Marcel Breuer with Herbert Beckhard. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1968). Washington, D.C.12Looking at the Department of Housing and Urban Development from the northeastLooking at the Department of Housing and Urban Development from the southeastEntrance of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentGranite cladding on the northeast corner of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentPre-cast concrete and granite on the southeast corner of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentEntrance arcade of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentWindows on the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentLooking at the Department of Housing and Urban Developmentfrom the northeastEntrance sign of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentColumns on the entrance arcade of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentLooking toward the northwest corner of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentGranite cladding on the northeast corner of the Department of Housing and Urban DevelopmentWindows on the northeast corner of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
References
McCarter, Robert. Breuer. New York: Phaidon Press Limited (2016). ↩︎
Nolan, Martin F. “LBJ Speeds Slum Housing”. The Boston Globe, September 10, 1968, p. 2. ↩︎
That well of love and compassion that stirs for those who will never return it.
I’ll try not to bore you with psycho-babble, but it naturally formed in my youth, as the deepest wounds do for all of us.
I can vividly remember being a child who pined for the love and closeness of an absent father—
Not physically absent, at first, but certainly emotionally.
As a little boy, I wanted so badly to hold his hand and be skin-to-skin with him, but he was cold and distant, apparently uninterested in me.
It wasn’t a surprise when he later confessed that his life would have been better if I hadn’t been born—tough words to hear from a parent, but at least he was honest.
He was apparently shocked when I cut off communication with him years ago and never looked back. Such arrogance.
My mother cloaks herself in a veneer of warmth and compassion as a means of survival, but she’s just as disinterested in anyone else unless they indulge her infantile sense of helplessness.
She smothers her enablers to keep them close, but invariably drives them away with her petulant demands and domineering behavior that become more apparent over time.
In many ways, I find her selfishness even more pernicious than my father’s—his was blatant, but hers deceived me for years as genuine concern and nurturing.
We’re all amateur psychologists these days, so you can probably guess that I’ve wasted most of my life pursuing one-sided, dead-end relationships with people who don’t give a fuck about me—or are incapable of doing so—repeating the old pattern established between myself and my parents.
From the perspective of middle age, I have to acknowledge that none of my so-called friendships in adulthood have been reciprocal or satisfying.
There was the cagey online buddy who only wanted to talk in chat and threatened suicide once to get my attention. There was the raging narcissist who emotionally tormented me and then nearly killed me—I moved over 200 miles to get away from him. There was the smooth-talking coworker who kept me around to help him with his projects, but dropped me like a hot rock when his position changed.
Then there are all the people I’ve desperately wanted as my friends and companions, but it was abundantly clear they just weren’t interested. In my wild imagination, I could picture us embraced in some epic, earth-shaking partnership, but none of them shared that vision. Most of them probably never gave my existence a half-second of thought.
Always haunting my relationships are the questions of my sexuality. Am I gay? Am I asexual? Who the fuck knows? Do I want a friend or a lover? I’ve never fully understood that myself, and while I’ve grown to accept the ambiguity, I’ve never found anyone else who could handle it.
I used to think it was a weakness that I could fall head over heels for people who would never do the same for me. I used to be ashamed of it. I’m not anymore.
I may have been the boy who idealized and defended their parent as a way to cope with the absence of affection, but as a man, it’s given me the ability to not just passionately love people, but to deeply cherish them with a child-like simplicity and purity—even when they don’t deserve it.
Experience has given me the ability to recognize when I’m being lured into another unrequited relationship—the signs are all familiar to me now.
I know when my baby brain wants to elevate a flawed mortal into a peerless daddy god with whom to form a perfect union, and I’ve become adept at ruthlessly scrutinizing a person’s life and character for misalignments with my own.
What’s different about me now from even a few years ago is that I don’t dismiss the tender feelings of the little boy inside me.
Rather, I gently take his hand, and we take a walk together. I listen to him intently as he talks excitedly about that special person who, in the moment, means the absolute world to him. I pick him up, hold him close, and kiss his forehead, thanking him for his sweetness, innocence, and kindness.
Then I harness that essential eros for a moment of culmination and truth delivered expressly for that person—it may be a favor, a conversation, or just a passing remark.
The form of the message is unimportant: what matters is that it was especially made for one with whom I have become so enamored, packed with such a concentrated force of love and grace that it cuts through their soul like a blade.
When the message is delivered, it’s as if some spell has been broken inside of me, and with a sudden jolt, I realize, That’s it. You’re done. And I walk away, thanking God for that person whose life may be entwined with another’s—but it isn’t mine.
It could be that I wasn’t built for genuine relationships. That’s a sobering reality I’ve come to terms with in the last few years.
Maybe my purpose on this earth is to deliver a seed of love to those who are otherwise impenetrable to receive it, never seeing its effect, or even knowing if it has an effect at all.
That could be my childish way of coping with the absence of affection in adulthood, but I do know that every transmission of grace deepens my soul’s capacity for love—for myself more than anyone else.
W.J.J. Chase. Troup County Courthouse (1939). LaGrange, Georgia.123Facade of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaInscription on the facade of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaClock and etched marble spandrel on the facade of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaLooking at the southwest corner of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaEtched marble on the facade of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaEtched marble spandrel on the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaWindows and spandrel on the facade of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaInscription and etched marble ornamentation on the facade of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaGlobe light at the entrance of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, GeorgiaPedestal at the entrance of the Troup County Courthouse, LaGrange, Georgia
References
“Troup County To Build Soon”. The Columbus Enquirer (Columbus, Georgia), April 20, 1938, p. 1. ↩︎
“New Courthouse At LaGrange Completed”. The Columbus Enquirer (Columbus, Georgia), October 18, 1939, p. 2. ↩︎
William M. Kendall of McKim, Mead & White. United States Post Office (1913). New York.
The imposing United States Post Office in New York City was a very late work of McKim, Mead & White—so late that two of the firm’s namesake founders, Charles McKim and Stanford White, had been dead for several years when it was completed in 1913.
By that point, McKim, Mead & White was a well-oiled machine that ran on an army of anonymous architects, but the project is now primarily credited toWilliam M. Kendall.
The gleaming white five-story structure occupies two blocks of prime real estate in Midtown Manhattan and was built to complement its original neighbor, Pennsylvania Station,1 also designed by McKim, Mead & White, and demolished in 1963.
Location of the United States Post Office
The firm’s output in later years was often unremarkable and derivative, but there’s something special about this building, which is chock-full of exquisite materials and elegant details that reveal thoughtful attention to design despite the project’s massive scale.
United States Post Office, New York, circa 1913
Built for a hefty $6 million, the original structure included over 400,000 square feet of floor space and was composed of 165,000 cubic feet of Massachusetts granite, 18,000 tons of steel, 7 million bricks, and 200,000 square feet of glass.2
Most of that glass was used in the giant skylight over the building’s central workroom, which was reportedlythe largest room in the United States when the facility opened.3
Looking at the facade of the United States Post Office, New York
The building’s public-facing interior spaces were elaborately decorated with Tennessee marble on the floors and walls, topped by ornamental plaster ceilings featuring the seals of 10 nations recognized for doing “great things for the advancement of the universal mail service.”4
A Harvard professor reportedly suggested that the architects add the inscription spanning the building’s facade, quoting Herodotus: “Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.”5
The statement originally referred to mail service in ancient Greece, but its inclusion in the building’s design made it an unofficial motto of the U.S. Postal Service.
Inscription and Corinthian capitals on the facade of the United States Post Office, New York
A portion of the building is still used as a post office, but the bulk of the structure now houses the Moynihan Train Hall, which opened in 2021.
The demolition of Penn Station is often cited as the event that launched the historic preservation movement in the United States, and the dark, dank, subterranean maze of low-slung corridors that replaced it is entirely unworthy of one of the world’s great cities.
Although that unnavigable mess still exists, the conversion of the former post office into a modern train hall has restored much-needed prestige to New York’s landscape, and it’s encouraging to see such a fine building put to a worthy new use.
Gallery
Looking at the northeast corner of the United States Post Office, New YorkCornice and Corinthian capital on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkInscription on the northeast corner of the United States Post Office, New YorkInscription on the southeast corner of the United States Post Office, New YorkFourth-floor windows, inscription, and Corinthian capitals on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkThird-floor window on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkLooking at the northeast corner of the United States Post Office, New YorkFourth-floor windows, inscription, and Corinthian capitals on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkOrnamental crest on the United States Post Office, New YorkCorinthian capitals and entablature on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkOrnamental iron on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkFifth-floor windows on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkInscription and Corinthian capitals on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkNiche on the northeast corner of the United States Post Office, New YorkOrnamental iron spandrels on the facade of the United States Post Office, New YorkColumns and front steps of the United States Post Office, New YorkSoutheast corner of the United States Post Office, New YorkFront steps of the United States Post Office, New York
Bruce & Everett. First Congregational Church (1908). Atlanta.123456South facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaBelvedere on First Congregational Church, AtlantaWindow on the west facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaReflection of First Congregational Church, AtlantaDutch gable on the west facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaRound window and porch gable on the south facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaPorch on the south facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaBelvedere on First Congregational Church, AtlantaPorch columns on the south facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaCross on the west facade of First Congregational Church, AtlantaCornerstone of First Congregational Church, AtlantaTerra cotta ornamentation on the belvedere of First Congregational Church, Atlanta
References
“First Congregational Church, Colored, Will Soon Build a New Structure at a Cost of Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars.” The Atlanta Constitution, June 23, 1907, p. 7. ↩︎
“Contract Is Let For $30,000 Church Here”. The Atlanta Journal, April 16, 1908, p. 3. ↩︎
Ivey & Crook. Bank of Buford (1924). Buford, Georgia.12Southwest elevation of the Bank of BufordSouthwest elevation of the Bank of BufordMain entrance of the Bank of BufordCornice on the Bank of BufordWindows on the southwest elevation of the Bank of BufordGround floor door on the southwest elevation of the Bank of BufordThird floor and cornice on the Bank of BufordFirst-floor window and pilasters on the facade of the Bank of BufordInscription on the Bank of BufordSecond-floor windows on the facade of the Bank of BufordWindows on the southwest elevation of the Bank of BufordPedestal on the southwest corner of the Bank of Buford