One of the neat things this thread has revealed to me is now many places in America that are "fossils" of the "automobile-ization" of the world. These buildings. Specialized in nature -- representing the replacement of the horse for the "horseless carriage" -- they appear to be on the way to extinction.
That's another thread ..
Anyway, any 1,500 sq. ft (~50x30) six-sided "hexangular", corner lot building, no matter what it looks like today, may have been one of these cool, old gas stations. An example
Built ~1935-1940, streamline moderne corporate
Gulf Station, Old Layette at Main Street, Lexington KY.
Interesting "human interest" local, news story. Fella moves his restaurant, into a former Subway, starts to remodel it, then finds the remnants of his gas station history.
I dig its still there, but bummin' that it, and so many thousands of buildings like it, bear little resemblance to what they were.
Yeah, I know things go obsolete, new owners need different features, the economics may favor remodeling over raze/rebuild, etc. Guess I wish - the hobbyist in me - the old stuff could live on more like they wereintended to look when built.
The finished product, after new owner and local historians dug up the history, still left me a little disappointed more of the old building was not recovered.
Long as the new owner has a thriving business is what really matters.
source:
Lexington restaurant owner uncovers Lexington history in new location
circa: 1940's
2012 - when it was a Subway
About 2020, before remodeling was complete.
Today, via Google, the finished new restaurant,