----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, September 23, 2004 2:37
PM
Subject: Re: [BP] oversized brick
question
The Masonic Temple that was never
completed in Providence has the same style brick work.
Ken Uracius
Manager
Restoration Division
Grande
Masonry, LLC.
780 Allens Avenue
Providence, RI 02905
Phone 401 781
4797
Fax 401 785 4130
On your way up to go ice-fishing with the
good ol' boy, make a stop at the Brooklyn Masonic Temple, designed in 1907
by James Monroe Hewlett at the
northwest corner of Clermont and Lafayette. It has several interesting
details, like the cream-colored column
drums, fired with a slight amber tone in the fluting, emphasizing the
natural shading in the recessed grooves, and adding a color accent.
And the designers reconsidered normal
bricklaying practices. Instead of the usual course-on-course brickwork
for the wall surfaces, they produced oversized brick units by stacking the
bricks in pairs, with dark mortar between the paired units - these give
a massiveness that a traditional design could not.
They remind me, in fact, of the oversized
brick units Davis Brody introduced (?) in Waterside, Riverbend, and other
1970's projects. But a) why couldn't Hewlett get oversized
bricks in 1907 and b) why don't they seem to be used any
more?
Christopher Gray
PS I am voting for Bush, because it
turns out that John Kerry didn't just invent his own medals, he faked the
entire Vietnam War. Also Korea.