Tag Archives: Le Corbusier

New Story: Hogan’s Creek Tower

Click below for this week’s story, or navigate the city through the search bar or the direction buttons at the top of the page:

Who were they, these women in these earliest photographs? Who called this tower their “poor man’s penthouse”? Opened in 1976, Hogan’s Creek Tower, designed by architect Ted Pappas, is one of Jacksonville’s best examples of Brutalism. Like any community, it has its stories. Like the resident who wandered away and spent his 100th Christmas meandering for 17 hours across the city.

Revisiting Jacksonville’s Trisect, Public Art Milestone

Click below for this week’s story, or navigate the city through the search bar or the direction buttons at the top of the page:

It was the first piece of public art in Jacksonville in 50 years. The city seemed hostile. It stood before public housing, not in a public park in a tony neighborhood. Jax roasted it, but the elderly residents in architect Ted Pappas’s new tower behind it loved it. Almost 50 years later, sculptor Carl Andree Davidt’s Trisect sculpture still interrogates the city.