Monday, July 21, 2008

A Neighborhood Drug Store

R.V. Kunka Pharmacy

The building housing the R.V. Kunka Pharmacy is part of a long line of commercial structures on the south side of Archer Avenue. It is located at a 6-way intersection with Loomis and Fuller Streets.

This typical late 19th Century building got a snazzy update some time around the 1930s. Glazed panels, modern fonts, a two-tone color scheme, and an emphasis on horizontal lines combine to form a Streamlined slipcover storefront.

R.V. Kunka Pharmacy

Though easy to overlook, the entryway to the store is the focal point of the remodeling. Two vertical plastic "pilasters" appear to light up from within, marking the main door. The doors themselves feature stylish door pulls. Even the concrete step was given a reddish tint to harmonize with the facade.

Kunka Drugs entry

Whatever was once on the north side of this street was mostly blasted into oblivion by the coming of I-55. Today, many of these buildings face a Chinese Wall of concrete retaining walls and fenced-off areas beneath looming overpasses.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

That's a great discovery still trapped in time! I like it!

Unknown said...

I remember going to Kunkas. My gramma and godparents lived on Elias Court. My dentist was in the back of the drugstore. His name was Kowalski. His original place of business was torn down for I-55. I have vague memories of a soda fountain in the store. I can remember the smell of the store, but how to describe a smell?

Cliff Niersbach said...

Robert Kunka was my grandfather. In the '30-50's two rooms on the first floor were devoted to the soda fountain. The store had a wonderful smell - a combination of Horlick's malt, chocolate syrup, strawberries, bananas and pineapples from the soda fountain; cashews and other nuts in the heated revolving display near the front, and cigar and pipe tobacco in the humidor. The original first floor is actually below grade as the building was built before the streets were raised.