Sunday, May 10, 2009

Sculpted concrete blocks

Within the span of a week, I discovered two totally separate uses of an unusual architectural product, a sculpted square concrete block inscribed with an artistic pattern of rectangular shapes.

Sculpted concrete block detail

This example is used on the entry overhang of a four-plus-one apartment building on northern Ridge Avenue in Evanston, where its use vaguely evokes the image of an Aztec temple emerging from the jungle.

835 Ridge entryway

The same design is used on the stairwell decoration panel on a 3-flat on 55th Street near Midway Airport.

W. 55th Street

In both cases, rotating the block allows its complex patterns to overlap and interweave between blocks, erasing the distinction between the individual blocks and obscuring the fact that this is simply one design repeated over and over.

The design brought to mind a certain Rogers Park apartment building, and sure enough, one of the geometric forms on its wall is the very same block:

Funky apartment building

The recurrence of the blocks suggests that these were a product from a catalog, rather than the custom design I originally imagined. If so, were there other designs? Who manufactured them? Were they used by the same architect in all three cases? (N. S. Theodorou designed the Rogers Park building.)

The blocks certainly owe a heavy debt to the concrete textile blocks used by Frank Lloyd Wright in several of his California houses. Considering the 1950s fascination with the glamor and style of California living, the connection isn't too surprising.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The funny coincidence is that the Evanston one is a building I used to visit quite frequently as a child. My parents had friends that lived in that building. The last time I was there was about ten years ago. You can bet that I never paid attention much to its details or anything. It is great to notice a different aspect again! The people have long since moved out.

Peter S. said...

As with "Built St. Louis", your Chicago blog really illuminates overlooked beauty. It surely isn't modernist, but have you happened by the (original) Lawndale Theatre complex on Roosevelt Road. It seems to be a stalled reuse project now that could easily slide into a demolition by arson. You can get a preview at http://www.victoriansecrets.net/lawndale2.htm

peter sefton

"victoriansecrets of washington, dc" http://www.victoriansecrets.net

"lostlandmarks of upstate ny" http://www.lostlandmarks.org