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Venice owners of Pilot House and Jetty Jack hope to sell beer, wine

HAROLD BUBIL: No 81: Warm Mineral Springs Motel Sarasota County

For 60 years, the motel has served tourists who visit the nearby spring. The 200-foot-deep pond has a nearly constant water temperature of 87 degrees, and Eastern Europeans love it for what they say are the health benefits of swimming, or just floating, in it. Lundy, 95, the eldest surviving member of the “Sarasota school” group of modernist architects, only practiced here for less than a decade, running an office from 1954 to 1960. By the time he moved his office to New York, Lundy was already a local architectural legend. In those few golden years of the 1950s, when it seemed that all the possibilities and promise of postwar architecture were displayed between the Atlantic and the Pacific, Lundy helped Sarasota gain the world’s attention as a hotspot of progressive design.

FLORIDA BUILDINGS I LOVE: No 78: Venice Beach Pavilion, 1964, Venice

FLORIDA BUILDINGS I LOVE: No. 78: Venice Beach Pavilion, 1964, Venice 101 The Esplanade. Cyril Tucker, architect; William Lindh, engineer Harold Bubil This week, we head south less than two miles to the “island” of Venice. Its beach may be known for sharks’ teeth, but it has a pretty sharp piece of architecture, too, in its shading pavilion. The 1964 pavilion was designed by architect Cyril Tucker. Engineer William Lindh rhymes with “wind” gets at least half of the credit, as the pavilion’s roof has stayed in place through a progression of tropical storms over the ensuing 54 years. The shape of the roof is a hyperbolic paraboloid. It looks like a kite ready to take flight, but Mr. Lindh has taken care of that.

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