Travels and Meditations On Our Built Environments From California's Capital City, Sacramento
Sunday, December 19, 2010
In The Clouds
Even the blandest architecture in a city of government buildings takes on a new light at sunrise below a thick fog. This December morning in downtown Sacramento had a certain San Francisco quality about it.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
State Capitol Christmas
California's historic Capitol Building is stunningly beautiful in its own right. This time of year a 55-foot majestic white Christmas fir adds still more elegance. Workers were adding final touches when this was taken while out walking.
Tree lighting ceremony On December 7
(Photo Courtesy of The Sacramento Bee)Design Trekker loves how these holiday trees light up our Capitols across the United States, including the big one in Washington, D.C. again this year. Check this Washington Post link for photos of the national Christmas tree in Washington, D.C., in recent years. (Especially beautiful: 2007 in a snowstorm). We'll be collecting some images from statehouses across the U.S. in coming days. The juxtaposition of classic columns and design with wreaths and trees really defines the word "stately."
Washington D.C.
Courtesy wn.comMid-December Update: I walked to the Capitol on Friday, December 10, to take in the daily noontime p.m. holiday concerts in the Rotunda and took some updated photos from our California Capitol Christmas.
Columns and Wreaths on the Front Portico
View from inside The Capitol Building
Once more, toward the Capitol Building, with white picket fence
(Note flags at half mast for newest soldier killed in Afghanistan)
(Note flags at half mast for newest soldier killed in Afghanistan)
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Ghost Mall
Almost a decade ago as a reporter in California I came across a great and original Web site, Deadmalls.com,, and later wrote a story about Dead Malls in America being redeveloped for new uses.
Now I live in a California suburb with a different kind of mall: The Ghost Mall.
This is Promenade, a mall planned for 20 years, started during the housing boom, redesigned as an outdoor "power center," and then left for dead when the economy crashed. Owner General Growth Properties fell into bankruptcy with too much debt to fnish this thing. It's an awful disappointment in a city of almost 150,000 where the major shopping districts are Kohl's, Target and Burlington Coat Factory.
What's going to happen is anyone's guess. General Growth is coming out of BK. There's been some talk about making it an outlet mall. Maybe it has some value as an eternal monument to excesses of the early 2000s. I went out at sunrise on a Saturday morning. This is what you see out there on another failed strip of the American Dream.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Autumn In The Business Park
Some people go to Vermont or the Rockies for Fall color. Friday morning at Creekside Oaks Business Park in Natomas north of downtown Sacramento:
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Sunday, October 31, 2010
Courthouse Steps: A Splendid Echo Of The California Gold Rush
Since architects designed Sacramento's Robert T. Matsui U.S.Courthouse and builders opened it in 1999, corporate lawyers, federal litigants and accused crooks of all stripes enter the front doors via a California Gold Rush fantasy on the outdoor plaza. Credit artist Tom Otterness, commissioned to provide public art for federal courthouses in Sacramento, Portland, Los Angeles and Minnesota. (Don't tell anyone: Doesn't he bear resemblance to Garth, the sidekick of Wayne Campbell in the 1992 movie, "Wayne's World?)"
I have roamed this weird little critter-land for years, coming and going for courtroom dramas as a reporter for The AP and The Sacramento Bee. Now that I work a few blocks away I recently returned with a camera to capture some of the little scenes (alongside this dad below).
I have roamed this weird little critter-land for years, coming and going for courtroom dramas as a reporter for The AP and The Sacramento Bee. Now that I work a few blocks away I recently returned with a camera to capture some of the little scenes (alongside this dad below).
Check out the little figurine behind dad's right leg above.
Below, you see she's the real photographer.
Below, you see she's the real photographer.
Forty-Niner!
Gold River
Salmon!
What I also like about this plaza are the scattered nuggets of wisdom about the law. The artist embedded dozens of sayings into the pavement, making a counterargument to our usual cynicism about lawyers. Here's a few favorites.
Here's the view looking up from all this: Nice.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
The Ever-Imaginative Public Library
Since the Birchard Public Library's "Betsy The Bookmobile" visited our Sandusky County homestead in the 1960s in Northwest Ohio I am a fan of libraries. I visit a library at least once a week in this awful economic downturn to check out free books, roam the stacks and read magazines and newspapers. Lunch is for looking at picture books of the beautiful Indonesian archipelago or browsing an account of Japanese invading Singapore in 1942. So, about a week ago I noticed arrival of a new library branch at the southern edge of Sacramento, the Valley Hi North Laguna Branch with a stunning glass wall facing north. (It was closed so I still haven't seen the view from inside).
But that wasn't the half of it. The big surprise was The City of Sacramento's Shasta Park next door. It was filled with storybook characters and animals such as Peter the Rabbit reading books and using laptops. Well...let the pictures tell the rest of the story.
"And the Wight rabbit read that reading was good...and decided to learn to READ."
Note bookshelf below these two rabbits: I left clicked twice here and on the similar image above, and see copies of "My Friend Flicka," "Planet of the Apes," "Lord of the Flies," plus a dictionary and geometry text.
Swiss Family Robinson is one of one of the first movies I saw as a kid, based on a novel of the same name.
(This book is at least five feet high)
But that wasn't the half of it. The big surprise was The City of Sacramento's Shasta Park next door. It was filled with storybook characters and animals such as Peter the Rabbit reading books and using laptops. Well...let the pictures tell the rest of the story.
"And the Wight rabbit read that reading was good...and decided to learn to READ."
Note bookshelf below these two rabbits: I left clicked twice here and on the similar image above, and see copies of "My Friend Flicka," "Planet of the Apes," "Lord of the Flies," plus a dictionary and geometry text.
Swiss Family Robinson is one of one of the first movies I saw as a kid, based on a novel of the same name.
(This book is at least five feet high)
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
City Beautiful 1911
All over the world people complain of City Hall and the fools within. But here's a hats off to the builders of these old palaces, to the architects who realized that City Hall had to say something about gravity, importance and permanence. I recently switched jobs and moved into an older part of downtown Sacramento. All around my new location there's pretty good taste, which you will see more of in weeks and months to come.
This is Sacramento's old City Hall. I work in the decade-old California EPA building behind it. Here are some closeups of the design work I walk past each morning after leaving the #52 commuter bus and walking east up I Street. It's inspiring, especially in the early morning fall light just after sunrise. It's a bit like my memories of Rome, when I visited my uncle Norbert in the late 1970s and returned to work at a small newspaper in the early 1980s (Proving it does work to pitch a few coins into the Fountain of Trevi).
Former legislative staffer Dan Flynn, in "Inside Guide to Sacramento," his great architectural guide to California's capital, writes of the the 1911 City Hall building at 915 I St.: "The building's Beaux Arts style reflects the City Beautiful sentiments of the early 20th Century. The City Beautiful movement called for dignified civic buildings that were carefully positioned to provide striking vistas. The movement expressed the idealism of municipal government reformers during the Progressive era."
This is Sacramento's old City Hall. I work in the decade-old California EPA building behind it. Here are some closeups of the design work I walk past each morning after leaving the #52 commuter bus and walking east up I Street. It's inspiring, especially in the early morning fall light just after sunrise. It's a bit like my memories of Rome, when I visited my uncle Norbert in the late 1970s and returned to work at a small newspaper in the early 1980s (Proving it does work to pitch a few coins into the Fountain of Trevi).
Former legislative staffer Dan Flynn, in "Inside Guide to Sacramento," his great architectural guide to California's capital, writes of the the 1911 City Hall building at 915 I St.: "The building's Beaux Arts style reflects the City Beautiful sentiments of the early 20th Century. The City Beautiful movement called for dignified civic buildings that were carefully positioned to provide striking vistas. The movement expressed the idealism of municipal government reformers during the Progressive era."
The architect was Rudolph Herold of Sacramento. A 2005 local history account provides context for why a city built on the fast growth and frequent squalor of the Gold Rush wanted to aim higher.
(See Page 3 for 1911 City Hall portion).
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