Water & Power
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
While going through a bunch of old photos of Los Angeles on the Library of Congress website for a project I'm doing at USC this year, I was amazed by these interior shots of the F. E. Weymouth Filtration Plant at 700 North Moreno Avenue in L.A.
Despite being designed for the administration of an urban water-processing site, the interiors seem to play with some strange, Blade Runner-like variation on Byzantine modernism, where federalist detailing meets a hydrological Babylon.
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
As the open plan interior of a contemporary home, this place would almost undoubtedly show up on every design website today—imagine a better railing on the central staircase, a galley kitchen on one side, a bed lit by retro-styled fluorescent tubes at the far end, some bold moments of color—but it's just a piece of everyday municipal infrastructure.
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
In any case, continuing the vaguely sci-fi feel, there is even a tiled fountain—a Mediterranean concession to the building's role in water filtration—on one wall, emphasized by these amazing lighting features, yet it looks more like a film set, both ancient and futuristic.
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
Alas, I'm not a huge fan of the exterior, although it is, in fact, a fairly amazing example of municipal design gone more sacred than profane. But an equally streamlined modernism in keeping with those interiors would have made this place totally otherworldly.
[Image: From the Library of Congress].
Finally, the marbled lobbies continue the surreal mix-up of styles, eras, and materials with something that could perhaps be described as Aztec corporatism with its huge graphic seal and other geometric motifs.
[Image: From the Library of Congress].
For shots of the actual waterworks, click through to the Library of Congress.
While going through a bunch of old photos of Los Angeles on the Library of Congress website for a project I'm doing at USC this year, I was amazed by these interior shots of the F. E. Weymouth Filtration Plant at 700 North Moreno Avenue in L.A.
Despite being designed for the administration of an urban water-processing site, the interiors seem to play with some strange, Blade Runner-like variation on Byzantine modernism, where federalist detailing meets a hydrological Babylon.
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
As the open plan interior of a contemporary home, this place would almost undoubtedly show up on every design website today—imagine a better railing on the central staircase, a galley kitchen on one side, a bed lit by retro-styled fluorescent tubes at the far end, some bold moments of color—but it's just a piece of everyday municipal infrastructure.
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
In any case, continuing the vaguely sci-fi feel, there is even a tiled fountain—a Mediterranean concession to the building's role in water filtration—on one wall, emphasized by these amazing lighting features, yet it looks more like a film set, both ancient and futuristic.
[Image: Via the Library of Congress].
Alas, I'm not a huge fan of the exterior, although it is, in fact, a fairly amazing example of municipal design gone more sacred than profane. But an equally streamlined modernism in keeping with those interiors would have made this place totally otherworldly.
[Image: From the Library of Congress].
Finally, the marbled lobbies continue the surreal mix-up of styles, eras, and materials with something that could perhaps be described as Aztec corporatism with its huge graphic seal and other geometric motifs.
[Image: From the Library of Congress].
For shots of the actual waterworks, click through to the Library of Congress.
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See also the LAPL image collection:
http://photos.lapl.org/carlweb/jsp/photosearch_pageADV.jsp
for example:
http://jpg1.lapl.org/pics20/00009775.jpg
Toronto's R.C. Harris Water Treatment Plant is similarly stunning. Such a delight to encounter such beauty in such an unexpected place.
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