In Ruins

Uploaded: October 24, 2010

Description

Holliday Park, Indianapolis

In the 1950s, the St. Paul Building, at 220 Broadway in New York City, was torn down to make way for a modern skyscraper. Karl Bitter, one of the outstanding architectural sculptors of the late 19th century, had designed the facade of the original building, including three massive statues made of Indiana limestone called “the Races of Man.” To find a new home for the sculptures, the building’s owner, the Western Electric Company, held a competition among U.S. cities, which were required to submit plans for their display and preservation. Indianapolis proposed to place them in Holliday Park, which was then an arboretum, and the city was ultimately awarded the highly prized sculptures, valued at the time at $150,000

Thanks for looking!



Exif: F Number: 10, Exposure Bias Value: 5.00, ExposureTime: 1/1600 seconds, Flash: did not fire., ISO: 3200, White balance: Manual white balance, FocalLength: 32.00 mm, Model: NIKON D700

Comments

Laura E. Swan level-classic October 25, 2010

Wonderful capture and really interesting read! Remember when houses cost about $7,000?

Love your treatment here! Looks great, Cindy!

-Laura #1320742

Tiia Vissak October 25, 2010

great tones & details! #8993815

Leslie McLain level-classic October 25, 2010

Beautiful capture, Cindy. #8994076

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