McBlade Runner

At the corner of Delaney and Essex sits the cyberpunk future of fast food.

Metal mesh panels in geometric shapes float just off the building, glowing at the edges.

Just behind the glowing panels is a row of teak-laminated slats that wrap the building, adding some subtle complexity to the visual field.

One wonders if influence may have come from FF7’s city of Midgar or a sci-fi space station.

I found this place after a busy day of photographing real estate around Brooklyn. I had a little time to pass before Regina was done with her business in the city, so I decided to spend it by going to Cocoron for some soba noodles. I popped out of the subway right here at Delaney & Essex to find this crazy looking McDonalds before me, and I’ve got to say, I commend them on their bold architectural choice.

I may not start eating Mcburgers or whatever they’re called, but I do hope to see this trend of experimental design elsewhere.

Also, the Regal cinema across the street also looks bonkers and futuristic, so maybe there’s something about the Lower East Side that is inspiring this cyperpunk futurism.

MCBLADE RUNNER-2.jpeg

I tried to find out who designed in, but a bit of googling turned up no obvious answers.


P.S. - Full disclosure: I have recently had the fried chicken tenders at McDs, and they’re surprisingly good. So if desperate times mean the golden arches is the only good around, there’s still hope.

P.P.S. - Oh yeah, they’re called Big Macs, right? I’m still going to leave McBurgers in the post.

P.P.P.S - This is, I believe, the first post I’ve composed entirely on my phone. I did so in bed while I really should be going to sleep. Let me know how it turns out.

Le Canard enchaine

Cole claimed Le Canard Enchaine, a friend restaurant in The Stockade of Kingston, had the best french onion soup he’s ever had, all throughout his travels. I though that was a claim worth investigating.

I was excited, but the soup did not blow me away. I’ve had better, most recently at L’Express in Montreal, but that’s not really a fair comparison.

Still, it was warm and satisfying on a cold night, so it hit the spot.

The Googie Architecture of P. Terry's

Have you heard of Googie architecture?

It’s amazing.

You have if you ever watched The Jetsons, whose imaginary architecture borrowed heavily from real life Googie buildings just outside the animators’ studio. You might also have encountered while driving around Los Angeles, California, New Jersey (where I first discovered it in the form of the Caribbean Motel in Wildwood, among other examples), or, in the case of these images, Austin, Texas.

The style came to bear from post World War 2 futurism in the 50’s and 60’s. Americans has fresh optimism about the future and fantastic new technologies, along with money to burn.

Automobiles became common and everyone wanted to travel.

And what does the traveling soul need, but somewhere to stop, rest, and get a bite to eat?

In the east you’ll find toll roads and parkways aplenty with intentionally placed rest stops, which are wonderful all in their own right. Since moving to the Hudson Valley and exploring northern and western New York I’ve discovered some really amazing ones.

Way out west in California is the land of the freeway, where one is not on a guided tour but has the freedom to stop wherever they please. So if they can go anywhere, how do you get them to stop at your restaurant?

What if you made your building look CRAZY? Like NOTHING they’d ever seen before.

So that’s what they did. The result was wild, super futuristic architecture and signage.

Architectural Historian Alan Hess said “Googie made the future accessible to everyone… it wasn’t custom houses for wealthy people - it was for coffee shops, gas stations… the average buildings of everyday life”. 

That last line got me thinking. I’m a big fan of residential architecture and really gorgeous homes, but a home like that really only exists for the person that owns it and their social circle they invite over. These other structures, though, coffee shops, gas stations, the other places of business and leisure - those are the places we all experience together that may go even further to define our lives than our own homes.

There’s something really special about so much thought and intention being put into making our communal spaces, our spaces that everyone lives in.

Sure, we don’t get as many buildings that look quite as crazy as this anymore, but there are still some marvels out there to discover, and wonderful new things being made every day.