The living room at Taliesin West in Arizona. This is where Frank Lloyd Wright and the fellowship of Taliesin would get together for meetings and to relax.
The main office at Taliesin West, Frank Lloyd Wright's architectural educational compound in the desert of Arizona.
Inside the old hotel, you can still see the old mailboxes for guests and the billiards table waiting for the next game.
On a long walk into bodie in the snow, we came across the old firehouse.
A few of the excellent visually oriented urban travel guides from Wallpaper Magazine.
Think of it as a cross between the hotel bar in Lost in Translation and the Emperor's chambers aboard the Death Star. From the outside, the Marriott is one of the most despised buildings in San Francisco — it looks a lot like a huge Wurlitzer jukebox. The view is better from The View, because the bar sits on the 39th floor, at the apex of two giant glass archways. Order a stiff drink, chat it up with the conventioneers at the next table, and imagine you're watching the Empire thrash the rebels right outside the window.
The road back down from Cerro Gordo to the dry Owens Lake bed.
An old building in Cerro Gordo.
I think this is the old bunk house in Cerro Gordo. That is the dry owens lake bed many thousands of feet below.
The American Hotel in one of southern California's great ghost towns.
Paul Cloutier has been a member since 5 September 2007 and goes by theorem.
Currently in San Francisco.
Subscriber since December 2007!
I am the publisher of this site, and I enjoy seeing great architecture and traveling in the american west.
You can also find Paul at paulcloutier.net.