Peake Building - Insider Tour

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Appalachian Rising Ventures

Appalachian Rising Ventures

2 ай бұрын

Appalachian Rising Ventures obtained the historic Peake Building, said to be documented in the Guiness Book of World Records as the first building in the world which could be entered on all four floors (three stories and a mezzanine) from street level. The building was constructed in 1925 and wraps around Virginia Avenue. Please, come and take a pre-renovation tour with us. We cannot wait to restore this beauty!

Пікірлер: 429
@chasedm1330
@chasedm1330 Ай бұрын
Pure nostalgia 🥲 My Mamaw and Papaw raised me in the middle apartment (the one with the direct entrance from the street). I lived there with them from ages 2-10 between ‘95-‘03 before we moved to a house on West Ridge Ave. This video brought back a ton of my childhood memories. My height marks were recorded on the bathroom’s door framing. My Mamaw gave me baths in that kitchen sink. Ah! I could go on and on. Except for the store on the first level, I covered every square of that building as a kid. I’ve been in every apartment, and even snuck into the boiler room a few times (I still have nightmares about that place). I’m elated and grateful you all are taking efforts to preserve it. I’m sorry about the damage to the steps. I used to hit them with a hammer as a kid and drive the broken pieces around in my toy dump trucks. Anyways, I’d love to be involved in this project somehow, so I’ll DM your FB page.
@philhoward4466
@philhoward4466 Ай бұрын
i hope those height marks get preserved
@AppalachianRisingVentures
@AppalachianRisingVentures Ай бұрын
I’m gonna look for the height marks and see if they are still there!
@freyallarganswald4746
@freyallarganswald4746 Ай бұрын
Those little doors were for milk deliveries. We had them in some old buildings here in Scotland. 🤗 I’m looking forward to seeing you bring this beautiful building back to life 💕🤗
@matthewleary7782
@matthewleary7782 Ай бұрын
Exactly what I thought. They would open right over the icebox in each kitchen.
@radicalmama135
@radicalmama135 Ай бұрын
I was about to say! I know what they are! We have one into our 1935 house and in my parents old 1925 house they had one also - but we had milk delivery well into the 90’s in Vancouver Canada - but the milkman also delivered: eggs, cheese & bread - it was AWESOME! We had a big family so once a week we had a super over flowing box! Oh and cottage cheese and yogurt!
@oneofwethepeople1161
@oneofwethepeople1161 Ай бұрын
Mud flood
@freyallarganswald4746
@freyallarganswald4746 Ай бұрын
@@radicalmama135 those were the days eh when the milkman was part of the community and provided a much needed delivery service of local fresh products right to our doors. 🤗our milkman also delivered bread rolls, eggs and other milk products like cream, yogurt, butter and cottage cheese. In the early 1990’s the old man who was a third generation dairy farmer died. Sadly his family decided to shut down the whole dairy, sell the property and herd and so ended our deliveries of beautiful fresh cream and milk. Also a part of our areas social history died too. It must have been really hard competing with the ever expanding amount of supermarkets with lower prices. Tbh I much preferred the taste of the dairy products from that local farm there is no comparison to supermarket products contained in plastic bottles. 🙁 I haven’t heard of any traditional “milkmen” in our area (central Scotland )since sadly.
@tompatterson5453
@tompatterson5453 25 күн бұрын
Lol just posted this.
@RenataDreyer
@RenataDreyer Ай бұрын
Very interesting building, wish the camera person would show more of the building and less of the person talking.
@michelrodrigues110
@michelrodrigues110 Ай бұрын
she´s the boss, who pay the bills, who claim the reign, the one to be on spot
@IAMDC322
@IAMDC322 Ай бұрын
You probably wish for a lot of things to make yourself feel better about your self. 🫠 womp womp womp
@jacosta5580
@jacosta5580 Ай бұрын
Yeah bad video.
@Boga217
@Boga217 Ай бұрын
Definitely left a lot of curiosities to be desired..especially the amazing view out of the curved front she bragged about.
@Pambo101
@Pambo101 Ай бұрын
I agree, the video is a tour of the building, not the people doing the tour…
@scottm2828
@scottm2828 Ай бұрын
You should do videos of the renovation. I would definitely watch.
@Hobotraveler82
@Hobotraveler82 21 күн бұрын
Beautiful old building. Glad to see it saved instead of demolished. Love the architecture. Gonna be amazing when its finished. 😊
@libertycan6959
@libertycan6959 Ай бұрын
wonderful building! If walls could talk. So sad to see our world shift this way. I'm grateful I got to live in the 70s and on. Seeing these small towns back in the 70s was amazing because of slower technology and no internet they were still full of what was in the 50s. I drive around our town and recall all the diners and gas stations, streets full of mom and pop shops, churches and community buildings etc. All is gone now. A different world... can't wait to see the buildings process.
@user-bj1zk8mu4m
@user-bj1zk8mu4m 5 күн бұрын
Congratulations on getting your rescue of this beautiful building underway. It’s a lot of work but its completion will be so rewarding to you, to your community, and to the tourists you attract!
@Rosie-jx6jo
@Rosie-jx6jo Ай бұрын
Wow! That’s going to be a huge renovation job. Looking forward to follow on your renovation adventure. 👍💪🏼
@aday1637
@aday1637 Ай бұрын
When I was 4, my parents had a salesman come in and do a layout of kitchen cabinets for a remodel they were doing to their home. He sold them 'Youngstown Cabinets". This was around 1954. The cabinets were white with the logo on the face of the sink cabinet. The white paint yellowed so badly that my parent put wood grained contact paper over all the facing surfaces. Now this eventually shrank over time and it was at that point my parents had the cabinets replaced with custom wood cabinets in the late 70's. The old cabinets were working just fine but they just became unsightly. The cabinets were manufactured in Youngstown Ohio. Hope that helps with your quiry into your's.
@charlesyoung7436
@charlesyoung7436 Ай бұрын
In 1960, my parents bought a house built in 1955 with a yellow baked enamel steel Youngstown cabinet kitchen. It came with triple deck "Lazy Susan" storage in two corners under the counters. My sister inherited the house, and the kitchen is still in place, with the exception of the built in GE dishwasher (which gave out in the 1970's). It's the ultimate in Mid Century Modern design. BTW, I grew up close enough to Southwest VA to remember a Roanoke, VA TV station commercial that was the shortest ever. It featured a flying saucer/coal tag with an announcer saying: "Olga Coal---Olga Coal--Out of this world---Out of this world." The Olga Coal tags I actually saw were small marked cardboard discs that would burn up with the coal.
@pgtmr2713
@pgtmr2713 20 күн бұрын
@@charlesyoung7436 Wow a coal ad on tv! That's a neat era overlap.
@BeatenAtv
@BeatenAtv 19 күн бұрын
That building has so much potential it is insane! You can not rebuild anything like this anymore. The wood structure that is in it. Is strong along with the bricks. Plus the original radiators is just awesome.
@Mallsus2
@Mallsus2 2 ай бұрын
This is really cool! I will bet opening in front window and a window to the shaft will create one heck of a cross breeze with that pressure difference from the height of the shaft. I wish we still used passive heating and cooling techniques like that today
@MORELOCK1989
@MORELOCK1989 2 ай бұрын
I had family that lived in that building for a long time.
@michaeltres
@michaeltres Ай бұрын
I have driven by that building possibly hundreds of times, and I was always intrigued by its appearance, even as a child. Long ago, the only way to get to Norton and Wise was to go through Appalachia. I have long thought that Appalachia deserved some restoration. It's a place worth saving.
@joyperrin4275
@joyperrin4275 Ай бұрын
Always loved that building. My grandparents and an Uncle & Aunt lived at the top of the street. Can't wait to see the renovation.
@richardwilson1283
@richardwilson1283 Ай бұрын
I bet the 3rd floor "boxes" were milk delivery since they go to the kitchen.
@AppalachianRisingVentures
@AppalachianRisingVentures Ай бұрын
That is what I and several other people have also come to the conclusion of. So interesting!
@thefarmerswifeknits6190
@thefarmerswifeknits6190 Ай бұрын
Milk delivery or ice delivery.
@StarLuvr004
@StarLuvr004 3 күн бұрын
Agreed
@lauries6517
@lauries6517 2 ай бұрын
We can't wait for more videos.
@tim_gifford
@tim_gifford Ай бұрын
You’ve definitely got your work cut out for you but I can see how awesome that building will be restored. I appreciate your doing the video walkthrough
@pppantz
@pppantz Ай бұрын
NO idea how you came up as a recommendation but I am here for it. What a fabulous venture. My house is a puzzle form 1900.
@davidshumway9639
@davidshumway9639 Ай бұрын
Dude I'm about 20 minutes in and stressed to the max. I didn't catch any explanation on what they plan to do with it it or what they did but this thing is toast. The cost to demo and rebuild all that's garbage will be prohibitive unless they have some grant or something. It wasn't a good design from the get go. What a turd. I gotta get off this video. The money pit factor is just wrecking my peace.
@marshawargo7238
@marshawargo7238 Ай бұрын
I really do hope that they have enough money for this renovation! Way too many old saveable buildings are being torn down to be replaced with "new & improved" crap! They just don't make anything the way they used to & new stuff isn't built to last! This building, if renovated correctly, could last another hundred years or more❤if it's looked after & cared for!!!
@kimkelly-kline3768
@kimkelly-kline3768 Ай бұрын
Bless their hearts...LOTS of work to be done..hope they're part owners in a Bank...sorry..I know old buildngs should be saved,but this one..I would tear down...way too much damage.
@NORFOLKIAN
@NORFOLKIAN Ай бұрын
That’s what KZfaq is for… 😂
@user-xr6cx2dj3j
@user-xr6cx2dj3j Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your journey with us!! Looking forward to watching you all bringing the building back to its original state 👍
@brendadickenson3547
@brendadickenson3547 Ай бұрын
I remember this unique building. I lived in W.Va. and my grandparents. Lived in Roanoke,Va. And the other grandparents in Russell Co. Va. Oh, those winding roads I had to take medicine before every trip!
@rtex8563
@rtex8563 Ай бұрын
Wow! What a challenge you purchased! The first challenge is where to locate A huge construction dumpster? That whole building needs to be gutted to the studs/walls. Maybe you could get a local trades school to help with gutting and rebuilding. You will need many hands to tackle that place!
@Clydesirota
@Clydesirota 15 күн бұрын
These people have no idea what they are doing. In a few years they will be dazed, broke and walk away. Sad.
@frenchfriar
@frenchfriar Ай бұрын
I have a feeling that the little alcoves with the doors that open into the apartments were for milk deliveries, you'd put the empty bottles out and get full ones back, and the milkman never had to enter the apartment. They look too small to be for ice deliveries, but I've seen that too in old apartments. Since they do have doors into the apartments, I'm sure they aren't for telephones, though they are about the right size for a phone niche. It looks like there's a lot of good bones to save, even though there is a lot of damage, because there's also a lot of good features left. Good luck with your restoration.
@jamesbulldogmiller
@jamesbulldogmiller Ай бұрын
Yes !! It's just what I thought too.
@skipstewart9376
@skipstewart9376 Ай бұрын
The square open to the sky in the building is called a lightwell. They actually built those in San Francisco as loadbearing exterior walls in the center of the building. It let light down and air circulation, but in San Francisco they were more of an anti-earthquake addition.
@radicalmama135
@radicalmama135 Ай бұрын
They also came in as regulations in NYC in the 1920’s as regulation for light and air - so you didn’t have these behemoth buildings with interior rooms without any exterior egress, no air circulation and no light whatsoever
@Davett53
@Davett53 Ай бұрын
Later, in 1993, we bought a house built in 1905. It is surrounded by houses built in the 1890s. Our house had been heated by coal, and employed a gravity furnace (meaning the heat rose from the basement, through passageways or chambers to the upper floors), though by time we bought it, it had been converted to natural gas & forced air with ductwork. We reclaimed the coal bin room, for more storage in our basement. There was an original canning room, for preserving home grown fruits and vegetables. All the houses on our street have brick built, underground cisterns, for collecting rain water, in the backyards. The timbers used in our house, predate modern sizing, and the nails are older style. We updated two lavatories removing the massive pedestal sinks, and single spigot fixtures, & 5 gallon toilet tanks.
@paulyosef7550
@paulyosef7550 18 күн бұрын
Wonderful that you are restoring the building.
@RobynNBMoncton
@RobynNBMoncton Ай бұрын
Im looking forward to following your restoration progress.😊
@ksemery
@ksemery Ай бұрын
The Boxes may be Milk Chutes back to when the milk man traveled in the early hours of the morning leaving bottles and wire trays at residences throughout towns and cities.
@judybooze7256
@judybooze7256 Ай бұрын
I love love old buildings thank you for working on this cool place.
@songsforsomeone
@songsforsomeone 16 күн бұрын
thanks for posting!!! I've daydreamed about this building for a long time!
@scottharper9645
@scottharper9645 Ай бұрын
This really takes me back to the early 70’s in SIoux City. My parents owned several buildings in downtown that looked like this one. I remember doing many renovations to the apartments during summers in college.
@JACOBSJohn818
@JACOBSJohn818 Ай бұрын
Really cool building.👌
@buckodonnghaile4309
@buckodonnghaile4309 20 күн бұрын
Ive been surrounded by Canadians for far too long. Its refreshing to hear someone pronouce the word "tour" any way other than "two-urrr".
@mikeb1039
@mikeb1039 Ай бұрын
I can't imagine how expensive its going to be to reclaim that huge building. Gotta be millions. I hope your plan is successful, good luck!
@lo2740
@lo2740 18 күн бұрын
yeah, it is so far gone, why doing this, its not even a nice or quality building, its just a very cheap building that has never been maintained in a super poor town with no future.
@t4leta
@t4leta Ай бұрын
I totally agree with the person from Scotland about the third floor apartment hallway boxes being for milk delivery. Which were accessible from in the kitchens. Good luck your refurbishing project. I bet it will be great!
@Daehawk
@Daehawk 25 күн бұрын
That's an amazing building that's been build over and built over. Going to take a lot of work and money to get it back to how it was.
@Thedailysideshow
@Thedailysideshow Ай бұрын
Beautiful building. I’ve been around the Appalachian area for awhile, my wife is from Richlands, Va.
@AppalachianRisingVentures
@AppalachianRisingVentures Ай бұрын
About 1.5 hours from our town, Appalachia, VA.
@kengoss6878
@kengoss6878 Ай бұрын
Water issues need to be addressed foremost before it deteriorates your building. Re-tar or address the roof. A tiny crack can take down a huge building. Y'all have a great adventure ahead of you. You seem like great folks, - Ken in Rome, GA.
@lo2740
@lo2740 18 күн бұрын
"before it deteriorates your building" 🤣, i guess the building has been deteriorated since a few decades already, it is very far gone.
@zeldamartin3487
@zeldamartin3487 10 күн бұрын
Radiator heat is the best. I will be following your progress!❤
@amyfrancois9121
@amyfrancois9121 Ай бұрын
Buildings back then were BUILT by craftsman who had passion/pride for their work!!
@ShadoeLandman
@ShadoeLandman Ай бұрын
In my teens, I helped renovate an old apartment building, and this building brought back many of those memories. I found an old sheriff’s badge with the name scratched off inside one of the walls. It was like a time capsule. The first floor had plaster and trim from the 20’s at the latest, and the daylight basement apartment had cheap paneling from the 70’s. It was in Star City, WV.
@Lantanana
@Lantanana 2 ай бұрын
Being nosy, but for the outside steps, I recommend a hand hold. I am now disabled and notice when there is nothing to hold onto. You could put it just on the building side, if you want to keep the outside edge open like it is now.
@coffee8866
@coffee8866 Ай бұрын
That would be an awesome Cigar/Restaurant store. Great buy!
@rodolfoerdogan4983
@rodolfoerdogan4983 19 күн бұрын
I enjoyed this, especially the explanation from the commentators
@mothroyale9076
@mothroyale9076 Ай бұрын
Great video. Awesome to see you both take an interest in reviving the area you grew up in. Loved the down to earth presentation. And the camera work was good. The camera was held steady and not moved to qucikly form view to view in a vertigo inducing manner that can sometimes happen. It must be tricky to film when you are having to be considerate of not falling through the floor. I will be following your progress with much interest.
@Davett53
@Davett53 Ай бұрын
I moved to Columbus, Ohio from Athens, Ohio, about 100 miles, North East away. My girlfriend and I rented an apartment in an old city block, the main buildings were built in 1896,...and additional ones were added in 1900. Our suite had 14 foot ceilings covered in stamped tin. The rooms had at one time been illuminated by natural gas lamps, as there were capped gas lines in the ceilings and on the walls in the living room. The windows were 8 foot tall. Instead of steam radiators, the rooms were heated by basic (passive) gas heaters, vented to chimneys. So they were not aided by electric fans, the heat just radiated out and natural convection moved the heat about. We also used portable electric baseboard heaters. There was an oversized claw foot tub, large enough for two occupants. We rigged up a shower & an enclosure. A simple copper pipe frame, with shower curtains. We restored the original 1905 kitchen, stripping & repainting the many well built cabinets. We stripped the paint off of sturdy chrome over brass, cabinet latches and hinges. We purchased from a salvager, a 1905 era kitchen exit door, with a built in window, which we restored, that lead to a large open sided outside porch. We lived there for 10 years, beginning in 1982. The rent was ridiculously low, because we rented it in "as is" condition. It was up to us to pay for any improvements, & repairs. Rent: $75.00, with gas, water, electricity all included. It was on the second floor, above an "old timers tavern".
@AppalachianRisingVentures
@AppalachianRisingVentures Ай бұрын
I would have loved to see that!
@Davett53
@Davett53 Ай бұрын
@@AppalachianRisingVentures The building is still standing, and the oldest section had it's brickwork & trim restored. It is called or named "The Ramlow Block", after the original family who had lived there, and there is an alley with the same name. We had our neighborhoods, renamed based on re-discovered history. Our's used to be referred to as "North Campus" (North of the campus of The Ohio State University),...is now named The Old North. (Not to be confused with another area south of there, named The Short North.) The name for the area in general, is The University District. About 30 years ago all the old names were rediscovered, and our main roadway, is North High Street. In the early 1900s, there were iron arches, that crossed over North High Street, from our downtown to the northern end. Each neighborhood had their name on one, and they had been illuminated by gas overhead lamps. Now modern LED bulbs are used, in some areas the lamps, can go through a sequence of rainbow colors. In 1901 the nick name for our city, was Arch City. Columbus Ohio is the capital of the state of Ohio.
@jayburris6252
@jayburris6252 Ай бұрын
Very cool building and project. Just fyi, all of the sheet paneling is a much later addition. All of it. I’d guess late 1960s or later. Also, by 1920 there were closets designed and built in at times. I subscribed to your channel so I can see the progress!
@randymacsgarage
@randymacsgarage Ай бұрын
what he said ,kudos.
@larryfeeks6620
@larryfeeks6620 Ай бұрын
What a cool building! Looking forward to seeing what you do with it!
@zibbyzubb
@zibbyzubb 29 күн бұрын
that will be quite an undertaking. Glad the building will be restored/renovated.
@genedandy
@genedandy 19 күн бұрын
Beautiful building with a lot of potential. Hope you folks post an update some time in the future.
@DeadKoby
@DeadKoby 14 күн бұрын
Certainly a unique building. Best wishes on your big project.
@bailey1000100
@bailey1000100 Ай бұрын
That lowest decorative section of brick work is called a "soldier course" If you can imagine soldiers all standing shoulder to shoulder upright all in a line. Have a look again.
@AppalachianRisingVentures
@AppalachianRisingVentures Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@JK-xl7un
@JK-xl7un Ай бұрын
Good luck, look forward to seeing the progress.
@mmontagart
@mmontagart 24 күн бұрын
My cousin is restoring a beautiful old building in North Central Iowa . My family used to fix buildings too. You have many adventures ahead of you. Wishing you the best on this amazing project.
@janetbrandt171
@janetbrandt171 Ай бұрын
What a great project and huge undertaking! Good luck.
@neenmach
@neenmach 20 күн бұрын
Nice building. I would wonder if one of those phone stations was a dumb waiter. To move produce upstairs? I also love those old steps, as short of rise you can. Much better for walking.
@glenbo2464
@glenbo2464 Ай бұрын
This is like the icing on the cake for me as i have seen this building from the outside only in another youtubers video of the town ! Its so cool !
@Davett53
@Davett53 Ай бұрын
I attended Ohio University which is in southern Ohio, in Athens Ohio. I rented suites in many buildings that were built in the late 1890s and early 1900s. In fact your building resembles many of the old buildings that are standing to this day. Athens Ohio is in the foothills of Appalachia. The town is very hilly. Ohio University is the only reason the town is still vibrant, and reasonably well taken care of. The streets are all exposed pavers.
@SillyPutty3700
@SillyPutty3700 19 күн бұрын
Go Bobcats! I grew up at 165 N. Congress!
@Davett53
@Davett53 12 күн бұрын
@@SillyPutty3700 Yeah, boy! I was there from 1972- 1976,.....I lived on the East Green, dorms Bush Hall and another, i forget the name, now. (maybe Read Hall) Then rented a suite in a 4 story newer apartment,....which may not exist anymore, called Lake View Apts. Then i rented a place on Court Street, in an ancient hotel converted to apartments,...Probably built in the late 1800's. Maybe it was once called the Athens Motel,....My college chums bought land outside of town in the Guysville /Stewart cities. Loved the lush green rolling hills, backroads the snaked their way through the backwoods. In 1972, parts of Athens felt like it was still living in the 1950s & early 60s. Old 1950s' wrecked and rusting cars, were hidden in the underbrush. Lots of abandoned farm houses to explore. The South Green river had already be re-routed,...but it still flooded it's banks from time to time. South green had elevated walkways. Lots of good times were had.
@mrbutch308
@mrbutch308 20 күн бұрын
Interesting! God bless everyone who is involved in the restoration of this historic building!
@heartland96a
@heartland96a Ай бұрын
That furniture store across the street from this down hill , wow , trusting nothing will bring a vehicle into your store.
@Nydesidner
@Nydesidner Ай бұрын
Boxes may have been for ice delivery with an ice box on the inside.
@marshawargo7238
@marshawargo7238 Ай бұрын
More likely, it was a milk/bread box. Ice would have to have been put immediately put into the icebox. You can't have ice melting on wood & running down the walls. When I was little, the bread man & milkman rang the bell, but we lived in a house & this is an apartment building, so IDK how they would have done it.
@WallyTony
@WallyTony Ай бұрын
That's such a cool building. Thanks for sharing it with us.
@terryr.5093
@terryr.5093 16 күн бұрын
I remember it well. Lived in Appalachia from 1950-1968.
@larrywestlake173
@larrywestlake173 Ай бұрын
Just stumbled across your videos and love the idea of restoring them! Can wait to see what's next!
@ffoster477
@ffoster477 Ай бұрын
That is a fascinating building, I am glad that you are going to restore it. As you know from others those niches are for milk bottle delivery. I am looking forward to follow the restoration project. I have subscribed, hope you will do video updates. Thank you for sharing this. ❤❤👍👍
@CKNZ161
@CKNZ161 Ай бұрын
That's a pretty fierce looking hill. Similar to some here in Bristol UK.
@donwarner6925
@donwarner6925 Ай бұрын
Great video. Thanks for the tour. I’m looking forward to watching the progress.
@philipbeard8132
@philipbeard8132 Ай бұрын
Consider checking 1930 to 1990 census to identify former residents. Perhaps some information could give additional clues to its past. Good luck.
@yungnsurly
@yungnsurly 12 күн бұрын
Please show us any cool treasures you find. I love that stuff! Thank you for sharing!!
@redbarchetta8782
@redbarchetta8782 20 күн бұрын
Good for you guys renovating these pieces of history.
@benevenuto9794
@benevenuto9794 Ай бұрын
Best of luck… I admire your effort and wish you the best in restoring that beautiful old building.
@79tazman
@79tazman Ай бұрын
Very cool building glad to see you guys bringing it back to life again
@virtuallabrats
@virtuallabrats Ай бұрын
Awesome, thank you for sharing this is excellent!!
@TobyAva2023
@TobyAva2023 Ай бұрын
Love the building!
@noonehere1793
@noonehere1793 Ай бұрын
Thats going to be quite the project! Good luck👍
@Rusty_Nickle
@Rusty_Nickle Ай бұрын
It's awesome to see somebody preserving this kind of stuff. I sure hope we get future updates on this building I really want to see what it looks like as they go along.
@outoftheforest7652
@outoftheforest7652 18 күн бұрын
Wow... I applaud your bravery in taking on this task!. We renovated (have not finished) a HOME near Cincinnati. We gutted a few rooms... had a new beam put in, concrete floor installed.. it was a hot mess. We think the entire building had been moved from across the street .. and at that time a lower level build in.. It is a lot of scary hard work to rebuild old hoimes and you have a mASSIVE project on your hands. I wish you the best of luck and can't wait to see the progress!!
@mariofilippi3539
@mariofilippi3539 18 күн бұрын
Thanks for the video. Mixed-use housing has always been interesting to me. Here's wishing you the best of luck in your restoration.
@yungnsurly
@yungnsurly 12 күн бұрын
Little doors in the hallway with latches are milk bottle delivery doors. My old apartment in Hyde Park in Tampa had one. You would put your empties in there and the milkman would replace with fresh full bottles on delivery day. That's what it looks like to me. That's what the ones in my 1920s apartment building were for. I also had a little alcove on the wall where the old phone was.
@yomama9462
@yomama9462 13 күн бұрын
Love it, good luck!
@thomasstambaugh5181
@thomasstambaugh5181 16 күн бұрын
Wow, what a challenging project you've taken on. Unless you are prepared to spend well into 7 figures on this building, you will have to completely gut the structure and start over. You may be able to rescue some of the wood work and such, but there's just not much left to rescue. I subscribed and look forward to following your progress.
@chrisconklin873
@chrisconklin873 20 күн бұрын
Wow that could be an awesome building but that looks like a huge investment. Good luck, Id love to see the final product.
@Bullseye120
@Bullseye120 Ай бұрын
Kudos, to you guys for saving this building. Please post more videos on your progress. I have no doubt that your channel will grow.
@JamesMasterPlaster
@JamesMasterPlaster Ай бұрын
Watched the whole video very cool thanks
@SeanMcGown
@SeanMcGown Ай бұрын
So cool. Have fun on that one.
@jimmychaplin
@jimmychaplin Ай бұрын
WOW! That is a lot of work for you! It is wild-looking! I would estimate 250 million+ in repairs! Wow!
@dananderson3077
@dananderson3077 27 күн бұрын
Love it, she will learn what she looking at to describe...enjoy the project!
@Cbtrainnut
@Cbtrainnut Ай бұрын
Good luck! Hope you have a ton of money! Looking forward to seeing your progress!
@John-jp9bx
@John-jp9bx Ай бұрын
The house we bought was built in 1900. Still mostly original except for upgraded HVAC, electric and plumbing. Upgrades are a challenge due to construction with lath and plaster but rewarding. Hope your renovation goes smoothly.
@tlover94
@tlover94 21 күн бұрын
I would love to see it when you're done renovating
@1ajs
@1ajs Ай бұрын
hope u can help bring life back to ur urban oasis and get more going no reason these towns should rot away
@markstumbris7824
@markstumbris7824 Ай бұрын
Great building to save!
@nononsenseBennett
@nononsenseBennett 3 күн бұрын
Looks like a great project for This Old House...Better call Bob Vila!
@jamestaylor3737
@jamestaylor3737 Ай бұрын
Definitely worth saving
@seesea-sv3xw
@seesea-sv3xw Ай бұрын
IDK if I missed it but are planing to keep the building as apartments with a store in front or is there going to be another purpose?
@toriladybird511
@toriladybird511 Ай бұрын
The boxes that you thought might be for telephones might have been for deliveries so if the homeowner was not there it could be popped through the hatch.
@ffoster477
@ffoster477 Ай бұрын
correct, they were for milk bottles.
@cherylsmith4826
@cherylsmith4826 19 күн бұрын
More building shots, please
@kengoss6878
@kengoss6878 Ай бұрын
"Picture Molding" in apts., and that white light shade in apt. #2 is "Mid-Century Modern" 1960s. Slab doors "came in" in the the 60s and 70s. Original doors would be solid 4-panel wooden doors. You are missing mortar between some bricks. The need to be re-pointed (simple) to keep out water and decay. John is correct, those are two hallway "Telephone Boxes". They are early third 0f 1900s and from the depth had "candle Stick" phones with a brass separate ringer bell on the wall beside each one activated by an electricity signal when the (live person) operator plugged the wire for that phone in the switchboard. These were probably 1920s - 1940s. Some had an little shelf below for note paper & pencil and/'or phone number book (even one with 4 or 5 pages, nut these probably were hing on a nail in the wall when you used a hole punch in the upper left binding corner. If they were in a nicer home the bell would be via a built-in speaker in wall below the box. Onw could buy these from Sears and Montgomery-Ward. Later, when the rotary model phones came out, the bell was inside. ( Ig the phone shelf was in a plastered wall - some with a arched top, would be called a "phone niche". )
@ffoster477
@ffoster477 Ай бұрын
They were niches for the milk bottles as there was one for each unit. Since they had a latched door on the back in the kitchen. No one would put phones in the halls of an apartment building. They did have those niches in larger houses like you are thinking about, but mostly they were for wealthy people and located near an entryway close to the entrance. I worked in an early 1900 mansion with a phone nich in it, they placed a small figurine of Mary in it.
@pgtmr2713
@pgtmr2713 20 күн бұрын
That boiler room looks downright medieval with the wood structure
@martintabony611
@martintabony611 21 күн бұрын
In the UK metal kitchen units were common after World War Two, because the factories that had been making aircraft were looking for something to make. They are quite collectable now
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