Elvin Ct., end of the sidewalk

File this under “curiosities.” This is the northern terminus of the sidewalk on the east side of Elvin Court. Ahead is the Armory.

What makes this a curiosity is that the sidewalk ends mid-lot without any apparent reasoning behind it. On the west side, the sidewalk ends at the end of the last house’s lot, providing a de facto path into the Armory grounds. Here, though, it ends in front of the house, but not at the front door (which is on the south side of the house). Why did they say “this far, and no farther”? Usually if a sidewalk doesn’t go to the end of the block, it ends at someone’s front walk.

There is another curiosity on Elvin Court, which it shares with Horton Street one block east. The street numbers on the northernmost end go up to 253 instead of topping out at 237 which is normal for a Lansing block. This is a consequence of the fact that the 200 block actually extends past Vine Street, which is usually the border between the 200 and 300 block. Although Vine doesn’t cross Elvin, the invisible extended line of absent cross streets is still usually taken to demarcate blocks and the house numbers change accordingly. But on Elvin and Horton, the 200 block continues north of this invisible line. If one were to walk due east from Horton’s 200 block, one would end up on the 300 block of Clemens. Most of the house numbering in Lansing is so satisfyingly orderly that I’m always a bit affronted when I find the odd exceptions.

Leslie St., sidewalk split

No stamp here, just an oddity. The sidewalk at the southwest corner of Leslie and Malcolm X Streets splits. What is presumably the original sidewalk heads inconveniently away from the intersection, so a new strip (asphalt, not proper sidewalk) has been added that better follows the curve of Malcolm X.

I assume that the concrete sidewalk follows the original alignment of Malcolm X, when it was Main Street, and before it got moved around during the construction of I-496. The house directly across Leslie, which the concrete sidewalk seems to aim at, was only built in 2005.

This isn’t the only oddity in the vicinity. The nearby houses violate my sense of orderliness, as they don’t follow Lansing’s code for house numbering (which is usually very well observed). For some reason, house numbers to the south jump abruptly from 910 to 948. Blocks usually top out at 37.