Not a lot of architecture here, but I like the picture. The Coke machines remind me of when I was a kid and we (neighborhood kids) would stop at the gas station for a soda while walking home.
The Gulf station had the traditional Coke machine and the Shell station across the street had the more modern Pepsi machine. This place has both, something that wouldn't fly these days. Along side the machine in the pic is the crates for the empties... If you walked away with a soda, you were supposed to give the guy in the station the deposit (IIRC 2 cents) and none of us had any more money after buying the soda (10 cents) so we would drink the soda there and put the empty in the rack like good kids.
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No architecture here either. Just memories.
I know the feeling. Our neighborhood station had "Nehi" and "Orange Crush" machines. Just two short blocks up the street from my elementary school. Loved that place.
The Nehi and Crush machines were inside, were horizontal boxes, lids on the top, and after you put your dime in, you'd slide the bottle to one side, then pull it up to get it out
A rite of passage growing up was getting the strength to do it myself .. not have Mom or Dad to it. Somewhere about third grade I became a "man" -- but still was leaving skin behind on the bottle caps for a couple more grade levels.
We have family pics (my Dad's 1965 Olds 98, one of his business trucks) from mid 1960's at location below. Couldnt find them unfortunately.
That building no longer resembles as gas station IF you didnt know it was one 60 years ago. Little office door on right with a skinny little window, and two bays bricked over on left.
Where the red shed is, there used to be some other building -- long gone it would appear. on the right, there was a bullpen of stuff needing repair.
Anyway, changing geography, I did find this novelty architectural gem looking for Nehi-selling gas stations.
1924, the world's largest bottle, Opelika AL.
Gas station and bottle are long gone (since 1936), but in its day it got a lot of publicity. That definitely is a Nehi bottle design and surface features..
source:
The Bottle, Alabama - Wikipedia