
Paul Ingram/TucsonSentinel.com
Part of Broadway's 'Sunshine Mile' includes the Hirsh's Shoes building, center.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation has tagged Broadway between Euclid and Country Club as an endangered place alongside San Francisco's Embarcadero, the Louisiana steamship the Delta Queen, the James River in Virginia and See's Candy on Broadway. One of these things doesn't belong.... Read more»
Paul Ingram/TucsonSentinel.com
Part of Broadway's 'Sunshine Mile' includes the Hirsh's Shoes building, center.
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2 comments on this story
I couldn’t agree more on the take on mid-century modern being a case for the bulldozer. I could not fathom that strip-mall section of Broadway even being mentioned in one breath with the Delta Queen and the St. James River.
The author makes a great argument for what Tucson stands for architecturally, and what it doesn’t, but the article could be so much more effective without the male-bashing, which is completely unwarranted and uncalled for when talking about architecture. Corporate conformity is completely gender-neutral.
As someone who has traveled to places with actual history, the odd house on the block is likely older than this country, the United States’ notion of “historic” gives me hives.
Could we at least agree that unless a thing in involved in some great, signal event, we won’t consider something historic if any living person is old enough to remember a time without it?
Of course, if the strip malls on Broadway were a thousand years old they should still go. We have pictures, what else is there to those things that would be lost?