another angle of the Aqua building
as you walk towards the building, the balconies and windows appear to shift as if the building were alive. Very cool optical illusion.
another angle of the Aqua building
as you walk towards the building, the balconies and windows appear to shift as if the building were alive. Very cool optical illusion.
My outside wall
Last time it rained, water leaked in at least 5 places. I happened to be on the roof inspecting/repairing an errant DirecTV cable, and snapped this iPhone shot near one of the leaks.
really turning out to be an interesting building
Here’s the last time I visited the building, prior to completion:
http://www.b12partners.net/wp/2008/10/08/aqua-project-delayed/
view from my office window
how many days of rain can one county have? Did we move to London when I wasn’t looking?
a disclaimer to end all disclaimers.
Text reads:
“The Public Building Commission of Chicago and all other government tenants hereby disclaim any endorsement of any displays, exhibits, or structures that may be erected on these premises.”
Well, alrighty then
Canadian Geese hanging out at Lake Michigan, north of Sturgeon Bay
Woke every morning at dawn, but never got a good sunrise. This might have been the best.
Door County somewhere
another roadside attraction – stopped to pick a crab apple, and snapped this snapshot as well
Somewhere in Door County
at least I think this was a hawk. Seemed to soar like one at least
Door County
more photos later
(or check out the entire slideshow
www.flickr.com/photos/swanksalot/sets/72157622539591669/s… )
Still raining, still dreaming
gazing out of my office window onto the streets below is much more fun than working
iPhone snapshot modified with Best Camera App
probably my personal favorite iPhone snapshot, so far. Might be a copy of some famous photo, but not consciously, if at all.
West Loop, from my office window. Modified with Best Camera app
if I had opened this on my computer before uploading, I might have cropped this a bit, but not drastically.
A few interesting links collected October 13th through October 14th:
“Life of the World to Come (Dig)” (Mountain Goats)
“Darnielle claims he’s always been fascinated by religious texts, but up until now more secular fixations have dominated his music: Ruptured relationships, literary heroes and his own difficult childhood are among the most common subjects of nearly two decades’ worth of studiously lo-fi Mountain Goats songs. And, as a die-hard black metal fan who, last year, published a short novel based on Black Sabbath’s “Master of Reality,” Darnielle may seem a particularly unlikely candidate to explore the spiritual.”
“Black Sabbath’s Master of Reality: 33 1/3” (John Darnielle)
Didn’t know who wrote this book, just thought it unreadable. I got through about ten pages before tossing it to the floor in disgust. Maybe there is more to it, but it wasn’t obvious.
Kinzie Street and Clinton.
Yahoo Maps/Flickr lists this as being in Killgubbin, Chicago. There is an alternative spelling of Kilgubbin, which was also known as Little Hell. Used to be predominately Irish immigrants, many from the Irish town of Kilgubbin.
GapersBlock wrote about the area a few years ago;
So where do the Irish come in, and how did the name transfer?
In the mid-1840s a devastating blight struck the potato crops in Ireland, leaving hundreds of thousands hungry and penniless. Perry Duis writes in his book, Challenging Chicago, that, as a consequence of the famine, “three large landholders in Kilgubbin, County Cork, and County Mayo evicted their peasants and paid for their passage to America.” (93) These Irish peasants made their way to Chicago.
Jobs in Chicago in the late 1840s were scarce, and the Irish arrived with little money or resources. As a result, they became squatters, erecting a shantytown on unoccupied land just north of the river, near the site of the “original” Goose Island. When the Irish moved their settlement northwards to the present-day Goose Island, they took the island’s name with them.
Accounts from the period clearly state that the Irish settlers raised livestock on the island, including cows, chickens and pigs. Whether or not they actually raised geese in their backyards is a bit unclear, but that certainly became the popular story.
…
By the 1890s, Goose Island had developed an unsavory national reputation for its slums, crime and industrial pollution. In 1896, a news item in the New York Times about a fire at the American Varnish Works on the island described Goose Island as “a dilapidated locality.” Partly in an attempt to combat this image of the neighborhood, Chicago alderman considered making “Ogden’s Island” the official name in 1891, but the change apparently was never made. (Duis 107) Goose Island persists as the accepted name for the area.
In addition, the neighborhood has entertained many other nicknames throughout its early history. The Irish settlers gave the area the name “Kilgubbin” for the home they left in Ireland. In the 1860s, flames and smoke from the Peoples Gas coal plant on the island gave the neighborhood the name “Little Hell.” And, finally, the fumes from tugboats moored at the island in the early twentieth century gave one unfortunate area the name “Smokey Hollow.” (Duis 103)
[Click to continue reading Gapers Block: Airbags – Goose Island]
“Challenging Chicago: Coping with Everyday Life, 1837-1920” (Perry R. Duis)