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Matt Blaze
Matt Blaze
@mattblaze@federate.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

Washington ("Hinckley") Hilton, Washington, DC, 2023.

All the pixels, but please honor the "do not disturb" signs, at https://www.flickr.com/photos/mattblaze/53007102796

#photography

An eleven story midcentury modernist / brutalist hotel building. It has a curved facade and a plaza/driveway in front. It is night, and lights are visible in some of windows.
An eleven story midcentury modernist / brutalist hotel building. It has a curved facade and a plaza/driveway in front. It is night, and lights are visible in some of windows.
An eleven story midcentury modernist / brutalist hotel building. It has a curved facade and a plaza/driveway in front. It is night, and lights are visible in some of windows.
Flickr

Washington Hilton, 2023

Washington, DC 28 June 2023 The Washington Hilton hotel, in the Kalorama neighborhood, opened in 1965. A classic modernist concrete slab Brutalist design, the curved facades and winged canopies evoke Eero Saarinen's airport terminals. But in fact, the designer was William Tabler, who served as the hotel chain's favored architect during its mid-century building boom. The hotel has famously hosted a number of prominent events, including the White House Correspondents Association Dinner, the National Prayer Breakfast, the Shmoocon hacker conference, and the assassination attempt on President Reagan, the latter giving rise to its local nickname, the Hinckley Hilton. Rodenstoock 32mm/4.0 HR Digaron-W lens (@f/6.3). Phase One IQ4-150 digital back (@ ISO 50). Phase One XT (15 sec). Stitched composite of two shifted images. No emulsions were harmed in the making of this image. P0003032
#photography
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Anthony Stevens
Anthony Stevens
@AnthonyStevens@techhub.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

@mattblaze Southwest of DC there is a Hilton with an interesting facade. At Hilton Alexandria Mark Center, this building looks like a giant dollar sign, facing DC. I took this image in 2005.

A tall, Hilton Hotel featuring glass walls faces DC with offset floors arranged so it looks like a giant dollar sign.
A tall, Hilton Hotel featuring glass walls faces DC with offset floors arranged so it looks like a giant dollar sign.
A tall, Hilton Hotel featuring glass walls faces DC with offset floors arranged so it looks like a giant dollar sign.
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Brent Cook
Brent Cook
@busterb@infosec.exchange  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

@mattblaze

BTW, if you don't follow Matt's 'All the pixels' links, give it a try. Seeing all detailed stains and cracks in the surface of the concrete, looking in all the windows for something unusual, the dealer tags from PA on an train of school busses, all bring it to life for me.

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Matt Blaze
Matt Blaze
@mattblaze@federate.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

This is a fairly conventional architectural composition, emphasizing the curved facade. To get a high resolution capture of the wide structure, this was made as a stitched composite of two captures with the Rodenstock 32mm/4.0 HR Digaron-W lens. The Phase One back was shifted left and right by about 12mm.

By using shift movements at a fixed perspective, the two captures can be stitched directly together into a panorama without needing to transform the frame geometry (as you would with panning).

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Matt Blaze
Matt Blaze
@mattblaze@federate.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

The result here is about 170MP in 16:9 format, which is sufficient for very large prints that retain a great deal of detail (I've printed this at 6 feet wide).

Mid-Century Modernist architecture, and Brutalism in particular, is easy to dismiss as being superficially lifeless and uninteresting, but at its best (and with the right eye) these buildings can be seen as sculptures in the landscape. I don't always appreciate them, but they're often more interesting than they first seem.

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Matt Blaze
Matt Blaze
@mattblaze@federate.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

The Washington Hilton, completed 1965, was designed by architect William Tabler. It's notable not only for its distinctive exterior, but also for the prominent events hosted there. The hotel is or has been home to the White House Correspondents Association Dinner, the National Prayer Breakfast, the Shmoocon conference, and the 1981 assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan, among many other things.

It has extensive back-of-house facilities and security features to accommodate high profile VIPs.

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Matt Blaze
Matt Blaze
@mattblaze@federate.social  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

Based on the style and period, you might guess this was a minor work of Eero Saarinen's (it shares many design elements with his arirport terminals of the same era). But, in fact, the architect was the less well known William Tabler, who had many commissions from Hilton. This was one of Tabler's most distinctive hotels, I think.

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