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ArsEcclesiae

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Posts posted by ArsEcclesiae

  1. New image I haven't seen yet. Nice!

    Yes, Nice rendering...very pretty. I am a bit skeptical of the design however...I hope it ages nicely, but all that white I can't help but think it will look grungy in about 10-20 years. Still, brand spanking new I think it will look cool!

  2. Very lovely pictures! The "fuzzyness" of the photos (IMHO) lends an air of nostoligia, as though the photo is something seen through the lense of the mind's eye. Anyway, my favorite is the last photo of the three that you posted, looking down Monroe Center (at least I think that is where that is). The only thing that makes it not quite perfect is...nobody is there doing Christmas Shopping! :unsure:

  3. I like how after a hundred years or so, that street scene looks about the same. Just wish there were more street shoppers though.

    I love the colors too, such diversity! Oh, and I am so Thankful to Louis Campau for giving us the interesting street grid downtown. I know it can be a little crazy and annoying, but look at the character it gives the city with this shot of the winding road.

  4. HDVCH looks so massive now that it's frame is looming on the horizon! Big old Butterworth looks so puny in comparison, at least in the photos preceding. I think that is one thing that the "neede" did for the building. By giving the building a slender focal point, it detracted from the massiveness of the central building by the contrast of the ultra slender, as well as drawing the eye upward.

  5. Boy, that's a great question. I love St. Adalbert's, but I am not sure that I would consider the "iconic" structure in GR. It is certainly representative of its time and place, a great and lovely temple of God built by old-world immigrants. There are a number of these kinds of churches in GR, such as St. Andrew's Cathedral, St. Mary's Church, St. James' Church, Sacred Heart Church and Immanuel Lutheran Church. But I never think of St. Adalbert's as representing Grand Rapids, the way that say, Notre Dame represents Paris or St. Paul's Cathedral represents London. In fact, with the exception of perhaps the Alamo as the iconic image of San Antonio, I cannot quickly think of any ecclesiastical structure as being the iconic structure of any major American city.

    I wonder if that is simply because in most American cities the religious buildings have been obscured because of neighbouring high-rise structures (think St. Pat's in NYC...most "iconic" church I can think of in a large American city). In Europe, the cathedral was generally the focus of the skyline, along with the steeples and turrets of smaller churches. These became well established symbols for centuries before being obscured by larger structures.

    I just mentioned this because unlike most of the other churches in GR...St. Adelbert's has a dome, and is clearly seen from any of the highways going into downtown. Whether or no...it certainly dominates the West Side. ;)

  6. Seeing that picture of the Basilica made me think...what is the most "iconic" structure in GR? I have talked to a lot of people who have never been to GR other than driving though it, or have not been here much, but almost all of them mention the "big green dome." It seems like if nobody remembered anything else about GR it was that there was a church with a "big green dome."

    so...is this the most iconic structure in GR? Just wondering what people's thoughts are on that.

  7. That's basically correct. It's a frosted glass in lieu of the spandrel glass to let more light into the atrium. In my opinion, instead of frosted glass they should have gone with the same tinted vision glass used on the rest of the building, but the heat transfer may have been too extreme for the LEED-compliant HVAC system...

    I was looking at the building earlier today, and I noticed that above the section of darker glass, there is an extra band of clear glass that further makes that part of the front different from the rest of the building, which leads me to beleive that the change in color was intentional. Either because they wanted it to be that color on purpose, or because they had to use a different type of glass whose color may have been impossible to match and so they integrated it into the whole in as asthetically pleasing a way as possible.

  8. Wow, I had no idea the substrate was so sandy downtown! Makes sense, I suppose, but for some reason I had thought it was all clay throughout the interior of the state??

    I remember seeing a very old picture of Grand Rapids showing the hill behind the city. I was surprised bacause it looked just like a sand dune! There were parts of the hill that was just exposed sand with trees just on the top where it was not so steep.

    Wish I could find that picture...I think its in some book at the Library.

  9. I agree with you...That building has such character and such an awesome location (Short walk for people working at VAI, Medical Mile, Downtown offices or students at GRCC). It would be awesome if it got a face lift!

    If I ever lived downtown...I always thought that is where I would like to live! :P

  10. When I went to GRCC, I used to park where the Van Andel Arena now stands, and walk from there. It was free at that time. It was great walking through downtown. I got to know it pretty good in those days. Can't imagine people being so loathe to walk that they'll wait 20 minutes to get into the parkade, never mind nearly as long to get back out.

    I would park in the Belknapp neighborhood when I attended GRCC and walk across Coit bridge and down Michigan to Bostwick. I always enjoyed the walk (Rainy days were not quite so pleasant...but that's why you dress for the weather) and with all the construction getting underway it was rather exiting...not to mention the fantastic views of the city from Belknapp every morning!

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