Saturday, March 13, 2010

retread infrared

IR

It's another cold, cloudy March day, and there's just no way to take infrared photos on a day like this. So instead I tweaked a bunch of old IR photos in Picnik, mostly having it auto-adjust colors & exposure so the photos aren't just solid magenta like the originals. Enjoy?

Oregon Brewers Festival 2007

willamette

waterfront park, infrared

rusting chunks #5

Oregon Brewers Festival 2007

McIver State Park

IR

Mill Ends Park

fremont bridge

IR

Starvation Creek

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

So here are a few photos of Portland's shiny new Bill Naito Legacy Fountain, in Waterfront Park next to the Burnside Bridge. The city officially opened the taps last August 20th so it's the second-newest public fountain in town for the moment, second only to the one in Director Park.

Naito Fountain

This fountain has two parts: There's a semicircular pool with a few jets, plus some steps inscribed with praise for immigrants (which is the Bill Naito connection), and nearby are a few more jets directly under the new Saturday Market canopy. The city hasn't come out and said this explicitly, but my take on this is that the pool part is for kids, and the jets under the canopy are to prevent homeless people from sleeping there. I seem to recall earlier draft designs for the canopy had it fold up when not in use, again so it would only be be dry during Saturday Market. This being Portland, I assume we went with the water jets instead because they're both cheaper and more passive-aggressive this way. And I'm not even going to investigate what sort of homeless facilities we could have bought with the money we spent on the canopy & fountain, because it wouldn't do any good and would just depress me further.

Naito Fountain

If you didn't know what the fountain was for, and just looked at the photos and took it in the abstract, it would be fine, if not very exciting. It's basically a retread of the Salmon St. Springs / Jamison Square / Keller Fountain / Stark St. Island / Holladay Park / Essential Forces / Director Park formula. Not very imaginative, but at least it's a popular formula that works. And the water jets make for the occasional decent photo, which is what I really care about.

In short, I kind of like the fountain itself, but I don't like the idea behind the fountain. Does that make any sense?

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Naito Fountain

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

one pacific square

One Pacific Square

A few photos of One Pacific Square, the silvery and (ironically) octagonal office tower near the Steel Bridge. I hadn't intended this to be an informational post, but I was a little curious about the building myself, and I came up with a few links and figured I'd pass them along:

  • Emporis page about the building, including a few photos that actually show you what the building as a whole looks like.
  • info page from Ashforth, the building's owner, with lots of info about utilities, elevators, LEED & seismic ratings, that sort of thing.
  • Interesting PR piece about how the owners recently addressed the building's persistent window grime issues. Wherein we learn that the building has 3772 windows, all of which got extremely grimy over the years and were thought to be uncleanable.
  • Flickr: a cool photo that isn't at all like mine. It was sunny, for one thing.
  • A page of nice architectural photos from around town, including one of this building.
One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square One Pacific Square

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Bugsy Siegel Memorial, Flamingo Las Vegas

Bugsy Siegel Memorial, Flamingo Las Vegas

On the grounds of the Flamingo Las Vegas casino, between the pool and one of the wedding chapels, there sits this small memorial to the hotel's founder, the notorious mobster Bugsy Siegel. The plaque has a colorful bit about the original hotel building, none of which survives today. There's a bit about Siegel getting whacked in LA, and the sign concludes by pointing out that the hotel's changed hands three times since then, just to be clear that, as glamorous as the Mafia was back in 1946, current management is Definitely Not The Mafia. Actually the Flamingo has changed hands one more time since the memorial went in, and it's now part of the vast Harrah's empire.

Bugsy Siegel Memorial, Flamingo Las Vegas

A lot of people see or hear about this marker and go, "Only in Las Vegas". Some people find it scandalous that the Mafia plays such a big part in the city's creation myths. But, c'mon, it's not like Vegas is the only place that likes a little naughtiness in its past. Lots of cities do that, and it doesn't have to be far in the rear view mirror before people start romanticizing it. Tampa has its pirates. LA has shady silent-movie types, ready to flee to Mexico at a moment's notice, half a step ahead of the law, or creditors. All of Australia has the whole convict thing. Silicon Valley has amusing tales of not-strictly-legal geekery, like Apple's pre-origins making phone phreaking gear. New Orleans has, well, everything. Even Portland gets notions about having once been a lusty seaport, where unsuspecting men were shanghaied and pressed into service on ships bound for the South Seas or around Cape Horn. We'll never know for sure how common that actually was. Even if it was just an occasional practice, in terms of sheer nastiness it would rank right up there with anything the Mafia ever did. But it makes for an entertaining myth, and tourists pay to hear fanciful tales about it, and it's not really hurting anyone at this point. So I can't really get worked up about it when Vegas does the same thing.

Years ago I had a boss of, well, Sicilian extraction, who once told me about an uncle of his back in Boston. He was everyone's favorite uncle, friendly, generous, always had gifts for all the kids, always dressed impeccably in expensive suits. The one rule was that you were to never, ever inquire about what he did for a living. The boss left the story at that, but I always got the impression he knew a lot more than he cared to say. So in a way, I once knew a guy who knew a guy, you know what I'm sayin'?

Holladay Park Fountain


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A few photos of the fountain in Holladay Park, in NE Portland next to Lloyd Center. The park dates back to 1870, but this fountain has only been here since the park renovation in 2000 (the same time the Neighborhood Gardener statue went in.)

Holladay Park Fountain

The city's page about the park mentions this replaced a 1964 concrete fountain that played music. I vaguely recall something about this, but I don't remember what it looked like, and I haven't been able to find any photos of it. I seem to recall it had become rather decrepit and hadn't worked for years by the time they removed it. I could probably go to the Multnomah County library's online Oregonian database and come up with more info about the old fountain, but unfortunately that database doesn't include photos, which is the thing I'm really interested in.

I'd also be interested in recordings of the music the old fountain used to play, or video of it doing its thing. I have a mental image of it as a small and cheesy 60's version of the Bellagio Fountain, but that may just be because that's the only contemporary musical fountain that I've seen in person.

Holladay Park Fountain

So I don't have a lot of interesting stuff to pass along about the current fountain, or about the park for that matter. The park's namesake, the, uh, "colorful" Ben Holladay is another matter. Portland has so few really entertaining historical figures, so we really ought to enjoy/exploit the few we've got. Some selected reading, from across the interwebs:

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