Fichier:Farmers and Merchants Union Bank, James Street and Dickason Boulevard, Columbus, WI.jpg
Fichier d’origine (3 843 × 2 882 pixels, taille du fichier : 4,19 Mio, type MIME : image/jpeg)
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Description
DescriptionFarmers and Merchants Union Bank, James Street and Dickason Boulevard, Columbus, WI.jpg |
English: Built in 1919-1920, this Chicago School and Sullivanesque-style building was designed by Louis Sullivan for the Farmers and Merchants Union Bank in Columbus, Wisconsin as one of his late-career “jewel box” bank buildings that are largely located in smaller communities throughout the midwest. The building was the last “jewel box bank” designed by Sullivan, and the second-to-last commission of his career, and was intended to communicate the bank as a modern and progressive institution, rather than employing the stodgier and more traditional Classical design found on most other banks of the era. The bank was commissioned by the president of the bank, J. Russell Wheeler, whose wife, Anna May Wheeler, pushed him to commission Sullivan to design a new home for the bank. In addition to Louis Sullivan, the building’s stained glass windows, were designed by architectural decorator Louis J. Millet, and the terra cotta by clay modeler Kristian Schneider, whom developed moulds for the building’s terra cotta, metal, and plaster details. The two artisans worked alongside Sullivan on several other bank projects. The building was heavily documented in Sullivan’s 1924 “A System of Architectural Ornament”, published shortly before he died.
The building is clad in red tapestry brick, which features blue and green mixed with the red clay mixture in some bricks, creating variation in color and texture across the facade. The brick creates a backdrop to some of the best terra cotta on any of Sullivan’s projects. The terra cotta features many of the floral and geometric motifs found on Sullivan’s other works, and is arranged similarly to other Sullivan banks that utilized brick cladding. The building features two principal facades, with a narrower facade along James Street, and a broader facade facing Dickason Boulevard. The James Street facade features two openings close to ground level, with the eastern bay housing a large plate glass window, and the western bay housing a doorway flanked by skylights, both of which are recessed under a large terra cotta architrave and flanked by square pilasters with decorative Sullivanesque ornament panels at the capitals. The architrave above the doorway and window is divided into three segments by vertical terra cotta elements that feature floral motifs and, like many Sullivan buildings, appear like plants with roots, branches, and crowns. The outer panels of the architrave feature circular cartouches with hexagonal trim, leaves, and geometric elements, with circular central medallions featuring the years 1861, when the bank was founded, and 1919, when the bank was completed. The central panel is clad in marble with the words “Farmers & Merchants Union Bank” and “Louis Sullivan, Architect” engraved into the stone with yellow pigmentation, contrasting against the white and green marble background. Atop the two vertical elements on either side of the central panel are griffin sculptures holding shields, a common element on many of Sullivan’s “Jewel Box Banks,” while the base of the outer vertical elements features the initials of the bank at the base. Above the architrave is an arched bay that houses a stained glass window, trimmed with decorative terra cotta at the inner and outer rings of the arch, with the bay becoming more recessed after each concentric arch, much like the entrances to medieval Romanesque churches. Besides a band of belt coursing that runs on either side of the architrave and wraps the corner to a tapered buttress on the Dickason Boulevard facade, the only other adornment is an eagle sculpture on a vertical trim element at the center of the parapet, which terminates many brick courses above the arched opening below, and another band of terra cotta trim along the top of the parapet, which forms a cap on the parapet around the perimeter of the building’s low-slope roof. On the Dickason Boulevard facade, the building features five recessed clerestory arched bays housing stained glass windows, flanked by tapered buttresses. Surrounding the arched tops of the windows are decorative trim panels with floral motifs, which begin just below the base of the arches, and extend up above the top of the arches, terminating in a band of belt coursing. Atop the buttresses at either end are trim elements featuring large spheres atop rectilinear legs with floral motifs below, undulating in and out with the brick below. Additionally, a band of belt coursing, which wraps the corner of Dickson Boulevard and James Street, runs beneath the windows, only interrupted by the buttresses. Toward the back, on the building’s original rear wing, there are three windows at eye level in the original building, with bands of belt coursing below and at the top of the parapet. The rear window is a recessed bay window flanked by two pilasters with sullivanesque terra cotta panels, while the smaller windows are flanked by sullivanesque relief panels. The rear wing features a roof at multiple heights, and was extended in 1961 with a matching addition by Law, Potter and Nystrom, since removed. The rear of the taller portion of the building features a simple recessed bay with an arched window, and a similar eagle sculpture and vertical trim piece as on the front facade. Inside, the front wing of the building features a tall banking hall with brick cladding on the walls up to the level of the windows, where it terminates at a wooden sill. The space is split down the middle by a row of brick piers and low walls framing the teller cages, which terminate at the sill line of the windows, dividing the space while still allowing it to read as a single continuous lofty space. The brick forms piers at the teller’s cages, pilasters separating desks on the exterior wall, and low brick walls with marble caps. The upper portion of the walls and the coffered ceiling in this space is finished with white plaster, which gives the space a very vertical and airy feeling, as do the cream-colored terrazzo floors, which feature black edges at the base of the walls, tying the space together. The space features a terra cotta water fountain, or bubbler, also designed by sullivan, which features intricate ornament by Schneider. The space also features two mezzanine balconies with metal railings that run below the arched windows at the front and rear of the space, allowing managers to observe the activities in the lobby and teller area below from the rear balcony, while the front balcony exists solely to balance the space and keep it symmetrical. An office for private conferences with customers was originally located near the front of the space, along with a manager’s office, allowing convenience for customers seeking a meeting with the bank management. The teller’s side of the space also housed the bank’s two vaults and several other private offices. The bank originally featured a large meeting room in the one-story rear wing, behind the vaults, with a women’s waiting room sitting along the Dickason Boulevard side of the rear wing, featuring a bay window and a restroom. The building’s interior has changed in function somewhat due to the growth of the bank, changes in bank operations, and expansion of the building with new additions to house offices and a drive-through in the rear. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976, and is a contributing structure in the Columbus Downtown Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. The building saw an addition in 2006, clad in buff brick, which replicated a historic building that formerly stood to the east, and wraps the building to the rear, with a two-story section behind a one-story annex that connects the one-story rear wing of the bank to the new building. This wing replaced older additions made in 1961, which matched the one-story rear wing of the historic building, and 1980, which was modern in appearance and slightly recessed along James Street to give precedence to the historic building. The building still functions as the main office branch of the Farmers and Merchants Union Bank, which has grown substantially. The building has been long considered to be among the best of Sullivan’s “Jewel Box Banks,” and has been kept in excellent condition by the bank’s careful and caring generational stewardship. |
Date | |
Source | https://www.flickr.com/photos/59081381@N03/52807467712/ |
Auteur | w_lemay |
Lieu de la prise de vue | 43° 20′ 20,75″ N, 89° 00′ 55,87″ O | Voir cet endroit et d’autres images sur : OpenStreetMap | 43.339097; -89.015519 |
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Cette image a été originellement postée sur Flickr par w_lemay à l'adresse https://flickr.com/photos/59081381@N03/52807467712. Elle a été passée en revue le 13 avril 2023 par le robot FlickreviewR 2, qui a confirmé qu'elle se trouvait sous licence cc-by-sa-2.0. |
13 avril 2023
Éléments décrits dans ce fichier
dépeint
Valeur sans élément de Wikidata
26 septembre 2022
43°20'20.749"N, 89°0'55.868"W
0.00043802014892685063 seconde
6 millimètre
image/jpeg
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Date et heure | Vignette | Dimensions | Utilisateur | Commentaire | |
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actuel | 13 avril 2023 à 11:02 | 3 843 × 2 882 (4,19 Mio) | Ser Amantio di Nicolao | Uploaded a work by w_lemay from https://www.flickr.com/photos/59081381@N03/52807467712/ with UploadWizard |
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Métadonnées
Ce fichier contient des informations supplémentaires, probablement ajoutées par l'appareil photo numérique ou le numériseur utilisé pour le créer.
Si le fichier a été modifié depuis son état original, certains détails peuvent ne pas refléter entièrement l'image modifiée.
Fabricant de l’appareil photo | Apple |
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Modèle de l’appareil photo | iPhone 11 Pro |
Orientation | Normale |
Résolution horizontale | 72 pt/po |
Résolution verticale | 72 pt/po |
Logiciel utilisé | 15.6.1 |
Date de modification du fichier | 26 septembre 2022 à 11:03 |
Positionnement YCbCr | Centré |
Durée d’exposition | 1/2 283 s (0,00043802014892685 s) |
Ouverture focale | f / 2 |
Programme d’exposition | Programme normal |
Sensibilité ISO (vitesse d’obturation) | 20 |
Version d’EXIF | 2.32 |
Date et heure de génération des données | 26 septembre 2022 à 11:03 |
Date et heure de la numérisation | 26 septembre 2022 à 11:03 |
Signification de chaque composante |
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Vitesse d’obturation APEX | 11,15678150894 |
Ouverture APEX | 2 |
Luminance APEX | 9,1607663878623 |
Biais de compensation d’exposition APEX | 0 |
Mode de mesure | Motif géométrique |
Flash | Flash non déclenché, suppression du flash obligatoire |
Longueur focale de la lentille | 6 mm |
Fractions de secondes de l’horodatage de la prise de vue originale | 973 |
Fractions de secondes de l’horodatage de la numérisation | 973 |
Version de FlashPix prise en charge | 1 |
Espace colorimétrique | Non calibré |
Type de capteur | Capteur de couleur à une puce |
Type de scène | Image photographiée directement |
Mode d’exposition | Exposition automatique |
Balance des blancs | Balance des blancs automatique |
Longueur focale pour un film 35 mm | 52 mm |
Type de capture de la scène | Standard |
Latitude | 43° 20′ 20,75″ N |
Longitude | 89° 0′ 55,87″ W |
Altitude | 259,565 mètres au dessus du niveau de la mer |
Unité de vitesse | Kilomètres à l’heure |
Vitesse du récepteur GPS | 1,1085724826732 |
Référence pour la direction de l’image | Vrai nord (géographique) |
Direction de l’image | 215,45120226308 |
Référence de direction de relèvement de la destination | Vrai nord (géographique) |
Direction de relèvement de la destination | 215,45120226308 |