tours


Springfield: A Bicentennial Portrait tour screenshot (showing the Lincoln Home)

Photo tour screenshot (showing the Lincoln Home). Start the tour>>

You may remember last summer (and early fall) I took a series of photos for my Lincoln Land 80s CD project, which I use to showcase (on CD covers for my custom 80s music CD collection) areas of Springfield that are unique to the city. I do this every year or so because I love it. I think it’s a creative way to honor Mr. Lincoln’s hometown.

Included are big, well known sites like the Lincoln Home and Museum, and the Old State Capitol, lesser known places like the Vachel Lindsay Home and the Iles House, streetscapes that define the city, unique places in older neighborhoods on each side of town, and more. I decided to take all of the 88 photos and create a good photo tour of Springfield on my blog using all of the photos, so that you can tour these places that make Springfield unique yourself. Last year was especially important, because it was the year of the Lincoln Bicentennial, so this tour will be a great resource for showing what the city looked like that momentous year in history.

Springfield: A Bicentennial Portrait tour screenshot (showing mouseover)

Move your mouse over one of the pink arrows on the map to see what it is – then click on it to see the photo.

Over the past few months I’ve been coding custom CSS and HTML to make it work. I wanted to make it so that you could click a spot on a map of Springfield where a photo was taken, and up would pop a photo with a description so you can see what it looks like, and a bit of the history behind it. I succeeded in creating a tour like this (though it took more time than I thought). Each photo is marked on the map with a pink arrow and number from 1 to 88 (assigned in the chronological order I took the pictures), and when you move your mouse over a pink arrow, you’ll see a little tooltip that tells you what it is. Then when you click on it, you’ll see the picture and the description. The photos I used in this tour are much better quality than the ones I posted on my blog last year – they’re 720×540 pixels instead of little 200×150 thumbnails, allowing much more detail to be shown.

I plan to keep doing this project in the future to improve upon photos taken in the past, and to show what changes have occurred. I’ll likely base tours from future iterations of Lincoln Land 80s off the same CSS code, eventually creating a tour where you can go back in time as well, and see the changes that have occurred.

The tour is saved as a special page on my blog, so you will always be able to access it. It’s called Springfield: A Bicentennial Portrait, and you can access it from the Pages section in the sidebar. Enjoy the tour!

I have some great news with the Lincoln T-shirts to share with you too. I’ll make another post soon about it!

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Buck's Building

Buck’s Building

Every year since 2000, in early May, Downtown Springfield, Inc. hosts a tour of beautiful downtown spaces you can’t normally see. I feel it is a wonderful way to showcase downtown living and the interiors and exteriors of the many beautiful buildings we have in our downtown. As you may know, I live near downtown, and I believe there is no better place in Springfield to be.

I’ve been on each Upper Story since 2004. Featured buildings and spaces in the past have included the dome of the Old State Capitol, apartments above Augie’s on 5th Street, Lincoln Place Condominiums on 4th Street, and the Shutt and DuBois houses in the Lincoln Home neighborhood. The featured buildings are different each year, and buildings are usually not repeated in subsequent years. Sometimes, featured spaces are “raw” spaces under renovation, and in other cases they are finished spaces. Residential, commercial, and even normally inaccessible areas of public buildings have been featured. Both historic Lincoln-era and modern (and everything in between) spaces have been featured. In most of the years I’ve done the tour, I’ve made it to all of the buildings on the tour. Each year, I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the tour and the views of (and from) the downtown spaces showcased.

St. Nicholas Hotel

St. Nicholas Hotel

This year included two spaces that have been shown before – one of the Lincoln Square Apartments (facing 6th Street), and Buck’s Building on the north side of the square. It also included an 11th floor apartment – and the penthouse – in the St. Nicholas Hotel, an apartment on the 21st floor of the Hilton (I actually didn’t even know there were apartments in the Hilton until this tour), the bishop’s residence at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception at 6th and Lawrence, and the Bunn-Sankey House on the 1000 block of South 6th Street (near Clay Street). The tour of Buck’s Building, a Lincoln-era building on the north side of the square, offered a good before-and-after perspective of the building on this tour, since the last time it was featured – in 2004 – it was a raw space under renovation. It’s neat to see it finished.

While I was on the tour, I brought my camera since I know there would be good views. I took 96 pictures, about 40 of which can be seen here in the tour on my blog (the others didn’t turn out well enough). The pictures are of 4 of the 6 buildings on the tour, since you (sadly) couldn’t take pictures inside the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, and I ran out of pictures on my memory card before I got to Lincoln Square (the last space I toured). I will tell you that both spaces were very beautiful, though – from the gorgeous 1928 interior of the bishop’s residence, to the more modern, but still fancy, interior of Lincoln Square, which is inside a section of the apartments facing 6th Street that was built in 1868 (the main section of the apartments visible at 5th and Monroe was built in 1984). All in all, it was a great tour, and a great day to walk around and explore downtown.

You can explore four of the buildings, too, via the photographs I took of them. Simply click a link below to take a virtual tour of that specific building. These tours are separate pages on my blog, and you will always be able to access it from the Downtown Springfield Upper Story Tour 2010 link under “Pages” in the sidebar. Have fun!

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