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Hamilton: 1970-2007: Cladding, Demolitions, and Progress

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I ran across some great retro slides--some as old as the early 1970's--taken by Hamilton resident Jay Antenen. Contrasting them with today shows some progress, but also some disappointment.

 

Hamilton cladding!

High.jpg

 

Today (well, actually the first two buildings to the left have seen improvements in the past couple months)

High3.jpg

 

HighNorth.jpg

 

Today

HighNorth2.jpg

 

Between Municipal Building and County Annex

DepotandRialton.jpg

 

Today, Rialto Theater and Bus Depot demolished by city

DepotandRialton2.jpg

 

Gone

Depot.jpg

 

Rialto.jpg

 

Coming down in 1996

RialtoDemolition.jpg

 

Today the site is Lintel Park

Rialto2.jpg

 

DreyfusBuilding.jpg

 

Today

DreyfusBuilding2.jpg

 

Webster Building

Webster.jpg

 

Demolished by Harry Wilks in mid-70's

WilksBuild.jpg

 

:cry:

WilksBuild2.jpg

 

Today, there is actually a large office building back there, but it is a whole in the streetscape regardless

WilksBuild3.jpg

 

McCrory Building

McCrorys.jpg

 

Today, under restoration

McCrorys2.jpg

 

Remainder of Mercantile Buildings

Mercantile.jpg

 

Today, under restoration

Mercantile2.jpg

 

S. Third St.

Wallys.jpg

 

Today, brighter colors and Fat Wally's

Wallys3.jpg

 

Old Palace Theater and Datillo's Produce

Palace.jpg

 

Today, Palace under restoration, Datillo's vacant

Palace2.jpg

 

Shafer Implements

ShaferImplements.jpg

 

Today, Presbyterian parking lot

ShaferImplements2.jpg

 

Anthony Wayne

AnthonyWayneEntrance.jpg

 

Under restoration

AnthonyWayneRestoration.jpg

 

Today, senior housing

100_0747.jpg

 

Anthony Wayne retail wing

WelcomeCenter.jpg

 

Today, Hamilton Welcome Center

WelcomeCenter2.jpg

 

Globe Opera House

GlobeCladding.jpg

 

Today, WOW!

100_5235.jpg

 

Journal-Square side

GlobeSide.jpg

 

Today

GlobeSide2.jpg

 

Burg's

BurgsBuilding.jpg

 

Today, restored and houses the new Riverbank Cafe and a couple other things

100_1433.jpg

VERY cool!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

I had no idea how pervasive the whole cladding thing got by the '70s. And we're still dealing with it today. It just goes to show what happens when people choose "new" without deciding if it's "better" or "worse".

Hamilton looks a lot better today than it did in the 70's.  Thank god they are removing a lot of that cladding... I don't understand why they cover beautiful buildings with crappy vinyl.

The trees along High make a BIG difference...that whole cladding phase was a major mistake.  Glad to see Hamilton working to get rid of that nonsense.  This is fantastic ink, thanks!

70's pics = groovy!

Great job!  I love that feeling of relief on "then and now" photos when there is enough historic fabric left to recognize a view.

 

As an "outsider" to Hamilton, even though there are losses, I dare say that Hamilton has fared better in that time period than several other communities we could name (thanks in part to Ann and Jay Antenen).  That includes a handful of really important "saves," including the Anthony Wayne and the Globe Opera House - which would make my list of the 100 most significant 19th century buildings standing in Ohio.

Some losses, some wonderful gains!

 

It looks like the Webster Building had a fire before it was demolished.

 

The cladding applied in the sixties and seventies was more often metal than vinyl; usually aluminum, sometimes coated steel on commercial buildings. There's probably some pretty good scrap value in it now.

^ Yeah, actually there was a fire.  I remember it which makes me think it was a bit later than the '70's but maybe memory doesn't serve.  A girl I went to grade school with's dad worked in the building when it burnt so it had to be late '70's - early '80's.

Holy crap, thanks for sharing! This cladding issue was prevalent across many cities. I remember many storefronts and buildings in my hometown of Ashland, KY being covered with metalwork. Most of it was deteriorating by the 1990s, which is no surprise, and some of it started falling during windstorms. There is a major effort now to remove the last of it.

 

As for the Globe Opera House, it reminded me of a massive air exhaust vent. But it is amazing how much was preserved under that metal sheet; I've seen metal tear-offs that have revealed MUCH worse.

Amazing! Reminds me of how in 1997 a tornado swept through Hamtramck and uncladded several buildings. Perhaps the first time a Tornado has left a town looking better than it found it.

 

Again, thanks! It's amazing how much beauty can be a mere 2 inches of currogated away.

Wow. So it was like this then --

 

Before (I wish I had more photographs) --

020804_2.jpg

 

After --

DSC_0516.jpg

 

Every ornate detail was chopped off. The black on the left was from a fire, hence the "need" back then to cover it up with something that resembled ceiling tiles.

I had no idea how pervasive the whole cladding thing got by the '70s. And we're still dealing with it today. It just goes to show what happens when people choose "new" without deciding if it's "better" or "worse".

 

Today, it's EIFS (shudder).

Does anyone remember what the reasoning behind these metal facades was?  Was it just aesthetic?  Was it a way of covering up deteriorating facades for less than repairing them would cost?  Was it a way of covering up embarassing empty upper stories?

Back in the late sixties, I used to hang out with a planning consultant who was a big advocate of this kind of stuff as a way to update business districts to look new and modern. The movement also included removing the business signs that hung over the sidewalks, to open up sight lines.

 

The most "successful" of those programs resulted in the creation of main-street pedestrian malls in cities like Kalamazoo, Michigan and Richmond, Indiana. Few attained such a high pinnacle as Hamilton, though!  :wink:

 

I went with him in 1968 to Kalamazoo to take photos of the then-new pedestrian mall there, for a sales pitch he was making in Huntington, Indiana. That one was built, and most of the citizens hated its effect on traffic and parking access from day one. It's long gone. I still have those slides from Kalamazoo squirrelled away somewhere. Maybe a post, some day.

I had no idea how pervasive the whole cladding thing got by the '70s. And we're still dealing with it today. It just goes to show what happens when people choose "new" without deciding if it's "better" or "worse".

 

Today, it's EIFS (shudder).

I just looked up EIFS -- so that's what that garbage is called. I've seen buildings being slathered in that crap for years and wondered what it was. I HATE it.

I still have those slides from Kalamazoo squirrelled away somewhere. Maybe a post, some day.

 

Please, please!

Ahhh! I love before and now shots from years ago. Thanks for the work you put into this. Why was it ever cool to cover windows? Imagine how dark and crappy it must be to have an office in one of those things.

 

This one is just terrible. I mean I can still plainly see the ridiculously awesome building sitting behind it!

 

HighNorth2.jpg

^Yep, that is the one that bothers me the most. It is the one of the largest, most ornate buildings on High. PreservationOhio added it to their Most Endangered List this year.

 

The Mehrum and Lindley Buildings:

IMG0020.jpg

 

Cladding

100_0784.jpg

 

100_1146.jpg

 

Peeking out...

100_5251.jpg

WTF. That's just sad.

Interesting study, Ink.

 

The welcome center and the Mercantile project are especially astounding.

  • 1 month later...

its funny that the people in the 1970s thought they were being stylish, when just a few decades later, there was a public outcry for restoration.

  • 2 months later...

i was inside the mercantile buildings about 9 years ago......holy smokes is there a kick-butt interior on the upper floors, complete with a central arcade ( i wanna say 3 story high) like in the old shillito building in DT cincy

When did cladding ever look "good"?

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