, or some place that looks scoured and hollow?
This looks like an AI drawing, completely with garbled not-English text:
An old store, obviously. I love the second-floor office, or lookout, or whatever it was. Absolutely severe and unadorned.
It makes me sad, too. For all sorts of reasons.
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Uh oh.
You get the feeling that the whole town had a going out of business sale about 30 years ago. Moving along . . .
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Stores like this indicate there was prosperity once, right? Those nice big display windows on the side, full of . . . hats? Shoes?
Possible Woolworth's.
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Annnnnd WHOA
Housing now, of course. Originally a Hilton!
The project is the fifth Hilton Hotel built by Conrad Hilton in the United States, and opened in 1929. The premiere hotel for its day—it was located by a Greyhound bus station—featured a store where travelers could purchase knick-knacks and souvenirs, a ballroom for events, and a private club.
The hotel continued to be open until the 1970s and then sat abandoned for more than 30 years.
More at the link, including pictures.
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Again, I’m not sure what AI would have done differently.
What's in there? There has to be something in there.
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The rare chameleon building, which responds to the cars parked in front
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Hotel or office?
I’m going with the latter.
It looks mothballed, or . . .
. . . or home to something secretive the windows cannot reveal.
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This modern motel must have been the reason I visited this town.
I don't know what "plaza" is supposed to connote here. And "Inn" seems a bit much. You're a motel. Embrace it.
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The Cinematreasures page says it has a lot of windows for a movie theater, and they have a point.
Perhaps that was an upstairs lobby? Or offices.
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I think we have the answer to the question posed at the beginning - charming slumbering hamlet, or scoured and hollow? - unless I was being really selective when I took the screen grabs/
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It looks as if the windows were always bricked up thus.
No doubt about its purpose, of course, but a bit of a mystery: why the black patch on the cornice?
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Here’s the bushel under which you’re not supposed to hide your light
Rather underwhelming courthouse. Seems ashamed to admit it has a dome.
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“We came in $1500 under budget, boss. You want the money back, or you want some pointless ornamentation?”
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I think I’m done.
I love the lettering for PLAINVIEW.
Could it all come back? Sure. Will it? Your answer to that says a lot about how you see the country today. How, and why.
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