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Houston's Beer Can House to Be Restored

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by BobFinn*, Mar 17, 2005.

  1. BobFinn*

    BobFinn* Member

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    Houston's Beer Can House to Be Restored
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Published: March 17, 2005


    Filed at 2:21 p.m. ET

    HOUSTON (AP) -- An art endowment will keep a Houston home decorated with thousands of flattened beer cans from facing its last call.

    Beer-lover John Milkovisch attached the cans to his house over a 20-year period as an alternative to more traditional home repair. He also made beer can fences and garlands to hang from his roof.

    The home was becoming a nationally celebrated folk-art site when the Southern Pacific upholsterer died in 1988 at 75, but has suffered years of decline. Now, with a $125,000 Houston Endowment grant to the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art, efforts to restore the home are on the fast track.

    The house will be open for tours after repair and restoration is complete, said Susanne Theis, executive director of the Orange Show, which bought the house in 2001.

    ``The Beer Can House represents the sort of idiosyncratic individualism that Houstonians and Texans pride themselves on,'' said Emily Todd, the endowment's grant officer.

    Family members said Milkovisch started covering his house with flattened beer cans so he wouldn't have to paint. He secretly liked the notice his home received but seemed surprised that it was thought of as a work of art.

    The Orange Show is looking for an architect to trace the home's evolution so it can be represented at its artistic peak. The home will then be cleaned, repaired and restored.

    ``Some things have just been lost over time,'' Theis said.

    An arch of beer-can tops and bottoms once reached across the driveway and there once was a curtain of pop tops on the south side of the home.

    The house is generally in good repair, but steel parts of the structure have rusted and aluminum parts have oxidized.

    Can collectors have already donated vintage cans to help in the restoration, and brewers may be asked to reproduce discontinued cans.

    New development in the neighborhood has blocked sunlight and dulled a once-sparkling fence studded with colored glass marbles. There are plans to install lighting to brighten up the fence and to add a vine-covered trellis to replace trees that were removed.
     
  2. Lil Pun

    Lil Pun Member

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    Where can I find a pic?
     
  3. BobFinn*

    BobFinn* Member

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    Article is from the New York Times, no picture.
     
  4. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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  5. Lil Pun

    Lil Pun Member

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    That does look impressive. Didn't some guy in Florida build a monumental compound out of coral?
     
  6. Vengeance

    Vengeance Member

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    I've been meaning to go there for a while now . . .

    The Orange Show is neat too. Definitely worth checking out!
     
  7. Saint Louis

    Saint Louis Member

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    My grandmother used to live in the 400 block of Malone. As a kid I always joked that the marbles he put in the fence and the concrete in the front yard were from his head. He didn't lose his marbles, just left them in the front yard. He had the beer gut that made you think he actually drank all of the beer in the cans that he used on the house.
     
  8. esse

    esse Member

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    ya gotta love that throw away money from the rich.

    God Bless Oshmans and God bless all the rich people that keep us artist scrubs eating crackers and cheese with the best of them all.
     
  9. rimbaud

    rimbaud Member
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    I wonder who they will get to restore it. I doubt they will get a real conservator so maybe United Metalsmiths or something. It will be a tedious task, though.
     

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