Showing posts with label Crookston MN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crookston MN. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

We are "Over-vinyled"

This grand old "four-square" is vinyl-sided to the point of losing the charm of the window frames.  And this is just one of many throughout Crookston.  In our search for a "quick fix" we want to "cover up" not "uncover" the beauty of the original home.  First people replaced wood siding with pressed wood siding, then it was asbestos siding, by the time vinyl siding was invented, these folks are probably covering up the previous three laysers forcing the windows to have no depth to them anymore.  Making it worse is the fake munions (you know those vinyl strips inside the vinyl window,) and the width of the original woodwork around the windows is down from four to five inches to one or two inches! 

The living room window probably had a stained glass upper and clear glass on the lower windows.  What a loss.  And where did the window to the side of the door come from?  These are typical of modern structures, '70's and above.  Now I ask you, why didn't the person sell the old beauty and just buy a newer house?

I will give it one "saving grace" and that is they kept the double-hung look of the upper story windows.  A lot of people have flipped out over casement styles inappropriate to the four-square, or more "munioning" (is that a word?) than was ever on the original house. 

If you must vinyl side your home and windows, then at least do it in an appropriate way.  Although munioned, the following home right across the street shows a classic look that preserves the original look and proportion of the the house.

 
 Watch for the next post on (top 10 things I hate about Crookston, MN) 
 

Saturday, December 10, 2011

One way streets must go!

I have always hated the one way streets in Crookston.  First of all, it encourages drivers to drive to the maximum speed limit, 35 mph through the heart of downtown. So much so that every year the police department has to put out those yellow markers to watch for pedestrians.  People in cars speeding past them do not even look to the sides for pedestrians wanting to cross the street. Talking on your cell phone while going 35 mph is just not right!  Trucks taking the "shortcut" through town drop their chicken feathers and noise all over the place.   Now granted we don't have too much to offer to look at (yet) but at least slow down enough to watch for pedestrians. Furthermore, if you are a retailer, only one side of your window and building can be seen.  Retailers hurting for business downtown get only 1/2 the chance to advertise! 

Furthermore you can no longer tell me it can't be done.  Just look at Fargo: 

Fargo to convert two major downtown runways


By Associated Press
Posted Dec 05, 2011 @ 09:26 PM
 
North Dakota's largest city in coming years will be converting two major downtown one-way streets to two-way traffic.
After a decade of discussion, Fargo leaders voted last week to convert NP and First avenues, which have been one-ways for more than half a century. Reconstruction could start as early as 2013, with the multimillion-dollar project taking years to complete. Eventually, each avenue will have two lanes in the current direction and one lane in the opposite direction, along with a bike lane.
The vote was 3-1, with Commissioner Dave Piepkorn (PEP'-kohrn) casting the lone dissenting vote. He worries about increased traffic congestion downtown. But many business owners back the move, saying it will bring more business and investment downtown.

 
So what do you think, Crookston?
 

  

Friday, November 25, 2011

Too Much Taupe!

Everywhere I look I see too much taupe.  Yes taupe it is, not tan, not brown, not beige, but taupe as in the color of pantyhose.  It doesn't go well with the rich natural colors of red pressed brick or yellow common brick seen in downtown Crookston.  If you look closely, there is a soft teal color on the four upper story windows on the right.  This is a much better color and combined with gold makes for a historically correct color combination for this building.  Much more pleasing to the eye.  This much taupe calls attention to the remuddling of the storefront and the wrong sized windows.  I know it was popular in the seventies to fill in and put in smaller windows for the sake of "energy savings,"  but now there are triple glazed windows for a bigger R Value while matching the original window opening. Worse yet, is the missing parapet. Where did they all go?  And when?  But I digress, back to taupe, covering homes it is the perfect backdrop for colorful flowerbeds, but downtown, yech.  Even if I wasn't a historic preservationist, too much taupe is just not in good taste. Check out the historic color collection at Crookston Paint and Glass.  Please rate this article, Too Much Taupe, on a scale of 1 to 10.  10 being the least hateful thing about Crookston, 1 being the most. 


Thursday, September 29, 2011

Ten Things I hate about you.

This is the introduction to a series of ten blogs focused on ten things I hate about my hometown, Crookston, Minnesota.  I was inspired to write this series by the following quote from the work "Othodoxy" by G.K. Chesterton on loving the world enough to change it.  If you like this quote, follow this blog for my Top Ten.  Feel free to comment as well.

     "What we need is not the cold acceptance of the world as a compromise, but some way in which we can heartily hate and heartily love it.  We do not want joy and anger to neutralize each other and produce a surley contentment;  we want a fiercer delight and a fiercer discontent.  We have to feel the universe at once as an ogre's castle to be stormed, and yet as our own cottage to which we can return at evening.
     No one doubts that an ordinary man can get on with this world...(but) can he hate it enough to change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth changing?"

Saturday, February 26, 2011

A picture of a downtown to die for



The photo is of Franklin, Tennessee and is part of a series of "America's Most Romantic Streets" at http://huff.to/gjBc6H.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

How I feel about the Palace Hotel

Photo from the Crookston Times    Push Play to listen while reading...


"Patient Trust in Ourselves and the Slow Work of God"
Above all, trust in the slow work of God.  I am, quite naturally, impatient in everything to reach the end without delay.  I like to skip the intermediate stages.  I am impatient of being on the way to something unknown, something new.  And yet it is the law of all progress that it is made by passing through some stages of instability -- and that it may take a very long time.  And so I think it is with (historic preservation).  Ideas mature gradually -- I should have started early and let them grow, let them shape themselves, without undue haste.  I shouldn't have tried to force them on, as though (we, Prairie Skyline Foundation) could be today what time (that is to say, grace and circumstances acting on our own good will) will make (us) tomorrow; Only God can say what this spirit (of restructuring our organization) gradually forming within (us) will become, and (we must) accept the anxiety of feeling in suspense and incomplete. Adapted from Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.  

Who knows what will become of us. We are heartbroken.









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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Historic Preservation and Jobs

• In Michigan, $1 million in building rehabilitation creates 12 more jobs than does manufacturing $1 million worth of cars;
• In West Virginia, $1 million of rehabilitation creates 20 more jobs than mining $1 million worth of coal;
• In Oklahoma, $1 million of rehabilitation creates 29 more jobs than pumping $1 million worth of oil;
• In Oregon, $1 million of rehabilitation creates 22 more jobs than cutting $1 million worth of timber;
• In Pennsylvania, $1 million of rehabilitation creates 12 more jobs than processing $1 million worth of steel;
• In California, $1 million of rehabilitation creates five more jobs than manufacturing $1 million worth of electronic equipment;
• In South Dakota, $1 million of rehabilitation creates 17 more jobs than growing $1 million worth of agricultural products;
• In South Carolina, $1 million of rehabilitation creates eight more jobs than manufacturing $1 million worth of textiles.

Excerpt from

Essay: Can Historic Preservation Help Lead Us Out of the Recession

Sept 28, 2009
-By James T. Kienle, FAIA

Friday, November 5, 2010

Now why can't UMC do that?

from the October 25th Crookston Times, no online comments.


Grand Forks, N.D. —
GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) — Grand Forks city leaders are setting up a task force to look at extending the University of North Dakota’s presence downtown.
    UND President Robert Kelley has spoken repeatedly of his desire to see that happen, and City Council President Hal Gershman tells the Grand Forks Herald he decided to do something about it.
    Gershman says it’s too soon to talk about the potential spending of city money or renting of city property. He says he’d like to see the private sector play a role.





 

Sunday, September 12, 2010

The Power of One

"The fact that this country has any important historic buildings and places at all did not happen by accident and did not happen because the government was the first to recognize that it would take intentional plans to save those buildings that have become symbols that define our nation to ourselves and to the rest of the world. Specifically, I refer to Independence Hall.
Independence Hall, originally known as the State House for the Pennsylvania Assembly, was built in 1732. The Second Continental Congress met there in 1775. George Washington was sworn in there as commander-in-chief of the Continental Army. The Declaration of Independence was signed there in 1776. The Articles of Confederation were ratified there in 1781. The Constitution was written there in 1787. Independence Hall, since 1979, has been a U. S. World Heritage site according to the International Council on Monuments and Sites, one of only 20 such sites in the U.S. and one of only two such buildings in the U.S., the other being Monticello.
While no one would disagree how important this building is today, it was losing its character-defining features even when it was center stage in our early history as a nation. The steeple was removed in 1781 because it had rotted out and become a hazard. After 1800, when the U. S. government moved to Washington, the building was little used except during elections and as a courthouse. In 1812, the wings and their connections to the State House were demolished and were replaced with fireproof buildings.
In 1816, the state legislature needed money to build a new capitol in Harrisburg. The state planned to put the building and adjacent square on the auction block, including the Liberty Bell. However, they gave Philadelphia an option to purchase the entire area for $70,000, less than half of Its assessed value of $150,000. The city could not refuse such a deal, and took possession in 1818.
During a week's visit to Philadelphia in the fall of 1824, part of a year-long return stay in the U. S., the Marquis de Lafayette: "electrified everyone in the crowds especially the mayor and members of the city council. The State House, which had been neglected and in need of repair, suddenly became an inspiration to his audience the moment the legendary figure delivered a speech crafted with significant observations about America, its model government, the Declaration of Independence, and his military idol, George Washington."
As a result of his impassioned observations of what had been and what was being lost, the State House would become one of America’s most important historic sites as it came to be called Independence Hall. Where there had been no plans or any serious thought about preserving the building as an historic shrine prior to Lafayette’s visit, the public now demanded action by the government. As interest in restoring the building began to increase, Independence Hall became the first major American effort at historic preservation.
The steeple was rebuilt in 1828. Major efforts were tried, with limited success, to restore the building to its original architecture, first, in 1854, then in preparation for the 1876 centennial. An 1868 plan by the city to fill the square with flamboyant Second Empire municipal buildings suitable for Paris was eventually abandoned when the city government realized it would dwarf Independence Hall. In 1896 the Daughters of the American Revolution received authorization from the city to restore, at their own expense, the building's second floor.
The 1812 fireproof buildings were also demolished around that time. But the rebuilding of the original wings was so poorly done that the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects took responsibility for the restoration work in the 1910s and 1920s. "The AIA restorations were landmarks in the field; the architects made careful measurements and subjected the buildings to rigorous architectural analysis." In 1942, the Independence Hall Association was formed to lobby for the creation of a national historical park incorporating the Independence Square structures and other important buildings and sites in Philadelphia. In 1948, the park was created and the National Park Service has restored and maintained it ever since.
The neglect, the rediscovery of its importance through one person's leadership, the community demands, the delays and the setbacks, and the eventual successful restoration of this icon helps explain the pattern of the stories of many other historic resources in the country and the county. In Montgomery County, we saw the benign or malicious neglect of such exceptional places as the Silver Theatre, the Red Brick Courthouse, Glen Echo Amusement Park and the National Park Seminary.
The attention brought to the C & O Canal by the group hikes on it led by Justice William O. Douglas and later by Congressman Gilbert Gude were instrumental in the path to creating this long and narrow national park. The rediscovery of these important historic resources were then followed by decades of delays and setbacks before they were restored and finally saved. All could have been lost to redevelopment, the canal could have also been lost to a highway and to a dam, if not for the opposition of county residents and county grass root organizations who determinedly fought the then wise and certain plans of the government or developers." 

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Why couldn't the wading pool be put back in Central Park?

Central Park has so many good memories for me, the swings, the thing that went around in a circle and you had to run to make it go fast and then you got sick.  The teeter totters where we used to "bounce" our partner almost off the board!  But for older kids taking care of younger kids, or young mom's, the wading pool keep those little ones so busy they must have fell into bed at night and slept right through!  Don't take the campers out of Central Park.  Read this:  http://www.wecallithome.blogspot.com.

Monday, August 23, 2010

City Council 7 pm sharp tonight! Save the Wayne for Artspace!

Don't forget to show up!  Tonight, August 23, 2010 at 7 pm in City Hall is our last chance to save the Wayne/Palace Hotel.  We will be presenting three new ideas for the historic landmark plus the stabilization costs and a new downtown task force that will cross the arts with the politicians!  Be There!

Pictures are at www.ourcrookston.blogspot.com!

Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Palace Pavilion

Latest brainstorm, The Palace Pavilion.  Open the doors for impromptu art and entertainment!  Let's bring more events downtown besides Crazy Days.  I can envision the Hotel Wayne as a shared “center common” covered pavilion space dedicated for:   dance performances, impromptu and planned.  Temporary food vendors, art walks, roller skating, displays, and promotions, pop-up “stores,” farmer’s markets, even community rummage sales.  Complete with picnic tables, a fountain, and a deck for performing, we can gather for community education, meetings, and have a place for adults and youth to hang out.

This “Palace Pavilion” can be simply a “three-season” place with screens for summer and shutters for winter. This idea requires only building stabilization, a new roof, and complete clean-out of the building.  It puts the minimum of county and city money into it and in fact saves the city and county some of the demolition cost, while bringing much needed foot traffic to downtown Crookston.   

Of course, we certainly want to move forward on funding the “Artspace Market Survey,” in hopes of a larger development that brings in tax dollars.  In the meantime this can save the county and city money and bring a much needed ‘center’ to our town needing only a new roof every 30 years.

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Thursday, July 29, 2010

They did it 3 years in a row!



OK, This is just darn stupid.  I've complained the last couple of years about the improper and poor pruning of our lovely downtown shrubbery.  The pruner, whoever that is, trims flowering fountain shaped, "Bridal Wreath Spirea" shrubbery into boxes!  Not only does that cut more than half of the flower heads off, but the mystery pruner cuts the Korean Dwarf Lilac bush blooms off too! 

Just like the Palace/Wayne Hotel situation:  pruning out one of the few architectural beauties we have left and exposing the trashy alley to the busiest street in Crookston. 

Does anyone else feel like they are surrounded by idiots or is this how it gets when you have gardened for many many years?

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Thursday, June 24, 2010

Follow my Diet Plan!

Sorry to take so long between posts and thanks to all my readers!  I've been working hard on not one, but four historic buildings and have lost 7 pounds!  Come help me out and you too can lose weight.  In fact if all of the people who needed to lose weight in Crookston chipped in and helped clean out the former Wayne Hotel, we all will be winners.  Here is a sneak peak at the "Artspace Report:"

  " the citizens of Crookston should make it clear to their elected leaders that they want the building preserved. While we are sympathetic to the County Commissioners who see the building chiefly as drain on scarce resources, we cannot state too strongly our view that tearing it down would be akin to burning a Rembrandt because you can’t afford to have it cleaned. Every effort should be made to find the money needed to stabilize the building until a suitable reuse can be found. Once gone, it can never be replaced."


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