adma
Superstar
Hmm; the same car in both shots. And I do prefer the old picket fence to the current plank fence (darn you, Home Depot)...
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its amazing how few changes there have been to the house on the right in the past 27 years. the most obvious thing missing from the 2010 version is that killer car: a 1970 Pontiac Bonneville or Parisienne. its amazing that the car persisted over the span of 15 years between 83-98--it looks like it wasn't even moved!
the house on the right is somewhat worse for wear, but there are very few changes visible in the last 12 years--same NO PARKING spray paint even. a new lawn is the most obvious change.
as a pair they certainly looked better before the owners decided to paint the little one white--strange, as it only accentuates how tiny it is.
Note that the Robertson spelling on the City's inventory of heritage properties, as opposed to the correct Robinson spelling, is in fact a typo ... there are many errors on that inventory!
Thanks for those contributions, collations.
Many of us have been admiring your magnificent photostream on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/32175940@N06/
Thanks, Goldie.
A few more small houses that can be found on Richmond St W.
533 Richmond St W, [July 31], 1983. Yes, this was a house at one time ... it can be found on the Goad's fire insurance atlases as far back as the 1880 edition.
haven't seen that one in a while...for as far back as i can remember that had been the office of a lumber yard that sat on the corner of Richmond and Portland...i remember the odd juxtaposition of the neo-modernist house just south of the corner (one of the first of its kind built downtown--probably from 1990 or so) and the ramshackle lumberyard that abutted it....
Thanks, Goldie.
A few more small houses that can be found on Richmond St W.
533 Richmond St W, [July 31], 1983. Yes, this was a house at one time ... it can be found on the Goad's fire insurance atlases as far back as the 1880 edition.
haven't seen that one in a while...for as far back as i can remember that had been the office of a lumber yard that sat on the corner of Richmond and Portland...i remember the odd juxtaposition of the neo-modernist house just south of the corner (one of the first of its kind built downtown--probably from 1990 or so) and the ramshackle lumberyard that abutted it....
And that's certainly how I remember this modest structure, as I first encountered it. But it was indeed a house at one time, believe it or not. Here's a few more recent incarnations of this structure before it finally disappeared ...