Escape 2

In the heat of the summer, I would escape into my basement. The coolest spot, my favorite spot was the crawlspace behind the washing machine. It was built of concrete blocks, dark, and filthy but the only thing I had to share it with was a fat, lazy cat named Rain Cloud.

No one would look for me in the crawlspace. Even though it was ten feet deep, eight feet wide, and a couple of feet high it simply did not occur to them that anyone would willingly spend time in it. I thought if it was good enough the cat, it was plenty good enough for me. So, I scrambled atop the washing machine and made my way inside whenever I wanted to be left alone and it was far too hot to go outside or tuck myself into the cubby hole in the attic.

It never ceases to amaze how normal that seemed to me when I was a child and how disturbing it seems now that I am an adult. I used to imagine that I had a house, like a Gothic villain with secret passageways and trap doors. Sometimes I would draw it, my mad, adventurewoman’s house with stairs to nowhere, bookcases that hid doorways and passageways to spaces where you could spy on your enemies.

When I find myself scribbling in class or at work I am most often sketching out a house.

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When Preservationists Vacation

A view of the abandoned Portsmouth Naval Brig from a boat in the harbor

Abandoned Portsmouth Naval Brig

They amuse their partners by taking photos of decaying bridges and abandoned prisons. Also they sometimes go to the beach.

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Dormer Window

Photo of soft light coming through a dormer window from the early 19th century by Ellen Brenna Dougherty

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20th Century Long Island

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Looking North and East from the Platform

Elevated tracks undulate as they stretch north and east into Queens on the 7 line

7 Train in Woodside, Queens.

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Tiny Markings

Close up image of tiny graffiti on a sign at the Floral Park Long Island Rail Road Station

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Preservation as Straw Man (via Frozen Music)

I read that Goldhagen piece and my reaction was similar to this except with some sputtering and swearing alongside.

Urban planning, as understood in Europe, does not exist in the United States. With only one-dimensional land use laws called zoning ordinances, no American city government has the power to control the interest of developers, and hence lacks the tools to shape urban form for the public good. This was not the case during the era when historic preservation first appeared in the U.S., from 1930 until 1966.Planning and preservation moved in separate d … Read More

via Frozen Music

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Views from the High Line

View looking north from the High Line to a block of apartments with scaffolding at the top

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In Midtown Again

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Painted Signage at the Station

A photograph of the telephone number of a taxi service painted on the concrete pier under the Long Island Rail Road tracks in Lynbrook, New York.

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