My wife and I visited the Boston area last summer for a vacation. Here are a few rail shots from the trip, mostly of trash-trains near the Framingham yard. I’ve always liked these east coast trash trains, and it did in fact smell of hot garbage at this spot. My idea of a great vacation memory.
Bowl Job
This small building is visible from the bridge above, especially if riding a school bus. My freshman year in gym class, we actually took field trips to the bowling alley to bowl (That’s for a whole other blog). I used to look down from the bus and see a piece that read Blow JOB. The wall has been buffed a couple times, once every twenty years it seems, but in this photo from 2016 you can kind of still see the Kwiz piece underneath the scratcher graffiti. The wall was half-assed-ly painted over again recently. One of the buildings never got painted over, and there is still an old Anx piece on it. I recall in the late 90s underneath it was a tiny Kwiz piece and a Jasta tag.


Life in 3 Megapixels
In 2003 or 2004 I saved up for my first digital camera. I bought it as a secondary camera to my film camera, since it took time to get photos back from the developer. It was a Sony point-&-shoot and was 3 megapixels. Here are some early digital photos of freights shot in 2004. Don’t get me wrong, I love film, but I like these because it gives you an idea of what things actually looked like (in 3 megapixels) without film grain.
Piano Factory
One of the most nostalgic spots in town for me, is the historic Starr-Gennett factory site. There is only one building remaining today, which has been preserved and turned into an indoor/outdoor venue by the City of Richmond. The building that I loved the most was the 6 story concrete warehouse completed in 1920 and demolished in 2001. It was covered in graffiti on the inside. I took a decent amount of photos there in the late 90s’/early 2000s, but regrettably none of them have survived. Every now and then photos of it will pop up online, but it’s pretty rare. The photo below was taken by Chuck Wonsik sometime in the early 90s. Mr. Wonsik passed away in 2019, and the photo was given to Donald Harrison, owner of Block Head Records in Richmond. Thank you, Donald. On this photo you can see a very early Kwiz piece with a character in a beanie. I vividly remember seeing this piece still there in the late 90s covered by ivy.


https://mrlinfo.org/history/lostrichmond/starrpiano.htm
Yard Building
There is a lot of rail history in Richmond, and at one time we had a large PRR yard. It lasted through all the mergers and was abandoned in the early 1980s, according to the book “Pennsylvania Railroad Lines West, V. 1”. Most of the rails were removed years ago and the area is over grown, but there are still some old buildings remaining. One of them is tucked away and slowly falling apart. I’ve been taking photos of it for a long time.

Senoz, 2000 
Sufr, 2000. Photo, 2005 
Sufr, Early 2010s 
Sufr, 2001 









Pandemic Portfolio
I took a lot of long walks this spring during the shutdown. Here’s some of the photos from that time period.
Weekend Flicks
In between watching trains, I went out and took a few photos around town this weekend.
Chessie Depot Update
They finally put on a new roof on the old C&O Depot to help stabilize the building. I even got to say hi to the roofing crew and let them know it looks great. For my previous post, please see…
https://wordpress.com/post/richmondindgraffiti.com/702
Dissed Kwiz
Here are a couple scans of what remained of a Kwiz piece from the 1990s underneath an overpass. The photos are from the early 2000s. I adjusted the contrast on the middle one to help it pop out a little.




















































