| Show - : - : !1 Jack Goodman's Cityview i E5 The Salt Lake Tribune Sunday September 30 1990 - r00- -4 t - I r t - - t 1 4a - - Charleston units were costliest between Denver and coast ' '7 Although Salt Lake City was :firtic village back in March of state's capital city had no :modern apartment buildings largef1"-rmm11sort that were very visible Francisco's Nob Hill on the in Chicago or on New York's IMMIEMEME11111111 Mk Central Park West ' Of course builder Alan Brock-ban- k who died Sept 7 was taking care of the low-cohousing needs of veterans in Rose Park on the west paid to protection But even side of town Smaller developments more important homes Charleston stands atop featuring new medium-price- d were being built on the east side Fault was the matter of earthfrom Bountiful to Holladay And quakes and the fact that Slack Win-bur- n there were to be sure upscale aparta designed as "quake-proof- " ment houses such as the Eagle Gate structure as seemed possible in those Hillcrest the Maryland and a comrather distant days When it was near completion David L Sargent Jr at plex of Covey apartments extending that time a professor of civil engifrpm 1st Avenue to South Temple neering at the University of Utah rebut most were far from new 'All of which one supposes is why ported the big concrete building had Charles A Peterson and Sid H Elia"experienced a remarkably small son began building their very sizable amount of earth settlement" Charleston Apartments on a prestiEngineering students John Rapp gious plot of land at the corner of 5th and Delmar Jensen who had set up instruments in and around the strucSouth and 13th East Originally colture found "practically no measurored a pale shade of green the Laliaped building has been able movement" at the Charleston paitted a gleaming white during the and so informed the decade Otherwise inside or Salt Lake Tribune pkt out: the Charleston has undergone The Charleston' with Peterson's few changes it has retained a certain construction firm reporting building costs of some $15 million was easily Status level among the city's newer apartments — something of a tribute the most expensive apartment house to architect Slack W Winburn Sr as between Denver and the West Coast well as its owners and builders It had and still has 132 units rangit !t With and corner ing from "efficiency" size all the way its extra-wid- e windows the Charleston more than a up to its luxury penthouses on the little resembles outwardly the 1 lth and 12th floors When it was built materials for a central 1Marjory Morningstar" apartments d those tall system were either lacking Thus today's winbuildings on Central Park or West in built in art dows in the one- - twd- - and deco style immediately preceding apartments are still somewhat and following World War II But marred by individual there the resemblance ends since units that protrude from the structure Otherwise the building seems Salt Lake construction methods difas modern as structures 30 or 40 fered markedly Most such structures are supported by steel girders years younger sheathed with brick walls The However when the sizable pale Charleston has nary a girder but is green building opened the twin entry instead the largest reinforced-con4ret- e doors beneath its gleaming canopy at structure of its kind in the area 470 S 13th East the building's tenants had the use of twin high-spee- d ti Its concrete walls and floors were strengthened by the use of fully 850 elevators There was and is a three-leve- l gatblit of reinforcing wire and reinwill rerage to house 90 cars plus an addi- forcing bars As call the 1950 period was one in tional parking strip for another 50 which considerable attention was vehicles on the structure's north 4 44 II e ' 1 12 st !fp 4v tAllti 444 i4111 c:r V' 111 i '1' ' et ' LL ' i- - al ri la 19t the 1 : I ' - ix -- ' 12-sto- side A carpeted lobby enhanced with blond wood veneer a telephone w - a l'3 U ni ti iv twin-towere- ttt comfortable lobby chairs and divans plus a impressed both tenants and Mbune reporter Bob Bernick conWhen the struction workers had completed almost two years of labor the Charlesmail-roo- n i4 19 i multi-residen- it rt' ri ) (10 I? 9 tI 91 ' rv old-time- Hi iii : 7 t so& 07 trE r )111 to 10 P SI' 0 t$ ortr 0 tho p 4 El 101 1 O r m r trt I 4- 1- -- - — -- 4 - 4- 21 i Ik9 x tr ' -- - - - r "t - — V 0 s ti It ?Il ' r ir 4r E 1 — vtk te ' rt If 11 in liwi I 0r a g t rt-- t- ' - ' 4- ---- I To n t INCOMPlIgt2!aiNgiM!i0!:!: 'OtAtteflMang:': ' 'aagat Olepo -- ak p1 clWatrtu in OC OPEN tjt) - - " R 4 : 5'''" il702 A4 - 0 0 - nler" Carved Rosewood Cylinder 4 At 1007:0' 04 - left& wgz e t mA(?va :::::: :: ?izA-4 ::: :::: ::::: :: :: :: :: - 2 44t: (1: ' K s :!: : ::: 01 1Ag (-- - ii I p4 :'' '04-i' 1 '' A:: -- :::: - vH-'' iaol fley 0 icy0!-:e: 7 (::: At' k': frt& I! :i: 400 601t::k ('''') :'!::U::0::::':::: Jill :: :: 1 :: 1 ' A :!' 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A ' 0 p ' 4 4 - ' — 0 s - shes' too 0 ' - rs77 ' ‘ -- ' ' '' ' symphony tickets v : 4 I :-- - - October 27 ' 1 n' D No TA 411' -- A i Season Family Pass $35 III:30 am and 1:00 pm ::::":"":-::"":- Reserved Seats: October 30 "Tricks and Treats" Halloween Concert $2350J':'ii:1:n4n:!i!!i1!:!i8iii!!smi:ii-:!linali- J - J :: :: ::: :" " '''' "" i'' Monday 7:00 'AM :iihiAll Smith'sTik! outlet6:::: Salt 467-599- charge by phone ''bri ::::1"::::L::H:: Kirk Muspratt Conductor Palaoé!!!4'-':11'!!'1-111!1'ii!':':'''':1:1':':':':!-:'::':'::'':1- 6: Concert only 10 COncert and Taste of the Town $35 7:30 pm in conjunction with Taste of the Town (5:30 pm) :: " ::''''' i lfL iv b I -- I TAG Ip 1 Ntkirill514 Produced By United Concerts H:::: :: Call i:::s: "- 7- 1 1 i st 6 ‘ 11 nw Iv t ) r4 vivi t Ailr It - 411 II i ft - ino OFF "Mather Wed ees 467-683- 1 3 r Mondays CLOSED MONDAY lb() MI' : ev t ririe k Vkt& "VIDEO VISIONS" 11 Friday October 26 and Saturday October 27 1990 8:00 pm Capitol Theatre 'woodbury Wik11)111 K1 D‘SA I ' : 2144 South 1100 East 6 TICKET INFO (MIMI 328-106- Nil i 2 ' — t I 11 - i::: cpo (1):)nn no ' ()"-- 0 1(To i4'e Definitely "TOO HOT" Single Tickets $12 I $15 I $25 (Group and students half price) linlart IS at:iii4-41:iiii:i::!!6-- ‘43i i - &I znotiv OFF au "The Haunted Hall" Kirk Muspratt Conductor Children $3 Adult $5 ' th 6 October 13 "BACH: The Baroque Master" Kirk Musprau Conductor Including BACH's Suite No 2 A - SA r' l'it'-- OFF ALL DOWN BEDDING AND PILLOWS BRUCH Scottish Fantasy (conducted by Kirk Muspratt) Mervyns Youth Series it- 11' 1 ::Aiiigai'6IliWiagi:4 1990 AND EUROPEAN WOOL-FILLE- D COTTON- - FILLED MATTRESS PADS j 4 IMMididiag 2-- 90 4 audtlifri ' i:I'i':- ITMUI 15-35c'- fo SILVERSTEIN MUSIC DIRECTOR October 26 & 27 The Kingston Trio Kirk Muspratt Conductor iii - - 1 k til Former members invited to WE INTRODUCE THIS YEAR RUSSIAN BLACK LACQUER BOXES AND WOOD CARVINGS AND AUSTRIAN CRYSTAL FIGURES I(IIIl ' - :11 Nutcrackers Smokers Pyramids Clothing Linen Steins Bells Hats Ornaments and Pins etc mad October 20 Steve Allen Guest Artist Retirement Fund Benefit Concert Joseph Silverstein Conductor - I 0: ( ° rl ate i A ' I - i ! ' - October 5 & 6 Joseph Silverstein Conductor and Violin SCHUMANN Overture to Genovera STRAVINSKY Petrouchka ?" ''' - Symphony Hall 8:00 pm Tickets $9 to $27 students $5 Call 4P ' ! Dr Crawford Gates I!: FINEST EUROPEAN DUALITY 9 ' )0( 4''' K' ANNIVE - 533-NOT- E 4444 :1 GUEST CONDUCTOR 1 ' ' Nv yit 16th December Sunday ii'' EK ' Cill'rriti 4rgiqcp vi"vxi ::: Jill —1 liii ‘TICI 4 IL"0 tg' '''' JOSEPH lt' 1 va JI 0 Saturday December 15th 44::::: ' 4 :E P PRESENTATIONS ii UTAH SYMPHONY '14' 0 i I :f 14 for flowers but not mad enough for diamondstry :: :4::::::::::::::::: it T 1G ipm::: Men :: ' t: :o: ::: t or :!7006'"11'"N ' :: 11110' V 14 Phone for Appointment li October :4 - 11 i ittlilltit SALE N: ttA": A I - 3--5 ::::::::: fitill': :i kil PM Sunday Sept 30th Christ United Methodist Church 2375 East 3300 Sou tk Salt Lake City pg157 k 454e0A1 ' is holding Auditions for the 'Wu 41 ''''i! ::1i! 1 75th Anniversary HAMEL'S MESSIAH ' ' I 1'44 1 11: 1 1 ORATORIO SOCIETY of UTAII Recipient of the Governors Awards in the Arts 1990 011140$01 0 ::::!:1:i:::::::::::::::::::::!':::':::1?' ) 4) 1 Itt '1 Gimp Secretary ::::: ir) z0 '''0''0A''-''':- I ' —Drawing by Jack Goodman War Hand ONIM " '''' ' i1Ati'''' I I f'‘13' - :1:::::::::mm x7 ''' I 1 Pre-Civ- il v: :::':: J longer its original pale green Despite changes Charleston retains a tony air 96 ArIQUE ' ' I 1 t ''' is no OPEN HOUSE FAL !:!!i! j I ‘ s NTIQUEH tat :::::::: Ile! 1 P°:!: 411 ' :::0''f::'': - i 44-- It kc ol I till 14 '111 I r: 4 "I '''I:i —- - li ll i 4 '' 4! H 144'L '::: 41'-'- T':i51111C-Ibri- 714 ! 4 ' - 4- ' " 111 Hst4i:(4"11 'IR Corner windows give structure art deco flavor but concrete building on 13th East trt y - it - 4 7 i t'-t t r: 1: i ''' ' 04- IV' i 4 rr r rr '6 1 r it a ' t Am 44 t i:A A 'Ir''1114t1:11111411111114 g rl r '4 (717'N 101 II 19 z- riw - ' ( i se rt tri- Ili 1 le - P Ill :4424 el til LI rrg ITT p ir il t f'- -- r47 c if frt - se : or'si' - ' 'le Lsr cast pops three-bedroo- !) if 00 rfic Alfred Drake in viewing actor-singone apartment Drake being engaged in one of the summer season musical comedy productions that were given outdoors in the nearby U of U stadium And the theatrical tinues — members of the neer Theatre's "Ain't Misbehavin' " are Charleston tenants this season During those distant years apartment dwellers included Frances B Malouf Max Rosenblatt and or two of other notable have departed the local one theme of inquiry that periodically whenever the Charleston is mentioned concerns that immense tree visible near the llth-stor- y penthouse on the southwest corner For the record there are eight rather plush penthouses on the building's two upper floors some with two some with three bedrooms Again for the record there are barbecue pits as well as lawns and shrubbery way up there with fully 6000 square feet of garden space on the 1 1 th and 5000 square feet of lofty tillable soil on floor 12' Mrs Oma Wagstaff an 1 lth-flopenthouse resident (for fully 35 years) maintains the biggest garden plot but the tall tree is not hers — although she occasionally rakes its leaves out of her own large and airy yard The tree and the penthouse garden in which it stands belongs to Mikhail Boguslavsky a gentleman you can see and hear quite regularly since he is a violist with the Utah Symphony I believe his wife Nina Boguslavsky teaches her native Russian at the university I can't report on who properly rakes the penthouse path but it seems to me doing so would strengthen a violist's bowing arm - 0 or - l str 1:7:4 ton welcomed short-teras well as long-tertenants since it enjoyed (and still enjoys) a rather special re- - rill' )4 iet 1 0 Vincent-Peterso- n non-existe- cif I switchboard ever-inquisiti- fa c( I ge "itti 'A ftose:: '1! i I iv ': t - 'Neil' 1:: '1 ' ' : Le A )-- IT ''c re ) i o d' ' cll113: I t II 1 533-NOT- - E i 41:'''' t' :iiii::: i' Allitillnir wit ' I F ! 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