Limestone Lives
Author | : Kate Ferrucci |
Publisher | : Quarry Books - IPS |
Total Pages | : 102 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : |
A celebration of Indiana's limestone workers in words and pictures.
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Author | : Kate Ferrucci |
Publisher | : Quarry Books - IPS |
Total Pages | : 102 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : |
A celebration of Indiana's limestone workers in words and pictures.
Author | : Donald Friedman |
Publisher | : W. W. Norton & Company |
Total Pages | : 200 |
Release | : 1998 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 9780393730302 |
Constructed in 11 months, the Empire State Building was a marvel of modern engineering. Its frame rose more than a story a day--no comparable building since has managed that rate of ascent. In "Building the Empire State", a rediscovered 1930s notebook charts the construction of this crowning achievement. Illustrations.
Author | : Douglas A. Wissing |
Publisher | : Indiana University Press |
Total Pages | : 264 |
Release | : 2016-01-04 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0253019109 |
“Quirky, well-crafted essays” by an award-winning journalist about his home state of Indiana, filled with characters famous, notorious, and unknown (Indianapolis Star). Fueled by an insider’s view of Indiana and the state’s often surprising connections to the larger world, IN Writing is revelatory. It is Indiana in all its glory: sacred and profane; saints and sinners; war and peace; small towns and big cities; art, architecture, poetry and victuals. It’s about Hoosier talent and Hoosier genius: the courageous farmer-soldiers who ardently try to win the hearts and minds of twenty-first century Afghan insurgents; the artisans whose work pulses with the aesthetics of faraway homelands; and the famous modernist poet who had to leave to make his mark. It’s about places that speak to a wider world: Columbus and its remarkable architecture; New Harmony and its enduring idealism; Indianapolis and its world-renowned Crown Hill cemetery. IN Writing makes visible the unexpected bonds between Indiana and the world at large.
Author | : Delores Haltom |
Publisher | : WestBow Press |
Total Pages | : 189 |
Release | : 2011-07-08 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1449720137 |
Celibeth Jones wore a mans heavy denim jacket, coveralls, and a pair of scuffed brogans. Thick, gray hair straggled from beneath a tattered stocking cap. She walked briskly, resolutely, looking neither to the right nor to the left; her bushy, black eyebrows were knitted together in a permanent scowl. Is she angry about something? Henon asked. Oh, yeah, Otis answered. I was hoping to have friendly neighbors. Henon stared unabashedly as the elderly woman passed the barbershop window. Celibeth glared back at him. Wow! If looks could kill, Id be dead. Shes positively intimidating. You better be intimidated, Otis said grimly. She killed her husband. Otis! Hezekiah threw the newspaper down on the floor. And got away with it, Parker chimed in. Hezekiah slammed the door on his way out of the shop.
Author | : Ronald A. Reis |
Publisher | : Infobase Publishing |
Total Pages | : 145 |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : Electronic books |
ISBN | : 1438119372 |
It was to be a structure like no other: the largest and tallest skyscraper in the world. Initial plans for the Empire State Building called for an Art Deco masterwork to rise 1,000 feet, with 80 stories of rental space. The high-rise was to completely fill the 84,000-square-foot site of the former Waldorf-Astoria, then New Yorks most opulent hotel. Hopes were high that the Empire State Building would accelerate Midtown Manhattans stride toward commercial prominence, pulling more business uptown. Built in the early years of the Great Depression, during which one out of four New Yorkers was out of work, the Empire State Buildings construction was thought by many to be a foolish undertaking. Yet, it was completed under budget and ahead of schedule, and the commercial colossus has stood through good times and bad as a symbol of daring, beauty, and American invention.
Author | : Kiel Moe |
Publisher | : Actar D, Inc. |
Total Pages | : 267 |
Release | : 2017-09-15 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 1638409110 |
This book considers the material basis of building as a key impetus of both urbanization and the energetics of urban life. The otherwise externalized material geographies and thermodynamics of building’s material basis reveal much about the dynamics and efficacy of how we build. This book plots the material history and geography for one plot of land in Manhattan—the parcel of land under the Empire State Building—over the past two hundred years. Through rich illustrations, it tracks all the building material that have passed through this parcel or remain in its geographic and ecological dynamics: spatially (in terms of their geographic material footprints and industrial processes) and quantitatively (in terms of embodied energy, embodied carbon, and emergy flow). In successive chapters, the book articulates the empire and states that are inherent to building, but remain unconsidered—abstract and unknown—by architects.
Author | : Thomas Kelly |
Publisher | : Macmillan + ORM |
Total Pages | : 473 |
Release | : 2006-01-24 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1466825308 |
A Novel of High-Stakes Romance and Betrayal, Set During the Race to Finish the World's Tallest Building In Empire Rising, his extraordinary third book, Thomas Kelly tells a story of love and work, of intrigue and jealousy, with the narrative verve that led the Village Voice's reviewer to dub him "Dostoevsky with a hard hat and lead pipe." As the novel opens, it is 1930-the Depression-and ground has just been broken for the Empire State Building. One of the thousands of men erecting the building high above the city is Michael Briody, an Irish immigrant torn between his desire to make a new life in America and his pledge to gather money and arms for the Irish republican cause. When he meets Grace Masterson, an alluring artist who is depicting the great skyscraper's ascent from her houseboat on the East River, Briody's life turns exhilarating-and dangerous, for Grace is also a paramour of Johnny Farrell, Mayor Jimmy Walker's liaison with Tammany Hall and the underworld. Their heartbreaking love story-which takes place both in the immigrant neighborhoods of the Bronx and amid the swanky nightlife of the '21' Club--is also a chronicle of the city's rough passage from a working-class enclave to a world-class metropolis, and a vivid reimagining of the conflict that pitted the Tammany Hall political machine and its popular mayor against the boundlessly ambitious Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Colin Harrison, in The New York Times Book Review, called Kelly's The Rackets "A well-paced, violent thriller, [and] an elegy for the city's old Irish working class." In Empire Rising, Kelly takes his work to a new level: telling of the story of the people who built the "eighth wonder of the world," he makes old New York the setting for a rich and unforgettable story.
Author | : Nicholas Christopher |
Publisher | : Dial Press Trade Paperback |
Total Pages | : 322 |
Release | : 2008-06-24 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 0385342403 |
On a snowy night in February, at the improbable point in Lower Manhattan where Waverly Place intersects Waverly Place, a photographer named Leo meets Veronica for the first time. Starkly beautiful, mysterious, aloof, she leads him into a world where illusion blends seamlessly with reality—a luminously transformed city where powerful underground streams crisscross beneath the streets, a city of dragonpoints and Tibetan mysticism where real time is magically altered. Ten years have passed since Veronica’s father, the famous magician Albin White, disappeared while performing a dangerous feat of time travel before a packed theater audience. White’s disappearance was no accident: he was sabotaged by his apprentice Starwood, who interfered at a critical moment and sent him hurtling into the past, free to explore other eras but with no means of returning to the present. Until Veronica finds Leo…
Author | : Scott Russell Sanders |
Publisher | : Beacon Press |
Total Pages | : 192 |
Release | : 1991 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 9780807063354 |
"A thoughtful and fine local geography. Scott Sanders, judging little and settling forth much, gives us texture and depth in southern Indiana, a place that's dressed a phenomenal number of the nation's enduring buildings." -Barry Lopez, author of Arctic Dreams and Of Wolves and Men