Marcus St., Eastlund Concrete, 2022

I know you’re thinking that I’m a little early for a change, but actually, I’m a lot late. Sorry about that. It’s finals week, also known as crunch time for professors. Anyway, here’s a couple of stamps from the entrance to an alleyway that runs from Marcus to Elizabeth Street, between Clemens and Fairview.

This one is from the approach to the alleyway. I had to scrape dirt away from it with my foot.
The entrance to the alleyway and the sidewalk that it crosses were evidently done at the same time.
This stamp is from the sidewalk part. The dirt is currently doing a very nice job of making the letters pop.

Washington Rd., Mt. Pleasant, graffiti, 1964

There are a few little churches which, while obviously not formally affiliated with CMU, are tucked surprisingly tightly into campus near the building where I work. They are all small, low-slung, modern-looking buildings. It was outside one of them, Christ the King Lutheran Chapel, that I found this sidewalk graffiti.

I think it reads “G.H. + P.K. Nov. 9 1964” although I am not confident about the second set of initials. The year makes sense as likely being when the sidewalk was first constructed. According to Christ the King’s “About Us” page, the chapel was dedicated in 1966.

Clifford St., DPW, 1941

I found a pair of diagonal Lansing DPW stamps on either corner of a driveway apron, facing the street, on the east side of Clifford Street between Elizabeth and Fuller. Given how often I walk around this block and my particular interest in collecting diagonal stamps, I’m a little surprised I haven’t noticed them before. They are very faint – one of them was too faint to show up in a photograph.

Clifford St., unsigned, 1992

Here’s a mysterious date marking from the east side of Clifford Street between Kalamazoo and Marcus. The typeface and corner placement strongly suggest it was done by the BWL, but they usually stamped their name into the lower left corner of the same slab, so I’m not sure why it is absent here. Possibly the sidewalk used to be wider.

Sorry for the blurry photo; I’m still getting used to my new phone.

Clifton Ave., Cioffi Construction, 2021

Sorry for the unplanned absence; I spend Easter with family and that got me behind in a way that spilled into the week. Speaking of Easter, on the Saturday before, I walked in the Hippity Hop 5K held at Potter Park Zoo. The course is usually on the River Trail, but much of the Trail was flooded this year so they had to figure out an alternate route. They ended up having us walk out of Potter Park on the entrance drive and then head into the nearby Sycamore Park neighborhood. Although I was walking in the street along with everyone else, I couldn’t help noticing a lot of new-looking sidewalk, with stamps, scattered around the neighborhood. Eventually I decided I had to know whether it was a contractor I’ve seen before, so I jumped out of the flow of race traffic onto the sidewalk to see and was rewarded with a contractor name I didn’t recognize. I stopped to take photos at the cost of probably 30 seconds of finishing time

The only Cioffi Construction I can find is based in Akron, and I can’t imagine that one would be doing work in metro Lansing. The stamp uses a template that’s very familiar to me as many contractors in the 2010s and 20s have used it, along with the City of Lansing Operations and Maintenance division. This particular stamp is at the north corner of Clifton and Harding, but there are a lot of other Cioffi stamps in the vicinity that I assume are all connected with the same round of sidewalk replacement.

Other racers round the corner as I take the photo.

Easter: the best holiday for sidewalks?

Easter might be the best holiday for sidewalk aficionados. Christmas makes for the prettiest walks, but there’s the complication of the sidewalks too often being under snow or worse, covered in hazardous ice. Easter, though, more or less marks the end of serious snow here in Michigan, and the start of good city walking weather. Now I’m back to just the usual uneven sidewalks to cause falls.

All this is to say I am taking a short break from sidewalk blogging and will be back as usual on Monday. Happy Easter and happy spring!

Vine St., KLM Lum graffiti, undated

I found this neat, unobtrusive graffiti on the south side of Vine Street between Ferguson and Custer. It’s alongside a house that faces Custer. I initially speculated that it was two sets of initials from two people in the same family, with a last name starting with M.

Checking the property records online, however, I found that in 2009 the house was sold by someone with the last name Lum. So either someone in the house was named K.L.M. Lum, or KLM were the leading initials of three members of the house (perhaps the children). The owner’s name I see in the records did not start with K, L, or M.

S. Huron St., Ypsilanti, illegible, 2006

I found this one outside a hotel where I went to a convention last weekend, the Marriott at Eagle Crest in Ypsilanti, off South Huron Street and James L. Hart Parkway. Unfortunately, the contractor name is illegible. It is [something] Concrete, and the style is extremely similar to the Audia Concrete stamps from the same year that I have found in Lansing. Audia is located in Milford, not too far from Ypsilanti, but I am pretty sure this is not them, because I thought I could make out an F in the otherwise illegible name. It is probably another contractor who bought their stamp from the same supplier.

Unfortunately I could not find another stamp in the expanse of concrete in front of the hotel so this one will have to remain a mystery.

E. Michigan Ave., […]oleum, 1927?

Wet pavement and streetlights combined to give me an especially good look at this half-lost stamp. It’s from the north side of East Michigan Avenue between Fairview and Magnolia, in front of the MetroPCS store. When I first photographed it back in 2020, I had to peel away a sod layer to see to the edge of the hacked-off slab, but thanks to my efforts at that time it is still all as visible as it can get. The reason for the update – besides that it’s an especially good look at it – is that I am now quite confident in the date being 1927. The curve of the penultimate numeral does not make sense for anything other than a 2.