Bell South Switch Building
#1
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:35 PM
#2
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:39 PM
#3
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:47 PM
#4
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:51 PM
#5
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:52 PM
BellSouth should do the right thing and do some work on the exterior. It is a great building. I love those two sconces on each side of the front door. I've certainly paid enought money to them over the years to pay for some of the rehab!
#6
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:52 PM
If they would build something just north of this building on the same block with a more modern style, then I think it would liven up that area.....something glassy. THe only problem there is the power plant for the building is on this parcel.
#7
Posted 22 March 2005 - 01:55 PM
#8
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:04 PM
The building could be much more attractive, but the outside has been toned down to actually deflect attention from itself. Sort of the way photographers that have studios in crappy areas of town tend to not spruce the outside up, but if you go inside the place is awesome.
With all the development around it, and with the camera time it will be getting with the new arena, maybe they'll spruce it up.
#9
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:06 PM
I actually hated the building when i first moved to first ward. I am not a fan of yellow brick buildings, and it has such an industrial/poorly maintained appearance. However, but it has grown on me over the last few years. it is a 1920s old bell building that has grown over the years. I agree with atlrvr that when buildings surround it, it will just be an old building among many new ones, and won't be as sore-thumb as it has been for a long time. I think new windows would go a LONG way to making it look better. Surely they could put in secure glass, so it would look normal, but still protect their equipment.
Also, Atlrvr, did you mean bell south and AT&T? I can't imagine why wachovia would be in there.
#10
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:09 PM
#11
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:14 PM
dubone, on Mar 22 2005, 04:06 PM, said:
#12
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:15 PM
The building has been constantly been added to since the the 1920s with the last major additition being the large backside that faces Davidson street in 1978. Now in the post-break up days of the Bell System, the building houses telecom equipment for Bell South, AT&T, and a number of other companies that provide telephone service to the Charlotte area. It shoud be interesting to note that are many subterranian floors on this building as a result of the multitudes of communications lines that have been pulled into the building over the last 80 years or so.
The reason the windows are all covered up are simply due to security reasons. By the time of the cold war, the national telephone system was considered to be very important asset to a post-nuclear war government so steps were taken to secure it as much as possible. All new telecom buildings were built with no windows and steel doors and older buildings such as the Caldwell St. office were secured as much as possible by bricking up the windows. The telephone system of the time was designed so that it would still operate after a nuclear war except where there was a direct hit. (presumably Charlotte would have been targeted for a direct hit by a thermo-nuclear bomb so it is doubtful this office would have survived, but they prepared for it anyway.)
#13
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:20 PM
#14
Posted 22 March 2005 - 02:32 PM
Imagine if they clad the outside with blue glass... it would look shiny and new, but extremely uninteresting. The current form could use some spruce, but i'm still more of a fan than a foe of that building.
#15
Posted 22 March 2005 - 03:29 PM
#16
Posted 22 March 2005 - 03:35 PM
I guess it doesn't have Historic designation, its just discussed in an essay about Charlotte's architectural styles, on the website of the Char-Meck Historic Landmarks Commission.
***
Beginning in 1929, Charlotte got three major buildings in the Art Deco style. Each was a branch of a large business with headquarters outside the city. The structures' progressive exteriors speak more of the increasing interdependence between cities in the era of the large-scale corporation, than they do to Charlotte's own willingness to adopt new ideas.
In 1929 Southern Bell converted its telephones to the dial system, and needed a modern new building in Charlotte to house the necessary switching equipment for the city. The Southern Bell headquarters in Atlanta had commissioned that city's firm of Marye, Alger, and Vinour to design an opulently modernistic Art Deco main office, and evidently had the same architects draw plans for smaller editions to be placed in regional centers including Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Salisbury, and Charlotte. 36 Though surrounded by later additions, the four-story beige brick main facade of the Charlotte Southern Bell building remains in excellent original condition. Limestone spandrel panels above and below the windows create a marked vertical emphasis, characteristic of the Art Deco. The outstanding feature of the facade is the carving on the spandrel panels, limestone window surrounds and entrance. The designs are a blend of abstract curves and geometric patterns combined with representational low relief sculptures: an Indian chief on one spandrel, tobacco plants, flamingos, and gryphons on others. Art-glass lanterns of abstract design highlight the entry.
#17
Posted 22 March 2005 - 05:17 PM
#18
Posted 22 March 2005 - 08:23 PM
Thanks for all the updates on this building today, i enjoyed the glimpse into the history of this building.
#19
Posted 22 March 2005 - 08:28 PM
Raintree21, on Mar 22 2005, 05:17 PM, said:
#20
Posted 19 August 2005 - 06:36 AM
could it be that the same political pressure (and possibly funds) that caused the ugly Holiday/Trade center parking deck to get a facade has caused BellSouth to fix up the facade of this building?
I have said often in this an other threads that i like this building if it just had new windows. could it be that this is now happening?













