Tag: Buffalo Architecture
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Buffalo #10YearChallenge: A Decade of Historic Changes
At every turn, new hotels, attractions, restaurants, breweries and distilleries are adapting the city’s world-renowned architectural legacy and historic buildings for the 21st century. In the last decade, there has been a sea change in how the city perceives itself; visionary Buffalonians have realized that the buildings, neighborhoods and architectural fabric that have always existed here set the city apart and are key to its rebirth. Here are 12 inspiring examples of the city’s once-in-a-lifetime transformation.
The Richardson Olmsted Campus
THEN: The Buffalo State Asylum for the Insane, built in the late 19th century by acclaimed architect Henry Hobson Richardson and set on grounds designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. The building sat disused for over 30 years.
NOW: The Lipsey Buffalo Architecture Center, the city’s first exhibit space dedicated to its incredible built environment, will open on the property in the near future. The center joins Hotel Henry, an 88-room urban resort and conference center that opened in 2017 and honors the building’s original architectural features. The Olmsted landscape has also been beautifully restored.
Buffalo RiverWorks
THEN: The Grange League Federation (GLF) operated an extensive grain milling and storage facility on Buffalo’s waterfront; Buffalo has one of the largest collections of grain silos in the world.
NOW: The Buffalo RiverWorks urban adventure course will debuted in the summer of 2018 and features zip lining, rock climbing, a two-level ropes course and other outdoor activities set among the property’s grain silos. A restaurant, waterside patio and roller derby rink opened in a converted warehouse in 2015, while a silo brewery and beer garden joined the complex in 2017.
The Curtiss Hotel
THEN: The Harlow C. Curtiss Building was an ornate early 20th century downtown office building that was abandoned by the 1990s.
NOW: The Curtiss Hotel, a 68-room boutique hotel featuring an all-weather urban hot springs, rooftop patio, revolving restaurant bar and other high-end amenities, opened in 2017.
Canalside
THEN: The Erie Canal ended its 363-mile journey on the city’s waterfront in 1825, making Buffalo an industrial boomtown. The westernmost portion of the canal was buried by the early 20th century.
NOW: The original western terminus of the canal was re-excavated and became the cornerstone of Canalside, Buffalo’s revitalized waterfront district that draws over 1 million annual visitors and features hotels, restaurants, shops and a host of year-round activities, from weekly summer concerts to ice biking.
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Martin House Complex
THEN: The Martin House was Wright’s most significant commission to date outside of Chicago and his largest residential design when it was completed in 1907. But the building fell into disrepair by the mid-20th century; portions of the complex were sold off and demolished.
NOW: Following a restoration spanning more than two decades and $50 million, the complex’s outbuildings have been rebuilt and visitors are seeing the main house in its restored grandeur for the first time in generations. The neighboring Barton House, which Wright also designed, was fully restored in 2018. The original sprawling garden and landscape is set to be completed in 2019.
Larkinville
THEN: Home to the Larkin Soap Company, one of the city’s largest employers and considered the Amazon.com of its day. Larkin filled several sprawling warehouses that covered full city blocks.
NOW: This revitalized warehouse district features breweries, distilleries, new restaurants and a public square that hosts one of the largest weekly food truck rodeos in the United States, Food Truck Tuesdays. The Swan Street Diner, a restored 1930s diner from Central New York, opened there last fall. Dobutsu, a Japanese-themed restaurant specializing in seafood, and Eckl’s @ Larkin, the second location of one of Buffalo’s most famous purveyors of beef on weck, joined the neighborhood’s ranks in 2018.
Silo City
THEN: A collection of grain elevators along Buffalo’s waterfront housed several grain storage facilities and a malting operation during the city’s heyday as a transshipment and grain milling center.
NOW: Silo City is a popular spot for architectural tours that climb to the top of the grain elevators, poetry readings, musical concerts that utilize the property’s unusual acoustics and a host of festivals that run through the summer. The owner of Silo City also opened Duende, a bar/restaurant, on the property inside a former administration building in the summer of 2018.
Hotel @ The Lafayette
THEN: Designed by Louise Bethune, the first female architect accredited by the American Institute of Architects, this was one of Buffalo’s grand downtown hotels at the turn of the 20th century. It fell onto hard times and was considered a flophouse by the late 20th century.
NOW: The hotel was meticulously restored in 2012 and also features a microbrewery and coffeehouse on its first floor.
Shea’s Performing Arts Center
THEN: With interiors designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany, Shea’s debuted as a movie theater in 1926 built to look like a European opera house. By the 1970s, changing tastes in entertainment nearly brought about its demolition.
NOW: Following a 20-year restoration and stage expansion, Shea’s is now one of the most successful theaters in the United States for touring Broadway productions.
The Barrel Factory
THEN: The Quaker City Cooperage Co. manufactured barrels from the heart of Buffalo’s Old First Ward Neighborhood.
NOW: The redeveloped Barrel Factory, which incorporates many of the building’s original architectural elements, features a brewery, distillery, restaurant, a kayak rental shop, kombucha store and other amenities.
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Graycliff Estate
THEN: This was the summer home for the Martin family (of Martin House Complex fame) for decades. The lakeside Graycliff Estate was on the market and nearly demolished and replaced by condos in the 1990s before preservation-minded locals stepped in to save it.
NOW: A 20-year interior restoration of the building was completed in 2018, bringing another one of Wright’s original designs back to its original grandeur.
Roycroft Campus
THEN: Founded by Elbert Hubbard, the Roycroft was one of the leading American Arts & Crafts communities at the turn of the 20th century. Artisans worked in jewelry making, book binding and other trades at the campus; the Roycroft Inn, across the street, hosted many of those who learned at the campus. Both the campus and inn were in deteriorating shape by the mid-20th century following the ebbing support for the Arts & Crafts movement.
NOW: The campus and the inn have been restored and are a National Historic Landmark. The campus once again hosts artisan classes and opened a museum dedicated to the Roycroft’s history in the fall of 2017, while the inn’s Sunday brunch and open-air peristyle dining are Buffalo favorites.
The post Buffalo #10YearChallenge: A Decade of Historic Changes appeared first on Visit Buffalo Niagara.
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Financial markets are still reeling from this week's back-and-forth with the United States' key trade partners, as President Donald Trump announced and then almost immediately withdrew crippling new tariffs.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed Tuesday down another 478 points, down 1.1%. Trading on the S&P 500 closed after a decline of 0.7%, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.2%, for the worst day of trading since September according to Yahoo Finance. The stock market has been sliding amid fears that consumer spending would contract in response to tariffs Trump announced would be going into effect on Canada and Mexico in particular. While those tariffs have been reversed for now, Trump has indicated that 50% tariffs on imported steel and aluminum from Canada will still go into effect early Wednesday morning at midnight.
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Trump has attempted to boost investor confidence by walking back his previous comments to Fox Business' Maria Bartiromo in which he didn't rule out a recession happening as soon as this year. But Politico reported Tuesday that one of his top Cabinet secretaries may be "forced to take the fall," with "few friends in the administration" left to defend him.
According to the outlet, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick — who co-chaired Trump's presidential transition team along with former World Wrestling Entertainment executive Linda McMahon (now Trump's secretary of education) — could be out of a job if the fallout over Trump's tariffs continues to roil markets. One unnamed source "close to the administration" told Politico that Lutnick was lately "trying to be a mini-Trump."
“I don’t think he got the memo that only Trump gets to be Trump,” the source said. “It just reinforces that he doesn’t really know how to do the job.”
Politico additionally reported that administration officials are "growing increasingly frustrated" with the commerce secretary, complaining that he often gets "out in front" of Trump and has "contradicted his messaging." They add that he has "a lack of understanding of even the basics about how tariffs and the economy work."
Last week, Lutnick made headlines after telling CNBC that "prices are going to rise" as a result of tariffs, but that companies can avoid tariffs by making their products in the United States. When hosts reminded him that companies offshore production because labor costs are lower, Lutnick proclaimed that manufacturing jobs would be done by "robots."
Click here to read Politico's report in its entirety.