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Reply To: | adaptive re-use is from the department of repetitive redundancy division < [log in to unmask]> |
Date: | Wed, 12 Dec 2007 19:39:11 -0500 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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[log in to unmask] wrote:
> To make sidewalks more interesting, but no more slippery, could you
> press low-relief things into them, like leaves and stuff? Like we did
> with clay things we did in first grade.
>
> Pennies? Paper clips?
>
> Impractically yours, Christopher
Yes. Foot impressions are common enough.
There was this really bizarre lady that we got hooked up with that
wanted her 20' by 3' area of sidewalk shot blasted, along with a whole
bunch of other stuff. She was calling the whole world for a solution to
her obsession... which meant for her combing through the NY Times then
calling whomever was mentioned in an article and asking them questions.
She was even onto the Portland Cement Association. A materials sales rep
sent her to me... which earned the rep my continued vigilance in
avoiding him. Anyways, she claimed that her neighbor had made a defect
in her sidewalk that on examination I realized was a bare footprint. I
tried to answer her with what she could do about it and ended off by
telling her that the best solution would be for her to start a story
about the mysterious stranger that had visited her house. Not too
different than the Angel Gabriel stepping on a piece of limestone in
Missouri. She did not get it. I ended up asking her if I could take her
picture with her standing on her sidewalk. She delightedly exclaimed,
"Oh, am I going to be famous now?"
There may be code issues that one has to deal with in some areas but it
is not inconceivable that if one had a mind to do it to scatter and roll
autumnal leaves into the surface of the concrete. They would rot away
and leave their impressions behind. You could do it with dead frogs too
I suppose.
][<en
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