Saturday, February 19, 2022

Santa Cruz Changes: 49 - Rail Trail 2022


The Rail Trail project is progressing steadily, being now complete from Wilder Ranch to Bay Street in Santa Cruz. Also in place is the short segment along Beach Street, from Pacific Avenue to the recently-widened pedestrian bridge across the San Lorenzo River. In between is the segment from the corner of California and Bay to Pacific Avenue.

Construction on that segment is scheduled to begin later this year. Above right is a rendering of what the completed California Street end will look like. The roadway at left is the entrance driveway into the sewage treatment plant. To the right of the driveway, at center-left in the rendering, is the plant's sign.


That same sign is in the photo at left, taken today, looking in the same direction along the railroad tracks. The new trail will be to the right of the tracks. The other end of this segment will connect with the existing paved trail from Depot Park, following the tracks under the wooden West Cliff Drive bridge to Pacific Avenue, next to the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary museum.


Santa Cruz Changes locations can be found on this Google Map.

Saturday, February 12, 2022

Santa Cruz Changes: 48 - Mansard evolution

Regular readers will have noticed that the kinds of changes noted here usually involve the built environment. Such changes most often happen when an older building is torn down and replaced. However, architectural styles have also changed a lot over the years. Sometimes those changes come full circle, when a new building is designed - at least in general terms - in an older style.

The style known as "Second Empire" features what was a new design invention at the time (1850s), and was perhaps the first architectural workaround. The city of Paris enacted a height limit, coupled with a requirement for pitched roofs. In response, some clever designer invented the mansard roof. 


The style didn't reach Santa Cruz until the 1870s, and its popularity only lasted about ten years. At that time, Santa Cruz didn't have height limits or roof pitch requirements, so the French innovation lacked its main raison d'etre. Today, only two Second Empire designs survive within our city limits, and one has been extensively altered. The Hotel McCray on Front Street, shown in the photo at right, was originally a private home, remodeled in Second Empire style in the 1870s. 

Now the old hotel structure forms the central core of today's Sunshine Villa, an assisted living facility. Extensive additional wings flank the original building. Attempting to preserve design consistency, the additions restate the original mansard roof and corner tower style.  


A view from above Pacific Avenue, near the north end of West Cliff Drive, offers an opportunity to see this design evolution circle from a single vantage point, along with an example of what later gave the mansard a bad name in modern commercial design. 

At upper left (pink) is part of the Sunshine Villa additions, showing its many dormer windows in a mansard roof. 

Below right is Las Palmas Taco Bar, with its green mansard false roof, used to screen mechanical equipment on the roof. To be fair, a mansard is probably not the least attractive way to provide such screening. The style was so overused in the 1950s-70s, however, that it became emblematic of that era's "tackytecture". 

A disclaimer, by the way: the food at Las Palmas has always been great, no matter what you think of the building.

Santa Cruz Changes locations can be found on this Google Map.


Sunday, February 6, 2022

Santa Cruz Changes: 47 - London Nelson Center


Last summer, the City of Santa Cruz passed a resolution to correct a longstanding historical error: the misspelling of London Nelson's name. That meant changing some signage, most prominently at the community center renamed for Nelson in 1978. The image at right is from 2017 Streetview. 


I don't know exactly when it happened, but there's now a new sign at the corner of Laurel and Center Streets. The photo at left was taken a couple of weeks ago, on one of our many cloud-free January days. 


On Christmas Day, I found that the name change has reached the monument at the top of the old stone Mission Hill schoolyard steps on Mission Street (right). A new bronze plaque has been attached, covering the engraved top surface of the granite plinth. The only change to the information previously displayed is the corrected spelling of  "London".

Santa Cruz Changes locations can be found on this Google Map.