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Bones

That Guy
Joined
May 22, 2007
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Location
Cedar Rapids, IA
God I am bored.

From my trip to Wisconsin a few weeks back.
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www.houseontherock.com

Infinity room
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Infinity Room and the GF's ba-donk-a-donk
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Pic from the ground of the infinity room
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There are some mighty large rocks in Wisconsin!
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I got one for you. This is part of my 4th block. We went to the homcoming parade downtown last Friday and spotted this fine unit.

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wontwork said:
I got one for you. This is part of my 4th block. We went to the homcoming parade downtown last Friday and spotted this fine unit.

I used to go to school wat Bevill state community college with the owners of that... Tran...lol
they were about 50.. always wore matching hawaiian shirts, cut off blew jean shorts..
made their living promoting amateur wrastlin.... smoked way too much and never missed a class...
Some classy mfckin people...
 
CheapJ7 said:
I used to go to school wat Bevill state community college with the owners of that... Tran...lol
they were about 50.. always wore matching hawaiian shirts, cut off blew jean shorts..
made their living promoting amateur wrastlin.... smoked way too much and never missed a class...
Some classy mfckin people...

Thay did have a wrestling sticker on the back glass.

I can't believe nobody has noticed that it is a Ford van with a Chevy bed and the side doors are made for the rear of the van.
 
wontwork said:
Thay did have a wrestling sticker on the back glass.

I can't believe nobody has noticed that it is a Ford van with a Chevy bed and the side doors are made for the rear of the van.

Didnt it used to be tan... .Ive seen it around, Ive seen a fawkin Celebrity wagon turned tandem axle truck though... we are in Alabama fella's.

laughing1
 
P said:
Didnt it used to be tan... .Ive seen it around, Ive seen a fawkin Celebrity wagon turned tandem axle truck though... we are in Alabama fella's.

laughing1

It is sad to say, but no. There is 2 in the great Walker Co. Alabama my friend.
The tan one is Chevy all the way. That might be their cousin's sister's father's aunt's brother's van that you have seen though.
 
I gotta ask ... what's the deal with the infinity room? It obviously doesn't go to infinity ...

J. J.
 
patooyee said:
I gotta ask ... what's the deal with the infinity room? It obviously doesn't go to infinity ...

J. J.
But it LOOKS like it does. Damn things moves around a lot while walking on it also

View from the roof
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Right, well actually it looks like it goes a lot further than it does and then ends in some trees, at least from the roof, but what I guess i was wondering is why was it built and by who? It doesn't seem like it serves any purpose or anything ...

J. J.
 
patooyee said:
Right, well actually it looks like it goes a lot further than it does and then ends in some trees, at least from the roof, but what I guess i was wondering is why was it built and by who? It doesn't seem like it serves any purpose or anything ...

J. J.
It has as much purpose as these buggies I need on the Intarrrnet all the time. :flipoff1: Built it cuz he could I guess.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_on_the_rock

Background

Both of Jordan's biographers[4][5] relate a story told by Sid Boyum,[6] which places the inspiration for the house in a meeting between Alex Jordan Sr. and Frank Lloyd Wright, at some unspecified time apparently between 1914 and 1923. Jordan Sr. drove with Boyum to Taliesin to show Wright the plans for a building, the Villa Maria in Madison,[7] which Jordan had designed. Jordan worshiped the famous architect and hoped for his approval. Wright looked at the plans and told Jordan "I wouldn't hire you to design a cheese crate or a chicken coop. You're not capable." Fuming, on the drive back on Highway 23, Jordan pointed to a spire of rock and told Boyum "I'm going to put up a Japanese house on one of those pinnacle rocks and advertise it."[8] Balousek says Wright "apparently didn't forget the incident," noting that Wright "complained publicly to Iowa County officials about the house the Jordans were building" and bought a nearby piece of property, "perhaps as a way to get back at Jordan" (but failed to develop it).

http://www.houseontherock.com/

During the 1940's, a man named Alex Jordan discovered a 60-foot chimney of rock in the beautiful Wyoming Valley. It was here he decided to build a house on the sandstone formation called Deer Shelter Rock. Jordan built the house as a weekend retreat and never intended it to be a tourist attraction. However, people kept coming to see the architectural wonder they had heard about. Jordan eventually started asking for 50 cent donations. That was only the beginning. The 14-room house is the original structure of what is now a complex of many buildings, exhibits and garden displays.

Alex was a collector all his life and enjoyed visiting museums; however, he did not want The House on the Rock to be a museum. He intended it to be much more than that. Though parts of the collections could have easily found their way into museums, The House on the Rock is more of a trip through the wild and fantastic imagination of Alex Jordan than a visit to a dusty, lifeless museum.

In December of 1988, Alex sold The House on the Rock to longtime associate Art Donaldson, a collector and a businessman who shared his broad interests. Alex remained at The House on the Rock as Artistic Director until his death on November 6, 1989. Art Donaldson continues to own The House on the Rock and builds on Alex's dream of expanding and entertaining visitors from all over the world. Alex continues to be in his own words, "Present but not voting".
 
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