Wednesday, May 28, 2008

72. US Post Office--Canal Street Station

A.K.A.: Canal Street Station
Location: 350 Canal Street
Built: 1937
Architect: Alan Balch Mills
National Register Number: 88002358
Listed: May 11, 1989
Visited: May 21 and 24, 2008

Canal Street Post Office

When it was built back in the middle of the Great Depression, this Art Moderne block of dusty rose pink must've been a curious apparition, sited as it was in the middle of a neighborhood still largely defined by manual labor. And it was doubly curious as much federal architecture of the time was still so keyed to classicism, so much so that at the time Lewis Mumford could bemoan "...the Georgian post offices designed to make us believe that nothing has happened in the world since the Constitution was signed..." (It's hard to understand, though, how a Georgian post office could be intended--or succeed--as a denial of the present when the ugly fact of Depression filled every nook and cranny of experience.)

Canal Street Post Office

As the neighborhood's fortunes fell and rose, and as Art Moderne gave way to...whatever, little arrived to match it. It's still a streamlined counterpoint to the complications of Canal Street, what with its crowded sidewalks and its car stereo stores.

Honestly, I can only like it in a belittling way. It's like a flea market knick-knack that might've once graced a respectable middle class home but can now be gotten for a few bucks: dated, and looking cheaper than it did when it was new, but not lacking in charm. Maybe it's the pink.

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