February 14th, 2010 |
Published in
all news, Hanover/Leb./Nor'ch., Hotel South Street
The relatively-recent brick building with the giant gable on South Street (Street View) has been demolished, and construction on the hotel Six South Street has begun (Facebook page with January 30 photo to west).
A big exterior rendering is available on the Maine Course CEO’s blog, and interior renderings are on Facebook and the main site as well.
February 14th, 2010 |
Published in
all news, graphic design, Hanover Inn, Hanover/Leb./Nor'ch., Hotel South Street
Speaking of graphic design, the new hotel on South Street (behind Hanover Park, where Panda House used to be) has been named Six South Street and has been given a logo by Vreeland Marketing & Design.

Detail of logo
While the hotel is to be welcomed and its builders admired for their boldness and attention to urban design, the logo deserves some criticism:
The word “Street” really should be written out. While “South St.” might be part of an address, the thoroughfare that gives its name to the hotel is “South Street.” The word “Six” seems to have been spelled out to add formality or pretense, the way it is in “The Wall Street Inn” (not the plain-old “Wall St. Inn”). So the word “Street” should be as well. Only an address plaque on the building should read “6 South St.” After all, both “Six” and “South” have shorter versions that could have been used but weren’t. And even though “Hotel” is on its own line, it still makes the logo seem to refer to a “Saint Hotel” (“St. Hotel”).
When a word is abbreviated, it requires a period. Probably to prevent the letters “ST” from appearing to retreat from the righthand edge, the logo omits the period. This should have been solved some other way.
February 14th, 2010 |
Published in
all news, coat of arms, History, publications
This looks interesting: Professor Colin Calloway’s The Indian History of an American Institution: Native Americans and Dartmouth (Dartmouth College Press, 2010).
(Curiously, the Press still uses Scotford’s short-lived 1960s shield rather than the standard MacDonald version of 1944/1957.)
February 14th, 2010 |
Published in
all news, Berry Row, Fahey-McLane, Kemeny/Haldeman, McLaughlin, New Hamp. Hall, north campus, other projects, Phi Tau, preservation, societies, Thayer School, Tuck School
A remote tour of recent construction via Google Street View images made around August 4, 2009, judging from the Hop’s marquee:
- The north end addition to Theta Delta Chi (view to southeast);
- The east end addition to Gile and rear addition to Hitchcock (view to north showing Gile getting a new copper roof);
- Fahey Hall (view with Butterfield);
- The redone Tuck Drive/Tuck Mall intersection (view to north; the Google Maps aerial is older and shows Fahey-McLane under construction);
- The stair addition to the west end of Bones Gate (view to south showing unobtrusive one-bay addition);
- The Zeta Psi addition (view to south showing front of building with addition under construction);
- The Chi Gamma Epsilon fire stair (view to north showing roofed but unenclosed fire escape — wonder why other houses didn’t do this if they could get away with it);
- Kemeny-Haldeman (view to east; Carson terminates Webster Avenue and is framed by Haldeman and Carpenter);
- The addition to Tabard (view to south showing rear of building; the Google driver went down this unnamed alley by the Choates before thinking better of it);
- The addition to Phi Delta Alpha (view to south showing rear of interesting, almost agricultural addition);
- The new Phi Tau (view to southeast showing side; the end view to the north shows the building’s interesting proportions);
- Berry Row (view “down” to the south);
- The McLaughlin Cluster (view of “outside” to the northeast; views “down” to southwest and “up” to northeast).
- The New Hampshire Hall additions (view to southwest showing east end addition); and
- “Whittemore Green” behind Thayer School (views of landscape including flowers and curving paths; hmmm).