It is rare to catch such a cherished scholar-author as Portland’s Richard Engeman on the roof of a large Portland warehouse smiling. Richard explains the unique recreation of the jumbo sign behind him. “Did Claire or I send you a pic of the wonderful sign on the top of the Montgomery Park building? It was recycled from when it was the regional warehouse for Montgomery Ward–changing the sign meant changing only two letters.” Claire Sykes took the portrait. This, of course, is also the prospect from which Claire and Richard recorded the “now” repeat of this blog’s recent report on the 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition campus.
Big Sign reconstitution is something we in the Wallingford Neighborhood (in Seattle, Washington USA) know well. A few years ago our first supermarket with a corny name, the Food Giant, was purchased by Quality Foods (QFC), which might have reasonably disposed of its predecessors jumbo FOOD GIANT sign, but a clamor resounded from Interstate-5 to Aurora to save the neighborhood’s perhaps best example of iconic kitsch and keep alive its sentimental resonances. A poetic justice was derived when some local wit soon determined that from the oversized letters of “FOOD GIANT” once could easily, with a few additions and subtractions, write the name of the neighborhood – WALLINGFORD – and put it on the supermarket’s roof. And so it was.

Parisian Berangere Lomont - of this blog - and the Food Giant sign reconstituted as Wallingford. I prompted Berangere to walk by on 45th Street like any ordinary pedestrian during her visit here in Oct. 2006. (This is another of the several hundred "repeat spots" I often visit and record during my "Wallingford Walks".)

Here, appropriately, is Claire Sykes - who, again, took the photo of Richard Engeman before the Montgomery Sign - crouching before the Wallingford sign atop that neighborhood's QFC market on the evening of Oct. 27, 2008.
Finally – or for awhile – the front of Food Giant/QFC is now being rebuilt two stories high and also extended south into the parking lot. This about 110 degree pan of the construction – imperfectly merged from three wide-angle shots – was taken on Oct. 19, this year. There is more on this parking lot and the structures that border it in our Seattle Now and Then posts. It is titled “Foodland” and appeared here February 8, 2009. It is a brief history (non-current events) of the corner from WW2 to now: from Wald’s Market through Foodland, Food Giant and QFC Wallingford.













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