Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Some of downtown Raleigh's ‘Brutalist’ architecture is on the chopping block

There were a lot of stories in the local daily newspaper in May about what North Carolina legislators wanted to do with some state government buildings that help form the downtown Raleigh landscape.

Most of the discussion involves the demolition of structures that are, and have been, described both professionally and derogatorily as “Brutalist architecture.” Other buildings are targeted for restoration and/or new occupants.

The stories piqued my interest because a year ago I’d noticed — and photographed — a few of the buildings cited in the stories when I did my downtown Raleigh walk-around shoot. 

At the time, I wondered (privately) what the state was thinking when it allowed these to go up. But despite my urges to crawl into a rabbit hole and get answers to that question at the time (for the record, I do rabbit hole crawls a lot), I shrugged it aside and decided this wasn’t the time. Well, the “issue” (for lack of a better word) is back, as it were.

So in the spirit of better late than never, here goes ... 

I’m sure Raleigh wasn’t alone when it went through a phase when it thought it was economically prudent to approve large, quadrilateral-shaped concrete structures to house its sundry government offices.

The state Legislative Services Office is controlling the planned changes, which is a significant detail in itself — and the result of several recent legislative power-shift bills that became law. thanks to the current Republican majority state legislature. 

Such projects used to be in the domain of the State Construction Office, a division of the Department of Administration, an agency whose head has a seat on the gubernatorial cabinet. And the current governor, Roy Cooper, is a Democrat who has been in office since 2017.

All to say that during Cooper’s term, the Republican super-majority, veto-proof legislature made itself point person for state government building demolitions, restorations and construction coming down the pike. 

And at the top of the list of structures getting the death penalty (i.e., they’re scheduled for demolition) are the Department of Administration and Bath buildings. 

The Department of Administration Building, shown in the photo leading off the post (with a side view in the first photo immediately below), is at Salisbury and Jones streets, across the street from the State Legislative Building (Salisbury side) and the State Employees Credit Union (SECU), which is on the Jones Street side.  

After it comes down, according to the news stories, the site will be filled with a new $400 million “Education Campus,” which will house the Department of Public Instruction (which administers state public schools), the University of North Carolina System, the North Carolina Community College system and the Department of Commerce. It is scheduled to be finished in 2026.

Because the SECU building is all glass, and because there is a large iconic sphere of planet Earth in front of the Jones Street side of SECU (see picture above), the state is going to be very careful when it brings down the Administration building. It will not be imploded, but instead it will come using what they are calling a “deconstruction.” 

The NC Community College currently operates in a building at 200 W. Jones Street, in a block occasionally referred to as Caswell Square — one of five neighborhood “squares,” positioned in the original downtown grid map devised by surveyor William Christmas in 1792. The existing building is also a possible demolition target at some point. 

* * * * * * * * * * 


A brief diversion from the main topic: On surveyor William Christmas’ original downtown street grid, the five squares were positioned in the form of a five-dotted die (see illustration above), with Union Square in the center encompassing the State Capitol. Using the die as imagery, the bottom right “dot” is Moore Square. The bottom left dot is Nash Square. The upper right dot is Burke Square (which is where the Governor’s Mansion is located), and the upper left dot is Caswell Square. The fives squares probably are worth a separate blog post at some point down the road.

* * * * * * * * * * 

The governor’s office, which had been in the administration building until being moved a block north to the Albermale Building, will be moved to a new structure built on what is now a parking lot across Jones Street from the Governor’s Mansion. The governor’s home is bounded by Jones, Person, Lane and Blount streets, two blocks east of the Legislative Building.

Also on the demolition block is the Bath Building (first two photos below) at 306 N. Wilmington St., a structure that formerly housed the Department of Health and Human Services and was built without windows on the top floors because the Health Department needed space for its laboratories. It has been empty for years, and according to the LSO plan, it will be replaced by open space.

Named for one of the three original counties of North Carolina, this structure has been roundly criticized through the years as the height of Brutalist architecture, partly because of its square, concrete facade, but also because of the lack of windows, apparently in ignorance of the fact some laboratory work might need to be done with minimum or no light (as in photographic film development and print-making in the pre-digital age). 

The building was constructed and opened in the late 1970s under the guise of 1970s modernism architecture, but it didn’t take long before its design came under attack by the postmodernism architecture community. 

Through the years, it has been called ugly, among the more printable pejoratives. But it also has its defenders, people who embrace establishment institutions as a part of a community’s history. 



Brutalist architecture is a real professional term, by the way. According to its Wikipedia entry, the term emerged in the 1950s in the United Kingdom. Its buildings are characterized by minimalist constructions showcasing a preference for bare building materials and structural elements over decorative design. The style commonly makes use of exposed, unpainted concrete or brick angular geometric shapes and a predominantly single-color color palette, according to the Wikipedia entry. Other construction materials, such as steel, wood and glass also can be fashioned in Brutalist style. 

The term has been attributed to French-Swiss architect Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, better known as Le Corbusier. The style also has been referred to simply as “modern architecture” for the minimalist and economic approach to building design, particularly those found in urban communities. Le Corbusier himself was subject to criticism, not only for his building designs but also for his alleged ties with fascism, antisemitism, eugenics ... and Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. 

Still another structure under consideration for removal is the tall and slender Archdale Building, a slender office tower in Halifax Mall north of Union Square, home of the State Capitol. Archdale is shown in the first two photos below. Most recently, it has been used by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources. 



Meanwhile, the LSO has put the current Department of Public Instruction building (first three photos below) on a list for possible renovation. I don't know what this building would be used for after DPI moves to the new Education Campus where the Department of Administration Building currently stands. Perhaps that decision hasn't been made yet.                                 




The state government buildings cited above aren't the only example's of Le Corbusier’s Brutalist architecture in Raleigh. The gray granite Dobbs Building (pictured immediately below) is the home of the North Carolina Utilities Commission. To its credit, it has windows; but it is another quadrangular four-story concrete edifice. As is the same-description building immediately south of it (second photo below), the Legislative Office Building. Both of these, incidentally, are also accessible from Halifax Mall. 



Several blocks south of the mall, at 300 S. Salisbury St., is the Wake County Justice Center (first two photos below). It is a much taller structure of largely concrete, but it has narrow vertical strips of glass (windows). 

A few blocks west of it is a private enterprise structure, the AT&T Building (third, fourth and fifth photos below). These photos were taken from Nash Square, another of the five squares (the southwesterly one). 












Above and first two photos below show another massive quadrilateral skyscraper, which houses the State Department of Insurance.



Above: Elsewhere is this quadrilateral building, but I just don’t recall what or where it is.

Above and below: In May, there were still plans to raze this unique circular Holiday Inn structure at 320 Hillsborough Street in downtown Raleigh. But then in June, I came across a newspaper article indicating that it might not come down after all.



Meanwhile, another item in the news is the oak tree in downtown's Nash Square (another of the five original five squares) shown in the photo above. It, too, is targeted for removal. Its problem is the lengthy vertical crack in the trunk, something local officials have been monitoring closely for several years already. 

But they no longer want to sit and wait to see what happens and are worried it could do serious damage if it tumbles over. It is going to come down in the near future. I'm glad I got this picture of it during my visit downtown in March 2023.

In the article I read in May, the newspaper reported that another oak in Nash Square had been felled previously and the wood was used to create the large squirrel and acorn sculpture seen in the photos below. I’m chagrined to admit I didn’t get a good picture of the sculpture on my March 2023 outing. But I got it in the background of the first photo below, and then I blew it up and cropped it so you get a better idea of the detail, even though it is out of focus (second photo below).



Tuesday, June 18, 2024

CHAPTER 33
School bands, dance teams
and other things



This special chapter of the Game Day Revisited series is devoted primarily to school marching bands but also to few dance teams I photographed at games during the original Game Day tour project. 

Many schools did not (and in some cases, still do not) have marching bands or dance teams, and so to fairly represent school instrumental ensembles available at all schools that I visited, I will present such information that I learned through the 2024 updating portion of Game Day Revitied.

Schools listed below are in the order I visited them.


FRANKLIN COLLEGE

Franklin College does not have a marching band, but it did have (and might still have) an athletics band that performs at all home football games and several home basketball games. In addition, it debuted a marching drum line in 2016. Students can also participate in string and/or wind ensembles at the school.

The two pictures below were from the pep band that I noticed at the 2012 game between Franklin and Earlham colleges.






HANOVER COLLEGE

Hanover College did not have a marching band when I visited the school for a football game in October 2011. But it did have a modest pep band that performed at the men's basketball game (vs. Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology) that I photographed in February 2011. Below are the pictures I took of the pep band from that visit.

In addition, the college music department avails students to the following instrumental ensembles: Hanover Concert Band, Hanover College-Community Orchestra, saxophone ensemble and drum line.






WABASH COLLEGE

Wabash College does not have a marching band, but its Department of Music offers students a choice of four instrumental ensembles in which they can participate — orchestra, brass, jazz and Wamidan World Music. 

The modest-sized pep band shown in the first two pictures below were present for the Little Giants game against Wittenberg University in November 2011. 

Below the pep band photos are images of an interesting lineup of members of Wabash’s Sphinx Club. They aren’t dancers, but they do perform various athletic formations and exercises at halftime of home games. 







DEPAUW UNIVERSITY

I cannot say that I remember seeing the DePauw University band get on the playing field to perform a full program at either of the two Monon Bell Classic games I attended (2011 and 2012). That doesn't mean it didn't, but after scouring my photo archives from those two shoots, I could not find a single image in which the DePauw band did any marching. 

More than likely, the instrumentalists were members of the University Band, and it executed a short program along the sidelines before the 2011 game, and it did make itself known by performing throughout the games in areas of the grandstands, as the photos in this section of the chapter can attest.

In addition to the University Band, DePauw's Music Department offers the following other instrumental ensembles for students to join: University Orchestra, Symphonic Band, jazz and contemporary.  

At halftime of the 2011 game, which DePauw hosted in Greencastle, Ind., the school’s dance team, the DePauw Poms, did perform on the field at halftime. Some pictures of their performance follow the first set of band images from the 2011 game. (Note: I could not find any indication that such a dance team still exists at DePauw. The most recent reference to it I could find in a search on the Internet was from 2015. That doesn’t mean it no longer exists, just that I was not able to confirms it still exists.)

The few pictures I took of a smaller version of the university band at the 2012 game at Wabash in Crawfordsville, Ind., follow the Poms below and close out the DePauw section of the chapter. 




















MARIAN UNIVERSITY

For several days after I visited Marian University in Indianapolis in November 2011, I kept thinking to myself how much I enjoyed the experience. 

No doubt the enjoyment was enhanced by the fact that I was able to take in the show only a short distance away, on the performance venue, St. Vincent Field, which was only two years old at the time of my visit. 

The university put on a wonderful, well-rounded show — the football competition on the gridiron, and the pregame and halftime (especially) entertainment featuring the Marian Marching Knights and Drumline and Color Guard. No other small-school I visited that autumn came close to touching Marian in doing all that for its spectators. 

The marching band is one of four band and instrument performance options that students can join at Marian. There are also pep, concert and jazz bands as well as a string ensemble. 

To see a full gallery of images of the Marian University Marching Knights, Drumline and Color Guard, follow the link in this sentence.




































TAYLOR UNIVERSITY


Taylor University does not have a marching band, but students can participate in the following instrumental ensembles: symphony orchestra, wind, jazz, jazz combo and Exploration of Global Music. 

The school did have a modest pep band in the grandstands playing during the game I photographed, versus Saint Xavier University in October 2012, as shown in the photos in this section. 










UNIVERSITY OF INDIANAPOLIS

There was no marching band at the University of Indianapolis game I photographed in November 2012, but members of the UIndy Dance Team entertained the crowd at halftime. The Dance Team is a club sport at the university. The team performs at football games and men’s and women’s basketball teams. Scholarships are available for members; more information for these is available at UIndy’s website.

UIndy does offer students opportunities to participate in five instrumental ensembles: symphony orchestra, symphonic wind, chamber orchestra, jazz, and pep band. It also offers multiple instrumental chamber instrumental ensembles: African drum, baroque, brass quintet, collaborative piano, flute choir, handbell, jazz, percussion and piano. 
















UNIVERSITY OF ST. FRANCIS (FORT WAYNE)

The University of St. Francis in Fort Wayne, Ind., apparently did have a marching band at one time, but does not have one now, according to Julie Caldwell, director of career development for USF. 

The school did have a modest pep band on hand for the November 2012 first-round NAIA postseason tournament game I photographed at the school, as shown in the photos below. 

Caldwell explained that the school’s music program is a niche one in that it concentrates on electronic music. In fact, it offers a major in music technology. It has a music technology center in downtown Fort Wayne and has a student-run record label, Marble Lounge Records, which released its first album, Legend or Myth, by Rosalind & the Way in June 2018.

USF does offer students interested in instrumental music to participate in jazz, guitar and electronic music ensembles.




ST. JOSEPH'S COLLEGE


St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer had a pretty smart marching band, and by “smart,” I mean that it’s accomplished — and fun. It was apparent that the student performers enjoyed what they were doing as they plied their very good skills. 

I felt the band pump considerable atmosphere into the stadium environment during the game I photographed there Sept. 7, 2013.

The drummers, particularly, kept the beat going on for extended periods during the game, which is why is why I led this chapter with a closeup of the drummers’ sticks preparing to strike another beat.

Sadly, school officials halted traditional four-year schooling at St. Joseph’s when they suspended academic operations in 2017 because of financial troubles. 
  
Above and next eight below: The rhythm section of the marching band, which anchored the north end zone of Alumni Football Field. I’m not sure why the one percussionist put the bandana or neck scarf up around his face; it was very hot and humid. It didn’t last there very long.
























Above: I don’t know for sure, but I believe this youngster is related to Robb Thiel, who was director of college bands at St. Joseph’s at the time of my visit.



ROSE-HULMAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology does not have a marching band, but it does have a sizable pep band, which was evident at the Sept. 21, 2013, game that I photographed on homecoming weekend. (See photos below). 

In addition to the pep band, students can participate in the following instrumental ensembles: symphony orchestra, concert band, drum tao and jazz band.













Above and below: Homecoming halftim was packed with activities and entertainment, starting with the cheerleaders, who went through some exercises at midfield. 


Above and next four below: Also at halftime, three teams of high school students from Carmel, Indianapolis and West Lafayette who participate in the annual FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) international youth robotics competition gave a demonstration of their creations that flung flying discs onto the field, where a young man did his best to catch and corral them.







MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY

The Spartan Pride Marching Band made its debut in 2020, six years after my visit to the campus for a game in 2014. Unfortunately, there was no music at the game I attended.

In addition to the marching band, there are several other instrumental ensembles available to students on campus, including the Manchester Symphony Orchestra, which consists of talented musicians from the university student body, faculty and alumni as well as members of the North Manchester area community. 

Students also are welcome to audition for the school's symphonic band, jazz band, Oak Leaf Brass, percussion ensemble and string ensemble.

TRINE UNIVERSITY


Trine University's Sound of Thunder marching band provided entertainment before and at halftime of the 2015 homecoming game against Oliver (Mich.) College. The halftime show featured a program that included a bit of dancing and xylophone music as well as traditional marching formations. 

After the Sound of Thunder's performance, the school's High Voltage Dance Team came onto the field to put an exclamation mark on the mid-point entertainment. 

I open this section of the chapter with a photo composed around one of the band conductor’s hats, sitting on the artificial turf during the halftime show. I needed a few seconds to set this up. As I did, I prayed the band wouldn’t change formation before I was able to press the shutter button ... and fortunately, I lucked out.

Trine University offers student musicians an opportunity to earn ensemble scholarships to participate in any of its musical ensembles, including the university choir. In addition to the Sound of Thunder, other instrumental ensembles are wind ensemble, university jazz bands (which includes university big band and jazz combo), and chamber orchestra. More information about the scholarships is available at Trine’s music department website

To view a full gallery of images from the Trine game halftime entertainment, follow the link in this sentence. 


























EARLHAM COLLEGE

Earlham College does not have a marching band, but students interested in instrumental performance can participate in the following: Earlham Symphony Orchestra, Javanese Gamelan Ensemble, jazz ensemble and Latin Jazz, hand drum ensemble, Rhythm Project, Afro-Cuban Drumming, string quartet, flute choir and brass ensemble.

ANDERSON UNIVERSITY

Anderson University did not have a marching band at the time I visited the university for a game in 2016. However, a pep band and drumline program debuted at the school in fall 2022. The school has several other instrumental ensembles, including the wind symphony, which the university considers its premier ensemble. It consists of 70 to 90 musicians. There also is a symphony orchestra and jazz ensemble.

End of series

Previously in Game Day Revisited: