From the Notebook

  • Percy Rivington Pyne Residence (1912) – New York

    Charles McKim of McKim, Mead & White. Percy Rivington Pyne Residence (1912). New York.

    There’s something to be said for a little restraint, as demonstrated by this tasteful 5-story townhouse in the Lenox Hill neighborhood of New York’s Upper East Side.

    Location of the Percy Rivington Pyne Residence

    The home is officially credited to Charles McKim of McKim, Mead & White, but was primarily the work of his assistant, William M. Kendall, who began assuming design duties as McKim’s health deteriorated.1

    Although the plan was first conceived in 1906,2 McKim died in 1909, three years before the project was completed in 1912.

    Cornice on the Percy Pyne Rivington Residence

    Neo-Federal in style, the Pyne residence balances a simple composition with refined touches, including a richly ornamented cornice, finely detailed consoles, an entrance portico with an elaborate frieze, and a series of blind arch windows on the second floor, one of them filled with marble and topped by a sculpted garland in its lunette.

    Yeah, I’m pulling out all the pretentious architectural terms.

    Dormers on the east facade of the Percy Pyne Rivington Residence

    My favorite part of the home’s design is the set of three dormers across the front roof — one of these things is not like the others.

    It’s New York, so a Sesame Street reference felt appropriate.

    Third-floor window on the east facade of the Percy Pyne Rivington Residence

    The stately Pyne Residence looks more like something you’d find in Washington, D.C., and easily blends into the background if you’re rushing down Park Avenue (and who isn’t?). Only on close inspection does the home’s subtle elegance reveal itself.

    When McKim, Mead & White’s successors planned the Oliver D. Filley Residence next door in 1926, they wisely continued the same scale and design.

    Portico on the east facade of the Percy Pyne Rivington Residence
    Blind arch window on the east facade of the Percy Pyne Rivington Residence
    Consoles on the Percy Pyne Rivington Residence

    Elevations, Sections, and Floorplans3

    References

    1. White, Samuel G. The Houses of McKim, Mead & White. New York: Rizzoli International Publications, Inc. (1998), p. 234. ↩︎
    2. ibid. ↩︎
    3. A Monograph of the Work of McKim Mead & White, 1879-1915. New York: The Architectural Book Publishing Company, 1915. ↩︎
  • King Memorial Station (1979) – Atlanta

    Aeck Associates with Reynolds, Smith & Hills. King Memorial Station (1979). Sweet Auburn, Atlanta.
    Aeck Associates with Reynolds, Smith & Hills. King Memorial Station (1979). Sweet Auburn, Atlanta.1 2 3
    Looking at King Memorial Station from the northwest
    Looking at King Memorial Station from the northwest
    Platform of King Memorial Station
    Platform of King Memorial Station

    References

    1. Bailey, Sharon. “MARTA Depicts Station”. The Atlanta Constitution, November 6, 1975, p. 10-A. ↩︎
    2. “MARTA Unveils Plan For Grant Street Site”. The Atlanta Journal, November 6, 1975, p. 6-A. ↩︎
    3. Ledlie, Joe. “MARTA Gets Big Rush in Debut”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, July 1, 1979, p. 1-A. ↩︎
  • Countdown

    Clock at PNC Plaza, Kansas City

    Tick-tock, tick-tock.

    The clock runs down as the dinosaurs ravage each other in a blaze of fury and spectacle,

    Looking less like the masters of an apocalypse than the two-bit players of a cheap Vaudeville act.

    The age of the fossils is belching its last noxious breaths,

    And in due course, the aging reptiles with childish dreams of domination will be swiftly forgotten

    As enough of the spectators — though not all, of course — finally admit they were never great to begin with:

    We just put stupid old monsters on the stage for our distraction.

    Then they overstayed their welcome…

    Brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis)

    One year from now, it will be a brand-new world.

    Those who wish to control everything outside themselves won’t like it a bit,

    And the people who subsist on fear and bullshit are presently withering into their graves.

    There have been harder times than these,

    And the sun still shines its light on everyone.

    Viewed from the distance of time and space, this is but a passing moment, albeit a pivotal one.

    It’s time to dance in defiance of the doddering demons who play God so badly,

    And dare to hope for a better future.

    Azalea (rhododendron)

  • Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts (2011) – Kansas City, Missouri

    Moshe Safdie of Safdie Architects with BNIM Architects. Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts (2011). Kansas City, Missouri.
    Moshe Safdie of Safdie Architects with BNIM Architects. Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts (2011). Kansas City, Missouri.1 2
    North elevation of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts
    North elevation of the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts

    References

    1. Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts – Safdie Architects ↩︎
    2. Paul, Steve. “Eyes On The Prize”. The Kansas City Star, September 11, 2011, p. F3. ↩︎
  • Loser

    Those who seek to suppress and dominate
    Are the ones least in control themselves —
    That truth has made itself abundantly clear.

    The only thing you can ever manage is your own soul,
    But you find that difficult, boring, and scary —
    You’d rather fuck with everyone else’s instead.

    Your toddler games fool no one:
    You are an infantile fool lost in fantasy;
    Your moral imperatives are a clear deception.

    You may distort appearances to fit your fancy
    But the laws of reality will never bend to your delusion,
    And in no way will you ever command the soul of another.

    For each life you think you’ve successfully restricted,
    Another hundred, somewhere, are defying your madness
    With their every breath and movement —
    All power to them.

    Your narcissism has been indulged for too long:
    It’s time to attend to your own demons,
    And stop playing the part to everyone else.

    As your wrath and rage have been vicious and unsparing
    I will spend the remainder of your existence
    Mocking your arrogance and lunacy in equal measure.

    The world was not made for you,
    And your life is a passing fart,
    So pull your head out of your rotting ass.

    Of course, you’re stupid to heed wisdom,
    And only in your last dying gasp are you likely to fathom
    That you utterly wasted your life on nonsense.

    Shut up and slumber, you loser titty baby.

  • Bolling Sasnett Residence (1922) – Atlanta

    A.F. N. Everett. Bolling Sasnett Residence (1922). Ansley Park, Atlanta.
    A.F. N. Everett. Bolling Sasnett Residence (1922). Ansley Park, Atlanta.1 2 3 4

    References

    1. “Building Activities in And around Atlanta”. The Atlanta Constitution, November 13, 1921, p. 6. ↩︎
    2. “Dwellings.” Manufacturers Record, Volume 80, no. 21 (November 24, 1921), p. 79. ↩︎
    3. “Mrs. Sasnett Gives Lovely Bridge-Luncheon”. The Atlanta Journal, June 4, 1922, p. 1C. ↩︎
    4. “Mrs.Sassnet Gives Bridge-Luncheon.” The Atlanta Constitution, June 5, 1922, p. 9. ↩︎
  • We the People

    Fuck me harder, Daddy,

    I’ve been so very naughty.

    Whip me around and slap me.

    Scare the ever-loving shit out of me

    So I can feel alive.

    Tell me you’ll kill me

    With your tiny hands around my neck

    Then change your mind at the last moment,

    Because I love the adrenaline rush it gives me.

    I’m on my knees begging for you

    With tears in my eyes.

    I’m all yours, Daddy,

    Completely surrendered to your will.

    You hold my life in your hands,

    And I tremble in your powerful presence.

    I can’t do anything without you, Daddy.

    Control me like your little bitch.

    Bend me over and thrust me deeply

    Until I’m red, white, and blue.

  • Spring in Cades Cove

    Cades Cove, Tennessee
    Cades Cove, Tennessee
    American black bear (Ursus americana) at Cades Cove, Tennessee
    American black bear (Ursus americana) at Cades Cove, Tennessee
    Eastern wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) at Cades Cove, Tennessee
    Eastern wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) at Cades Cove, Tennessee
    Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church (1915). Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church (1915). Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Sanctuary of Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church. Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Sanctuary of Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church. Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Looking out a window at Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church. Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Looking out a window at Cades Cove Missionary Baptist Church. Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Barn at Tipton Place. Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Barn at Tipton Place. Cades Cove, Tennessee.
    Cades Cove, Tennessee
    Cades Cove, Tennessee
  • Flush It

    Is it a White person’s shit or a Black person’s shit? Maybe it’s the shit of a Hispanic or Asian.

    Did a woman crap it out? Or a man? What if it’s the feces of another gender entirely — such a shit show!

    Perhaps a Republican dropped this dookie, or maybe a Democrat pooped it out. What if some fucking Independent plopped it in the bowl?

    Did a fabulous, wealthy person pop their turd, or did some lowly poor churn out the butt sausage?

    Surely this is the crap of a purebred American — but what if it’s the dump of some illegal foreigner?

    No, I suspect a Christian dropped this deuce…but maybe it was a Muslim. What if an atheist did it? Dear fucking God, it’s so difficult to know.

    In the end, it’s all bullshit, and it stinks.

    Just flush the fucking toilet.

  • Antoine Graves Homes (1966-2009) – Atlanta

    John C. Portman, Jr. of Edwards & Portman. Antoine Graves Homes (1966-2009). Sweet Auburn, Atlanta.1 2 3 4 Photograph by Edmund W. Hughes of Bell & Stanton Inc, dated February 28, 1967.

    References

    1. Coleman, George M. “Mayor Allen, Others Break Ground For New Antoine Graves Homes”. Atlanta Daily World, April 28, 1964, p. 1. ↩︎
    2. “Homes for Elderly Fill Up Quickly”. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, May 8, 1966, p. 37. ↩︎
    3. “City Architects Honored”. The Atlanta Journal, October 28, 1966, p. 14. ↩︎
    4. Portman’s first atrium building to be torn down – SaportaReport ↩︎