Showing posts with label south atlanta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south atlanta. Show all posts
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Finding Spivey Hall - Its Pretty Side Faces the Lake
"Nobody" went to Morrow, Georgia until they built Spivey Hall.
It's a bold claim: "one of the finest facilities...in the nation..." and there is so much that fascinates about this small auditorium in Morrow, Georgia, south of the cultural centers of metro Atlanta.
Spivey Hall is a 392 seat concert hall completed in 1991 at Clayton State University. On June 29 I went to a free 11am concert culminating a choral workshop, about 60 voices accompanied by piano and organ. Brief expert commentary: They rocked!. Spivey Hall rocked.
I wasn't allowed to take pictures inside the concert hall. You can find some here. So I'll show you a bit of the outside so you won't be surprised when you visit.
View Larger Map
Clayton State University is a low slung campus in a park overlooking lakes and ponds. Spivey Hall's curvy side faces Swan Lake. The curve houses the lobby and grand stair. The stage is on the street-side. The music school connects on the south.
This is Spivey Hall from the street. It does not express itself on the outside.
It's rather a shock, I didn't expect a brick box. But this is above average for the backside of a theater though most backsides face the back.
You really need the sign.
You enter to the back-left, there's a porte-coch�re next to the comfortable entry.
The entry is on the second floor. The lake side is a glass wall, though it's hard to see the lake though the trees.
The entry is a balcony overlooking the grand lobby, the stair, and the lake.
They set up the lobby for an after concert buffet.
From the stair you pick up all the design themes, lake to the left, lyre themed balustrade, black marble floors (but not in the auditorium), faux-painted colossal pink columns, crystal sconces, blue rectangles on the walls.
The lobby feels bigger than it is.
It's quite comfortable, it's open with many cozy comers and niches. The outgoing and the wallflowers can feel good in here.
This is the view as you exit the auditorium seeing through the lobby to the lake.
I walked out to see the lake side. But it's so grown up you really can't see the pretty side very well.
Now that you can find your way I suggest you visit next Saturday for a Sacred Harp sing: Community Singing and Potluck Luncheon: Saturday, July 20, 10AM - 4PM. It's free.
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Leete Hall 1922 at Carver High
I had no idea! I'd seen it at a distance but never up close until last Saturday. I was returning from Spivey Hall the long way, up Jonesboro Road through South Atlanta. A train blocked Hank Aaron at McDonough at University so I turned in.
This is the view you see in pictures, a Tudor tower on a little rise.
It's over the top in the very best way.
Carver High, George Washington Carver High School, is now the "The New Schools at Carver." But the main building we see today is Leete Hall (1922) designed by Alexander Hamilton and Henry White Jr.. In 1922 this was the campus of Clark University and Gammon College, now Gammon Theological Seminary I think. The colleges moved out of South Atlanta in 1941.
It's like a cathedral.
I was totally alone on the campus. It's not a huge place but I was overwhelmed.
I needed hours to spot the details.
Every corner deserved a closeup.
The backside is better than most front-sides.
Remarkable to see a cross on a school these days.
Now I know.
View Larger Map
This is the view you see in pictures, a Tudor tower on a little rise.
It's over the top in the very best way.
Carver High, George Washington Carver High School, is now the "The New Schools at Carver." But the main building we see today is Leete Hall (1922) designed by Alexander Hamilton and Henry White Jr.. In 1922 this was the campus of Clark University and Gammon College, now Gammon Theological Seminary I think. The colleges moved out of South Atlanta in 1941.
It's like a cathedral.
I was totally alone on the campus. It's not a huge place but I was overwhelmed.
I needed hours to spot the details.
Every corner deserved a closeup.
The backside is better than most front-sides.
Remarkable to see a cross on a school these days.
Now I know.
View Larger Map
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Mahmoud Riad Wins 10UP, Shows at End-Of-Days Warehouse
Mahmoud Riad is a 3rd generation architect. After three years with Zaha Hadid in London he's now practicing in Egypt at riadarchitecture. He's @mriad83 on Twitter.
Maimoud won the Atlanta AIA Young Architects Forum's 10UP Award for 2013. The work is in the extraordinary "End of Days" building once used by LinkBelt Corporation.
His "The Dancing Harps"is 10 feet square and 40 feet long. It's a prototype for a musical instrument.
If you win 10UP you get a $1,000 prize and a budget of $4,500 to build your submission. The trick: You have to construct it 24 hours and deconstruct it in 24 hours.
I like it as sculpture. The curved blue "frames" seem weightless, ready to bend, flex, and perhaps leave the building. It would be magic if it made music but that wasn't in the budget.
You can see it for yourself next this weekend June 8-9, 2013 from noon to 6pm.
Lifecycle Building Center
1116 Murphy Avenue, SW Atlanta, GA 30310.
June 8-9, 2013 from noon to 6pm.
I must show you a bit of the building, It's east of the tracks from Atlanta's West End and west of the Adair Park and Capital View neighborhoods. Look east when you take MARTA to the airport.
The mural on the clerestory windows provides the nickname. Our graffiti culture knows this place.
The ground floor is about 50,000 square feet plus there's a mezzanine.
The rail cars came right inside.
Bridge cranes everywhere.
It was hot and cold and dirty and noisy work.
View Larger Map
Congratulations:
Maimoud won the Atlanta AIA Young Architects Forum's 10UP Award for 2013. The work is in the extraordinary "End of Days" building once used by LinkBelt Corporation.
His "The Dancing Harps"is 10 feet square and 40 feet long. It's a prototype for a musical instrument.
If you win 10UP you get a $1,000 prize and a budget of $4,500 to build your submission. The trick: You have to construct it 24 hours and deconstruct it in 24 hours.
I like it as sculpture. The curved blue "frames" seem weightless, ready to bend, flex, and perhaps leave the building. It would be magic if it made music but that wasn't in the budget.
You can see it for yourself next this weekend June 8-9, 2013 from noon to 6pm.
Lifecycle Building Center
1116 Murphy Avenue, SW Atlanta, GA 30310.
June 8-9, 2013 from noon to 6pm.
I must show you a bit of the building, It's east of the tracks from Atlanta's West End and west of the Adair Park and Capital View neighborhoods. Look east when you take MARTA to the airport.
The mural on the clerestory windows provides the nickname. Our graffiti culture knows this place.
The ground floor is about 50,000 square feet plus there's a mezzanine.
The rail cars came right inside.
Bridge cranes everywhere.
It was hot and cold and dirty and noisy work.
View Larger Map
Congratulations:
- 1st Place: The Dancing Harps, Mahmoud Riad � Cairo
- 2nd place: Cloud Caterpillar Mary O�Malley, Samantha Senn - Ann Arbor, MI
- Honorable Mention: Shining Anemone, Junsang You � Madison, MS
- Honorable Mention: Flux Capacity, Halle Hannaford, Jennifer Trezek, Mayur Patel, and Ian Reves � Atlanta, GA
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