Out here, the pharmacy is in the back of a supermarket. The drug store is now a Walgreens store.Wow...so many...
I still only hear reference to the "drug store". No one calls it the "pharmacy".
Out here, the pharmacy is in the back of a supermarket. The drug store is now a Walgreens store.Wow...so many...
I still only hear reference to the "drug store". No one calls it the "pharmacy".
⇧ the "dinner / supper" distinction did not exist in my world either growing up - was surprised when I learned about it through books in high school.
Oriel window is term you don't hear much as they are an architectural feature that is rarely used anymore (at least in the apartment buildings in NYC since, well, after WWII).
But before WWII, many apartment buildings and townhouses, especially those built around the turn of the century, had oriel windows which, IMHO, are a beautiful architectural detail both from and interior and exterior point of view - they add a lot of character and interest to a room and a building's exterior.
I've never heard the term "oriel window", so I had to look it up. We just called them "bay windows", though perhaps an oriel window is a specific type of bay window?
From Wikipedia: An oriel window is a form of bay window which projects from the main wall of a building but does not reach to the ground.[1] Supported by corbels, brackets or similar, an oriel window is most commonly found projecting from an upper floor but is also sometimes used on the ground floor.
From Wikipedia: An oriel window is a form of bay window which projects from the main wall of a building but does not reach to the ground.[1] Supported by corbels, brackets or similar, an oriel window is most commonly found projecting from an upper floor but is also sometimes used on the ground floor.
We had one of those in the apartment building I lived in in the '90s. It had originally been a large private house built in the 1880s and was converted to apartments during WWII. And when it was torn down to make way for a Rite Aid, the town's historic preservation committee required them to duplicate the facade of the old house in the new building -- so there's a faux window sticking out just where the old one did. I always wanted to sneak in there and put a life-size cardboard figure of myself thumbing my nose out that window.
The things you learn around here.
My building has what I guess are sort of modern oriel windows, though they are not supported by brackets or anything. But there is a small triangular window protruding from the exterior wall. It forms a point, and you can step into the small bay and you're literally standing outside the walls of the building, with floor to ceiling glass all around you. It's quite a view from the 31st floor where I am. In fact, it's kind of scary. I go stand in it when I need a little adrenaline pick me up.
Although chain drug stores were very common in the Era -- United Drug, Whelan Drug, Liggett's Drug, etc -- for a long time the only one we ever had in this area was Rexall, which wasn't even a chain, really, but rather a buying cooperative for independent druggists.
I was put up in a corporate apartment for a company relocation years ago and it was one that had nearly floor to ceiling windows (basically, the wall was a window) on the 20th (I think) floor in one of those ultra-modern apartment buildings. I got a bit of vertigo just standing next to it and looking out so I can only image what "walking into" the thing you described would feel like.
The building is literally the last building on the edge of downtown Houston, so if you're looking out the windows on one side of the building, all you see are the next buildings. But on the other side, it looks out over the rest of the city, and it's a nice view. Luckily, my office and the "triangle of death" face the open view. It's a nice view during the day, and it's pretty cool at night to be in the building with the lights off and look out. We keep a chair in the space, and you can sit in the chair at night, and it feels like you're just floating.
I'm a fan of historical preservation, but that sounds like a kooky / odd solution. Keep the building or let it go and make the new building conform to current code; replicating the old front sounds forced. How does it look / feel?
I gather supper is also a "Canadian" thing, President Obama used it as a gag during the gala dinner he hosted for PM Trudeau a few months back (Obama's brother in law is Canadian, and he regularly visited Burlington, Ontario and area, my hometown).
In the twenty years since they did it I've never really stopped to talke a close look. I'm still angry about being disposessed -- the whole thing was a scam job, they got permission to demolish the building by buying off the Code Officer to say it was an unsafe structure. And this Code Officer had been a friend of mine, and had visited my apartment many times, and he *knew* that this was a lie. But Out Of State Money talks.
I didn't take it lying down. I skulked around in the night with a bucket of wheat paste, a paint brush, and posters reading STOP RITE AID and papered the town with them. Didn't help.
It was a great apartment -- a six-room railroad flat on the second floor with the living room at one end and the kitchen at the other, and a big open porch on the back with room to hang a hammock. $475 a month, which wasn't as cheap as it sounds (I was making $15,600 a year) but it was less than ninety feet from the building where I worked and I could be at my desk fifteen minutes after the alarm clock went off. I still have dreams about the place.
That sounds outstanding. Your office must be coveted by your co-workers.