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Sunday, January 22, 2012
The Free Public Baths
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Labels:
Demolished,
New York City,
York and Sawyer
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Dedicated to an era long gone featuring architectural photographs of houses, hotels, apartment and office buildings, civic institutions and more...many of which are no longer standing.
4 comments:
With some minor tweaks these facades could easily have served as banks, train stations or libraries in any city. Built back in the day as a public amenity to serve the numbers of people who didnt have access to such facilities in their own tenements. Too bad we dont put as much nobility and refinement in todays public buildings of any type.
And even more to the point, too bad we no longer put such nobility and refinement in out attitude toward the public good
Moreover, and still more to the point, the trillions raised annually through federal, state and local taxes are spent on a definition of "the public good" that is simply different from what it once was.
Is there really more "nobility and refinement" in a pretty building than in the tsunami of income supports that washes over the country every year? (And if you think so, aren't you "on the wrong side"?)
Cheers, etc,
There is a York & Sawyer bathhouse still standing, at 135 Allen. It is now occupied by a church.
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