Contrary to what the sign says, apparently not everyone loves bowling. After 60 years of business, the last bowling alley in my hometown of Whittier, California, closed in June of 2015, and this sign was taken down last week.
Sucks!
Contrary to what the sign says, apparently not everyone loves bowling. After 60 years of business, the last bowling alley in my hometown of Whittier, California, closed in June of 2015, and this sign was taken down last week.
I whole heartedly agree. This is one of my favorite things I've passed on a train:^^^ As a lover of trains, train travel is great way to see old buildings - especially factories and warehouses - as so many were built beside train tracks for transportation and, amazingly, so many are still there. I've travelled from Washington to Maine on trains and around almost all the old cities, you see these incredible old buildings - wonderful time travel. And you also get some more distant shots (especially if they are up on a hill) of some old homes as they wanted to be a bit further from the train noise, but still close. If you get lucky, you can see how an entire town was laid out - town center close to train, factories and warehouses just outside of town, a bit further back of the town, the residential areas and, on the hills, the fancy houses.
Sometimes it seems the developers here in California want to tear everything down and build something new. I've watched buildings being built, and 10 or 15 years later get torn down and replaced with a building that was almost identical. It's no wonder the west coast of the U.S. has so little physical history.Its sad that icons like these get destroyed. Sometimes, I am surprised they are not deemed historical landmarks.
Speaking of trains and old buildings...^^^ As a lover of trains, train travel is great way to see old buildings...
Me too. I don't know what they had to do to restore that particular building, but the last time I was in it (at it's original location) it was completely a wooden structure. Very cool!Glad they saved that one, Al.
And yet, they put the Richard Nixon Presidential Library & Museum in Yorba Linda just because he was born there. Go figure.And to think most people only know Whittier as the hometown of Richard Nixon and Octomom.