People On This Group Are Laughing At These 30 Buildings Attempting To Hide Their Previous Purpose
Just like the clothes and accessories we choose to wear define us in subtle ways, buildings can be figured out in the way they are built and decorated.
It all boils down to what is traditionally associated with the structure—say, what does a McDonald’s typically look like, and can you strip it of its branding to see the same iconic elements to still see the McDonaldishness of it?
This is exactly what this online group is all about—identifying and pointing out how buildings aren’t fooling anyone, even if their purpose is very different.
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Señior Colonel
Walgreens That Used To Be A Historic Bank. Chicago, Il
Library In An Old Supermarket
So, there’s a subreddit called r/NotFoolingAnybody that serves as Reddit’s dedicated community of building spotters with a twist. The twist being recycled retail buildings that were obviously something different (and often in ways that still allow folks to determine its origins—consider all the McD buildings around as proof).
Pizza Hut Turned Urgent Care
This Trader Joe's In Media, Pennsylvania, Used To Be An Armoury For The Pennsylvania National Guard
Former Bank, Now KFC. Owners Call It The Crystal Bucket. (Corning, NY Area)
The group is home to 33,000 members, spotting oddly familiar buildings on the daily, and the subreddit is ranked in the top 3% of Reddit.
To get sidetracked for a moment, you’d think that buildings are supposed to universally provide shelter and living quarters for people. However, it’s quite interesting to see that there are several reasons why they mostly differ.
Urban Krag Climbing Center, Dayton Oh
Taco Bell Turned Into Law Offices
Tim Hortons And Circle K (Toronto, On)
There’s a concept of site-specific architecture, which essentially means that a building or a structure is of a time and of a place.
It is essentially designed to respond and describe the physical and metaphysical contexts of where it’s at. This can include everything from the specifics of the location to what materials are available to what building codes dictate its characteristics.
Gay Bar In Cedar Rapids Used To Be A McDonald's
Big Woody’s (Bethlehem, Pa) Just Rolling With The Former Hollywood Video Signage
There's an old Hollywood video in my town that kept the signage and is now Hollywood Antiques
Apple Store In An Old Theatre, Los Angeles
The ultimate reason as to why buildings differ is exactly that—the reason it is being built in the first place.
Depending on its purpose, buildings can assume appropriately practical shapes and sizes, catering to the specific needs of that particular purpose.
Old Toysrus Is Now The Biggest Liquor Store I’ve Ever Seen! Includes A Bar. Fun For Kids Turned Fun For Adults. (Omaha, Ne)
Love how they kept the entrance sign letters in toys-r-us style
This "Starbucks" With Extra Pickup Lanes. So Convenient
Sears Store At My Mall Was Turned Into A Fake Mega Church For A TV Show
Say your building needs to serve a residential purpose. These will be primarily designed around factors like safety and accessibility. They will be built in places that have good pedestrian and vehicular logistics, with various utilities and services readily available, or at the very least easily realizable. That’s also the reason why many residential buildings are often high and space-conscious.
Value Village Looking Slick In A Former Best Buy
So Why Does A Hair Salon Need Three Drive-Through Lanes? (Former Bank)
Former Wal-Mart Now Board Of Education
The same can be said about industrial buildings. Depending on the industry and the functions and equipment that they will house, the buildings will be of appropriate size, shape and location. These are often found further away from populated areas, but are also boring to look at—it’s all for practicality and affordability. It’s cheaper that way, but also what if something explodes? That has to be easy to fix, all the while appropriate to contain it.
Former KFC, Broken Arrow, Ok
Ihop Now An International House Of Prayer
Former Pizza Hut - Now La Piñata Mexican Grill, Childersburg Alabama
And then we have commercials which, among other things, have a huge focus on purposeful, targeted aesthetic. It has to represent the commerce that is happening there and, considering that the design can change drastically at any point, making it flexible is definitely a bonus.
Pretzelmaker, Now Avis/Budget Rental (North Little Rock, Ar)
I wonder if there is still a faint scent of pretzels still in the air or if your brain would just trick you into thinking you smelled pretzels baking
Last Year This Was A Jack In The Box
Looks better. They are making one near my house to a Dutch brothers coffee shop.
Former Pizza Hut Now An Asian Vegan Restaurant (Pinellas Park, Fl)
And, so, sometimes you have very distinct, single-floor buildings with a “cap” for a roof, surrounded in concrete nothingness which served as a parking lot and drive-through before it became an adult entertainment club. Or something. But we all know that there was either a clown or a king dining there on the regular.
CVS Pharmacy Used To Be A Theatre, East Los Angeles, Ca
Former Arby’s In Norfolk, Virginia
Domino's Used To Be A KFC, Albert Lea, Minnesota
While these are broad categories, there are more niche purposes for buildings that seem like categories of their own.
Consider KWK Promes’ “Safe House”, for instance. While it looks like a bomb shelter, it kinda sorta is as its purpose is to be a zombie bunker.
Or that one fake house in the city of Raleigh in North Carolina that is only a shell of a house, but actually hides the city’s pumping station. The only weird thing about it is that it doesn’t have a driveway or walkway.
Planet Fitness In A Former Circuit City. Phoenix, Az
Former Bk Converted To Chinese Drive Thru. Didn’t Change A Thing Except Signage
"Chick & Burger" In A Former Chick-Fil-A At The Former Virginia Center Commons Mall
For all the silly "censorship" (hint: it's obvious for a reason), I would really like to thank bored panda for allowing me to say what is really on my mind. No snark. It's surprising what you can get away with saying, if you really mean it.
r/notfoolinganyone a sub for people to act like teenagers hearing “dirty” words but applying the mentality to buildings that got a slap of rebrand to indicate the current business in residence. “Fnarr, fnarr, they said KFC but WE can still tell it was a bank”. Do these morons honestly believe most businesses waste even a moment’s energy on “OMG, we should rip the entire building down and rebuild because someone might realize it used to be a supermarket but we use it as a library!”
This is the best kind of recycling. Re-use is cheaper and so much better for the environment. I especially love seeing gorgeous old buildings repurposed and still in use.
One that deserves to be here is the Villa Theater /Adibs Rug Gallery in Salt Lake City. (Not that it's trying to hide it's former purpose, and I'm really glad it's been preserved.)
Manchester, Connecticut has a superior court building that uses to be a Marshall's.
Glad to see repurposed buildings instead of being torn down. Ecologically better.
We have so many of these in my city! Grand old buildings in highly embellished styles that are too expensive to build anymore are preserved and continued to be used. The Apple Store was a former Carnegie library and also former home of the historic society, the fireman's insurance building with the gold dome is a Starbucks, and an old downtown bank with gilding, marble pillars, etc is now a restaurant (a nicer one than the brew pub that used to be there for years).
We have a local ice cream place in what used to be an old timey movie theater.
I was just in New York City for a school trip and we went to a pizza place that used to be a church for lunch. I don't remember what it was called, but if anyone knows, that'd be great! It also had a huge graphite mural of the city if that helps anyone identify it.
For all the silly "censorship" (hint: it's obvious for a reason), I would really like to thank bored panda for allowing me to say what is really on my mind. No snark. It's surprising what you can get away with saying, if you really mean it.
r/notfoolinganyone a sub for people to act like teenagers hearing “dirty” words but applying the mentality to buildings that got a slap of rebrand to indicate the current business in residence. “Fnarr, fnarr, they said KFC but WE can still tell it was a bank”. Do these morons honestly believe most businesses waste even a moment’s energy on “OMG, we should rip the entire building down and rebuild because someone might realize it used to be a supermarket but we use it as a library!”
This is the best kind of recycling. Re-use is cheaper and so much better for the environment. I especially love seeing gorgeous old buildings repurposed and still in use.
One that deserves to be here is the Villa Theater /Adibs Rug Gallery in Salt Lake City. (Not that it's trying to hide it's former purpose, and I'm really glad it's been preserved.)
Manchester, Connecticut has a superior court building that uses to be a Marshall's.
Glad to see repurposed buildings instead of being torn down. Ecologically better.
We have so many of these in my city! Grand old buildings in highly embellished styles that are too expensive to build anymore are preserved and continued to be used. The Apple Store was a former Carnegie library and also former home of the historic society, the fireman's insurance building with the gold dome is a Starbucks, and an old downtown bank with gilding, marble pillars, etc is now a restaurant (a nicer one than the brew pub that used to be there for years).
We have a local ice cream place in what used to be an old timey movie theater.
I was just in New York City for a school trip and we went to a pizza place that used to be a church for lunch. I don't remember what it was called, but if anyone knows, that'd be great! It also had a huge graphite mural of the city if that helps anyone identify it.