Riga Central Market

Sep 13, 2016 09:10


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Comments 24

trepkos September 13 2016, 07:16:26 UTC
Wonderful building!

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thenewbuzwuzz September 13 2016, 07:52:52 UTC
:)

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snogged September 13 2016, 11:56:24 UTC
Looks pretty.

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thenewbuzwuzz September 13 2016, 12:43:14 UTC
It really did in that light. Thanks! :)

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1_rhiannon_1 September 13 2016, 17:42:47 UTC
That's really cool!

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thenewbuzwuzz September 13 2016, 18:17:58 UTC
*grin* Thanks!

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double_dutchess September 13 2016, 23:51:17 UTC
Those look nice, and the backstory makes them even better.

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thenewbuzwuzz September 14 2016, 03:19:13 UTC
:)

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freecat15 September 14 2016, 10:49:57 UTC
That is amazing! I love the combination of the rich in history hangar tops and the Bauhaus style!

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thenewbuzwuzz September 14 2016, 11:09:35 UTC
Thanks! I enjoyed looking up Bauhaus, heh. (If I understand Wikipedia correctly, it was mostly simple and function-oriented? I wonder how it differs from constructivism, apart from being in a different country and not ugly. :D)

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freecat15 September 14 2016, 14:29:45 UTC
Well, I hope you didn't already tell all your friends about your knew knowledge of the Riga Central Market, because it was simply wrong. It's not Bauhaus at all (although elements of this can be found in B. too). The B. School was founded only in the early 1920's, I think (when the hangars already existed for years), and it was actually void of all ornaments (such as those visible on the walls between the bows). I guess my brain must have taken a break. What I meant to write was Art Deco, but that seems actually wrong, too, because it too developed in the early 20's. Unless the walls didn't belong to the hangars originally ( ... )

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thenewbuzwuzz September 14 2016, 15:01:46 UTC
Your Bauhaus secret is safe with me and everyone else who can read the comments on this public post...
I think the time period isn't actually off. They started building the market in 1924. If I understand correctly, only the curved metal parts are from the hangars - the brick and concrete stuff was all added in the 20s. (If there was more to the hangars, it would also have been more weird to ship them from Kurland.) And hey, the website of the market says they have some art deco elements on the facades, so well spotted! (The clue I have about 20s architecture is not so much, so I'll take their word for it and yours, too. :D)
Look at us, educating each other. :)

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