This is for all you Stranger Things fans!
Really! Winona Rider was born near here, and named for the city. About 27.5K souls, with the state's second-oldest newspaper, as we saw on Tuesday. let's see what the downtown looks like.
I’m curious about the order in which these were constructed. From the style, the building on the corner looks the oldest, which makes the rest of the block look as if people were just getting depressed about the town’s prospects.
Here’s the most depressing bar rehab I’ve ever seen.
The brick suggests it was done in two stages, too. GAH THE LIGHT GETS IN, MAKE IT STOP
Bob, already walled off half the front
NO I CAN STILL SEE LIGHT
(Months later) Okay, we did the rest of the front. Happy?
NO LIGHT COMES IN WHEN THE DOOR OPENS! MAKE THE DOOR DEEPER!
Definitely an addition built to serve the main building; you can tell by the string course and the window styles. The paint just underscores the matter.
A hotel, believe it or not. Doesn’t look like one.
Remember the ad from Tuesday? The tall streamlined hostel? Looks nothing like it.
Now? It’s . . . senior housing!
You’d know what it was without the sign.
Phone buildings = no windows.
Well you can come in here or you can come in there but you don’t have to come in over there
Now it looks like the sign of a prosperous town, eh?
Then again
Can’t explain the upstairs, unless they were thinking “Munchkin Senior Housing”
There’s just no explanation for the one on the right, unless the guy’s son loved sci-fi books and thought he’d make it look like something from the year 3054 AD
Into every town a little OUMB must fall:
It's like the building is playing Twister.
Half-assed lower-floor rehab, but otherwise nice:
This downtown is shaping up nicely, no? Hardly anything remarkable, but good quality building stock, well-maintained.
Mr. Slade’s handiwork, or at least what he paid others to do, is still there proclaiming his name. Two decades into its third century, in a way.
I include this one only because it’s obvious it had some 1920s Roman gravity, needlessly stripped away.
It’s that new hit comedy team, Shingles and Points
Let’s go back to that building we saw in the first picture: quite the eclectic, individualistic structure.
I like it. Nothing else like it anywhere, I’d guess - and it seems to have a meeting hall in the back. Must I google? Okay
Ah! I was wrong. It was a department store. Doesn't look a bit like a department store.
Two brothers with different personalities, yoked by a common ground-floor facade.
All in all . . .
. . . a nice collection, well-preserved, and reasonably free of ruination. Guess that’s all the town has, unless we turn to our right . . .
WHOA
Yes, it's famed.
The Winona bank was unusual for its time and place. In the prosperous river town where Victorian commercial blocks prevailed, the bank's cube-like geometry was arrestingly different. Botanically inspired (and decidedly nonclassical) terracotta ornamentation crept across its façades. Stained glass, generally reserved for religious structures, was used liberally in expansive windows and a sky lit ceiling, transforming daylight into a multi-hued glow.
Obligatory modern attempt to build an annex that implies the original design without trying to match it exactly and suffer by comparison?
CHECK
Obligatory modern attempt to build an annex that apes the original design and suffers by comparison? CHECK AND CHECK
Then again, right across the street . . .
Let’s just say it’s ripe for renovation!
There’s more - enjoy at your leisure, and give my regards to Winona.
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