Tag Archives: Pershing

Day 67-Written in Concrete

day 67It’s hard to fix mistakes written in concrete.  I came across the words “No More” scrawled in relatively fresh concrete in the drive way of some new structures along Mitchell and behind Harrodsburg near Lane Allen, a 1950’s era commercial district undergoing significant change.  One wonders…no more what?  Is this a response to the buildings, the construction itself–no more McDonald’s?  Or to something else, a protest against police brutality or a complaint about algebra homework?  The mystery is tantalizing, and should grow as it gets older.

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The old McDonald’s is closed.

Jack White of the Raconteurs sings “You wrote our names down on the sidewalk/then the rain came and washed ’em off/So we should write ’em again on wet cement/so maybe people a long time from now will know what we meant.”  And while he wasn’t talking about streets and buildings, it’s interesting to try to put that meaning to it.  The messages we put in concrete today, in the form of roads and buildings, will be with us for generations.  Walking through this 1950’s neighborhood, it’s tough not to think about how society’s preferences–choices made 60 years ago–are reflected in the streetscape, and wonder what the new structures say about us.