Edisone wrote:That building is the original. Nothing has been built on Webster Street since 1930. I attend monthly Mighty WuliTzer concerts at the Riviera Theater, on this very block - so I'm quite familiar with it. In fact, most pre-1940 buildings in the Buffalo area are either still standing or empty lots - very few were replaced by new construction, because we have never recovered from The Great Depression or the death of the railroads, death of Great Lakes shipping, steel industry, American Manufacturing, etc etc. The population declines every week & at least 30,000 houses stand abandoned, while Buffalo cannot find the million$$ needed to demolish them.fran604g wrote:George, you are right, I haven't been able to find any photos of the building that would prove this is indeed where Curt C. Andrus' store was located. The store fronts were recently "upgraded" which would explain the modern decor. Who's to know if the buildings may have been razed? I will continue to search, though.phonogfp wrote:I wonder if that's the original building. It looks like it could have been built in the 1920s/30s as a car dealership or something. In any event, it sort of lacks the gravitas for being the "House of Music!"![]()
Another thing to watch out for is street renumbering.![]()
George P.
ps - Look again at the full-sized version of that building's photo. It's made of beautifully multi-colored bricks, with decorative stone insets and topped with copper. Such care is rarely seen on post-1930 construction. (try to ignore the grotesque billboard with ambulance-chasing shysters, who are the shame of Buffalo)
I'm happy that you chimed in on this! I looked at the Riviera location as a point of reference for the address, but I didn't find enough pictures to show me the entire row of buildings between that and the corner.
That helps.
I'm going to ask my son to stop by there and take a better picture. He lives in Buffalo and teaches at Niagara University, so it shouldn't be out of his way.