Interior Casino Décor | Themed Casino Area | Interior Casino Remodel | Casino Card Room Upgrade | Gaming Floor Décor | Asian Card Room | Muckleshoot Casino
Image by I-5 Design & Manufacture
At the Muckleshoot Casino located in Shelton Washington, I-5 Design and Manufacture upgraded the Asian Card Room. The entry to the card room is flanked with two large specialty metal columns which house custom acrylic light fixtures with decorative louvers on top. Click here to see more examples of casino theming
Old State House-Window Case by Phil Manker
Image by Phil Manker
One of a series of 8 cases that mirror the window openings in the room hold many object from the Revolutionary War.
Design/ Production of murals + furniture + museum exhibits + retail displays + signage + light fixtures + architectural details
philmanker@comcast.net
philmanker.com/index.php
Boston
617-291-8584
Charleston, King Street
Image by hdes.copeland
Example of c.1930 traditional lighting pole made of aggregate concrete. These poles were designed to support a variety of street lighting fixtures from late 19th century traditional glass urn sconces to late 20th century mercury vapor cobra lamps. Durable, with self contained housing for interchangeable wiring, these inexpensive earth-friendly and unobtrusive utility poles are being replaced. The new poles are expensive, fragile and with fake pedistals designed more in scale for a grand boulevard, not a five foot wide side walk in a city with a medival street plan.
Photo and Text Posted: February 2008
Text Revised: July 2009
Copyrights Reserved: hdescopeland
Charleston, Meeting Street
Image by hdes.copeland
This is what is replacing the c.1930 traditional lighting pole made of aggregate concrete. The old poles were designed to support a variety of street lighting fixtures from late 19th century traditional glass urn sconces to late 20th century mercury vapor cobra lamps. Durable, with self contained housing for interchangeable wiring, these inexpensive earth-friendly and unobtrusive utility poles are being replaced. The new poles are expensive, fragile and with fake pedistals designed more in scale for a grand boulevards, not a five foot wide side walk in a city with a medival street plan. Photo taken in 2004.
Photo and Text Posted: February 2008
Text Revised: 1 August 2010
Copyrights Reserved: hdescopeland
2347311-3 Forest Grove Dr Dallas Built: 1969
Image by MidCentArc
Architect: Pedro Aguirre
The fifteen-foot drop from the back to the front of the house created a unique design opportunity for Architect Pedro Aguirre (owner of Aguirre Corporation.) A circular driveway ducks under the second story main floor, while a water fountain trickles down the entry way wall to greet guests on the bottom floor. Insider Marketing owners and homeowners Ellen and Steve Miller have preserved and restored the original floor plan, case lighting fixtures, doorknobs, stucco ceilings, cabinetry and trim detail that repeat throughout the home. Original artwork is found throughout the home. Vast plate glass windows give views to lush gardens. Bedrooms open to private patios and a shared courtyard. Aguirre recalls this 1969 home as “the best home he ever did” and hopes one day to live in it himself. It was also his last before shifting his focus to commercial design.
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