Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Grand Basilica



PHOTOGRAPHER’S JOURNAL: “Basilica.” There is no better word for identifying these buildings, especially those with peaked roofs. “Factory,” does not necessarily mean a single building. Shed is reductive, suggesting an add-on with a shed roof. “Mill,” “plant,” “shop,” and “workshop” all offer various problems, and none brings to mind these long high spaces where large objects could be built and moved. Often there is a central aisle where the largest work is handled and side aisles for contributing processes. Also like the early churches to which the term is historically applied, additions are made as needed, and often I find several "naves" side-by-side. As I understand it, to the Romans, basilica referred to the hall of justice, and sometime later in history it referred to the hall of  the godly.

I’ve been in none as grand as this, which is an admission I’ve come too late and must have missed the grandest. Note that there are two cranes parked here. The front one is clearly marked for a 30-ton limit. The one in back is marked both on the crane and the hook for not more than 60 tons. The braced rails, of course, must support the weight of both cranes and the loads they carry.

Be sure to click and view this one full screen.



2 comments:

Ginnie Hart said...

Basilica makes total sense to me, too, Ted. This one is a beauty, fitting of you and your kind of photography.

Emery Roth said...

I wish I'd seen it when the factory was still producing. Now it's just a warehouse for old electrical closets. This image was actually shot in 2011 and re-processed this fall. However, I was shooting there again today and none of the cranes have moved as long as I've been shooting here.