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California crazy

California crazy

by Jim Heimann, J. Heimann, R. Georges

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At the dawn of the automobile age, Americans' predilection for wanderlust prompted a new wave of inventive entrepreneurs to cater to this new mode of transportation. Starting in the 1920s, attention-grabbing buildings began to appear that would draw in passing drivers for snacks, provisions, souvenirs, or a quick meal. The architectural establishment of the day dismissed these roadside buildings as "monstrosities."
Categories:
["Architecture" "Architecture Modern" "California" "Modern Architecture" "Restaurants" "Restaurants lunch rooms" "Roadside architecture" "Vernacular architecture" "History" "U.S. Architecture - South" "Photography" "20th Century Architecture" "Public Commercial or Industrial Buildings" "General" "Architecture / General" "History of art & design styles: from c 1900 -" "20th century" "Architecture united states" "California description and travel"]

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