E. Bellows St., Mt. Pleasant, Kastle Const., 1994

Mount Pleasant has few sidewalk stamps, but I found this one on a curb cut on Bellows Street, at the northwest corner of Bellows and South University. There are several others like it nearby.

The building here, now vacant, was SBX (the Student Book Exchange) until 2018. I miss the days of independent college bookstores. CMU doesn’t have any now and at the rate they’re pushing “Inclusive Access” (a monopolizing opt-out program that automatically charges students for a lousy online copy of a book) their official University bookstore will soon just be a clothing and tchotchke shop. Nearby this abandoned store are several other abandoned storefronts that used to serve CMU students. It is probably not a coincidence that CMU’s student population is around half what it was in 2014.

I can’t tell you much about Kastle Construction of Central Michigan except that they apparently used to be located on Commerce Drive in Mount Pleasant and no longer appear to be in business. I appreciate their leaving behind some stamps for me.

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.

Forgotten Passage, Mt. Pleasant

Here is one last entry from a recent walk in Mount Pleasant. I was walking around the subdivision southwest of Central Michigan University when I saw an unexplained curb cut. There are no sidewalks here, so it looks like a driveway apron, but perhaps narrower. I’m fascinated by quasi-secret or neglected passages, so I took photos of it, but forgot to note where it was located. It was somewhere around Glen or Highland or Crescent Street, I think.

The autumn leaf cover made it hard to see much, but it appeared not to have been used in a long time, if ever. I would have thought it was just a spot where they put in a cut for possible future development that didn’t happen, except that it was just possible to make out a couple of long wooden beams like railroad ties that might have originally served as edging to a path. The path – if it is one – has no obvious place to go and just disappears in the woods.

The closest house is this aggressively modern one to the right, though they don’t have any obvious connection to each other.

S. Washington St., Mt. Pleasant, Lakeshore Construction, 2019

This one is from one of my walks near my office in Mount Pleasant. It’s in front of the North Art Studio, a quite distinctive-looking building, on the South Washington Street side of the building. Both sides of the corner here at Preston and Washington has some new sidewalk. I have run into Lakeshore Construction stamps before, on other works around work. There aren’t many stamps around Mount Pleasant, so I’ll take what I can get.

S. Washington St. (Mt. Pleasant) Snow Melt System

This is another Mount Pleasant digression, an advertisement of the heated sidewalk in front of Anspach Hall on Central Michigan University’s campus, on the east side of South Washington Street between Library Drive and Ottawa Court. I see this stamp all the time on my way in and out from work, and I like the look of the typeface. It’s a very 1970s font, although I believe this was installed during Anspach’s renovation in the 2010s.

W. Preston St., Metropolitan Block bricks, Mt. Pleasant

This is another sidewalk-adjacent and Lansing-non-adjacent entry. There is a one-room schoolhouse, the Bohannon School, on the southwest corner of West Campus Drive and West Preston Street, close to the building where I work at Central Michigan University. I’ve seen it many times but never walked up to it, so on a recent walk I did. I was immediately charmed by the brick front walk, particularly the old-looking embossing on the bricks.

The front walk on the Preston side of the school.

The schoolhouse was built in 1901 but only moved here for restoration in 1970, so I’m not sure why the bricks look quite so old, unless they moved the bricks with it. A quick search lets me know that Metropolitan bricks are a favorite of brick enthusiasts. Here is an entry about them from a blog called Brickfrog (tagline: “All brick, all the time”). Sidewalk fan blog: meet brick fan blog. While this is my first foray into pictures of bricks, Brickfrog already has a few entries about sidewalk markers. Brickfrog’s sidewalk markers are from the Boston area, and are of a kind unknown in Lansing: metal plaques actually set into the concrete. I have seen pictures of these in a few big cities, but have never seen one myself.

A lot of the bricks have been swallowed by the grass over the years.

The Metropolitan Block Co. dates back to 1866 and produced a lot of the country’s street paving bricks starting in the 1890s. They were, and still are, in Canton, Ohio. They currently call themselves Metrobrick. Amusingly, they manufacture at least two different varieties of bricks that are pre-distressed in order to make them look old, an attempt to avoid the problem that brand-new bricks always look too perfect and thus fake.

A look at the schoolhouse from Preston.

Watson Rd. (Mt. Pleasant), Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. manhole cover

This is nearby the sidewalk stamp featured in the previous blog entry, and was taken on the same walk near my work in Mount Pleasant. It’s on the west side of Watson Road between Preston and Crescent. It got my attention especially because my grandfather had a long and distinguished career with Michigan Consolidated Gas Company in Ann Arbor and Detroit.

As with the Bell System cover, this one bears a name no longer in use. MichCon, as it was commonly known, merged with DTE Energy (or as I knew it when I was young, Detroit Edison) in 2001, and in 2013 its name changed to DTE Gas.

Based on warning markings on it, the pipe seems to be a vent of some kind for the gas utility.

Watson Rd. (Mt. Pleasant), Lakeshore Construction, 2019

With apologies to those who are here only for Lansing sidewalks, I have been dabbling in some Mount Pleasant sidewalk exploration because I have started taking my daily walks up at work some days. It’s been slim pickings, with very few stamps that I have found near work, mostly Eastlund Concrete. I was pleased to finally run across one for a contractor I haven’t seen before, Lakeshore Construction. The stamp is on the west side of Watson Road between Preston Street and Crescent Drive.

The stamp is a familiar style, a modular format seen in a lot of stamps from the last decade or so. I can tell that Lakeshore Construction is a contractor after my own heart. How do I know? Because their web site’s main image is a closeup of their stamp! The site describes them thusly:

Lakeshore Construction is a full service construction and concrete company specializing in stamped concrete, decorative walkways and patios, driveways, poured concrete walls and foundations. Lakeshore Construction started in 2016 servicing the Mid-Michigan area.

S. Washington St., Mt. Pleasant, Eastlund Concrete, 2008

I live in Lansing but work in Mount Pleasant. I’ve digressed from metro Lansing before to post some stamps from Albion, where my parents live, but haven’t done any from Mount Pleasant. So, while taking my lunch break walk today, I decided to see what I could find.

The southern stamp.

I walked probably a mile along South Washington Street before I finally found any stamps at all. I am going to assume Mount Pleasant has no ordinance requiring sidewalk stamping. I did eventually find a pair of stamps bookending a long stretch on the east side of Washington between Gaylord and May. Eastlund Concrete gets around: they are also one of the only stamps I have been able to find near my parents’ house in Albion, as well as showing up frequently in Lansing. They’re based in Holt, south of Lansing, making Mt. Pleasant a pretty good hike for them. They evidently are also pretty consistent stampers, since it appears that stamping sidewalks is uncommon in both Albion and Mount Pleasant.

The southern stamp in context (at bottom).
The northern stamp, looking back south.