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10/16/2004: Rainbow-colored Albanian building
http://cellar.org/2004/albaniabuilding.jpg
This building is in Tirana, Albania, and it was painted that way by the Tirana City Hall to make up for the fact that it didn't have any street address. It turns out that Albania's government is so useless that... well, how useless could it be? Quote:
I'm just glad there are sociologists who are capable of asking the hard questions. |
When your company sells stuff and ships it UPS, you tend to get some interesting "addresses."
--Blue house across from Town Hall --10 miles north of Piņon on gravel road And so on... That building reminds me of this bridge: http://sycamoreland.com/images/allenslnbr.jpg |
Looks like a southern resort motel from the 50's.
I suppose there are advantages to not having an address in that every secret police file would say no known address. And you wouldn't have to send flowers the next day. :lovers: |
This completely redefines the term "colorful". Definitely a house painter's worst nightmare. The bright side: You can't see it from the inside of the building.....whew!!!!!!!! :eek:
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That building reminds me an older method of figuring last names. Once upon a time, your name was your profession. Mr. Baker, Mr. Smith, Mr. Fletcher...
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Great way to get rid of all that scrap paint laying around.
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last names
If your last name is the name of a place, it probably means that your family spent many years somewhere else.
E.G. Jack London's family must have moved to someplace where being from London was unique enough for it to become a useful identifier at the time when last names were invented. |
Interesting colors. It could be worse. I once saw a house painted purple. However, it did have an address. You couldn't miss the pink mailbox. I wonder what a psychiatrist
would have said about the personalities of the inhabitants. |
There's nothing wrong with the color purple :)
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Why wouldn't they just create street names, put signs up?
Thusly: 415 Rainbow Building, Tirana Ave Tirana, Albania |
I wondered the same thing. You would think a sign would be cheaper than painting a building. BUt then I realized that if it was a nation-wide problem, it probably overwhelms the government.
I wonder how they got into that situation. Street names are not a modern invention. Centuries old maps of London include street names. Surely there must have been street names at some point in the history of Albania. Did the isolationist government of the last 50 years abolish the old names? Did they just neglect to name new construction? Curious. |
Read the linked article, people. :)
This situation got me thinking...we don't have that kind of problem here in Philadelphia, but we do have a strong case of street-numbering retardation. Market St. is our N-S divider, while Front St. is our E-W divider. There is also Germantown Ave., which essentially runs E-W, but is a N-S street, and serves as another E-W divider. As you travel through the East Mount Airy and Germantown areas into West Oak Lane, things start getting interesting. The E-W streets that fed off Germantown Ave. start meeting the E-W streets that fed off Front St. Chelten Ave., which was an E-W street off Germantown, becomes an E-W street off Front...the street number changes from 2100 E to 2000 W. If you have a friend that lives in the 200 block of W. Chelten Ave., check your directions (as there are 2 separate 200 blocks of W. Chelten). Then there are the shared street names, but that's another story... |
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From the article: The government has recently adopted a bill calling for streets to be named as soon as possible but somehow the process has become mired in ideological disputes.
I was referring to "Why don't they just create street names?" Sorry about that. As to how it happened in the first place, well, Albania was incredibly isolated for the longest time, so I suspect that naming streets just wasn't a priority or necessity to their leaders. Here's a BBC article on Tirana Mayor Edi Rama that touches on the painting of city buildings. |
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IIRC Japan is like this, they have names for the major thoroughfares but not for neighborhood residential streets. My friend who explained all this to me told me it was a cultural thing; that people would actually balk at giving their house a number, like we balk at the idea of numbering people.
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We number people.
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Yes, but sometimes we still balk at the idea, for old times' sake. :)
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*Elephant man*/ I am not a number / *Elephant man* :guinea:
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Hate t'say it, but the story behind this picture reminds me a bit of the song "Where the Streets Have No Name."
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house numbers
In Massachusetts towns, the fire department is responsible for giving out house numbers. They are the ones who have to find the house in the dark, so I guess that makes sense.
On some streets, though, they renumbered the houses but allowed the owners to keep the old numbers if they like. Also, the numbering starts over at the beginning of each street. and increases as you leave town. I lived for a while in 155, then in number 24, then in number 3. I was amazed when I visited California where there are 5 digit house numbers. |
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