
Today we return to the good old Meatpacking District back in its great earlier incarnation, because I loved not so much the fire escape but the counterweight that would let the last flight of the fire escape swing down so people could safely reach the ground. I converted the photo to black and white because it’s a great batch of textures that come out nicely in this format: the grated door, the glass blocks, the bricks, the shadows, and especially the counterweight.
There isn’t a whole lot of information about Hanke Iron & Wire Works on the web now, and it felt like there was actually more when I took this photo back in ’09. It seemed to be most active in Chicago in the first couple of decades of the 20th century, but I remember seeing mention of a relocation toward the end of the company’s existence. A cider house a few blocks from my apartment mentions that there was a similar counterweight on its building in 2015, when it took over that building. There isn’t much more info than that now.
September 5, 2009. Nikon D90 (DX sensor), Nikon DX 18–105mm lens at 52mm (35mm equivalent: 78mm), f/13, 1/1,000, ISO 1,250.













