I'm sure they own them.
And they probably have a big off-site storage for these and other things.
I'm sure they own them.
And they probably have a big off-site storage for these and other things.
A few more nice shots of the yuletide atmosphere around Devon Energy Center:
They're going to need a mighty big attic for all this stuff!
More pics here:
Missing WHITE in holiday season? Visit skating rink in Downtown OKC
Great shots, Praedura - thank you!
Yes, very nice. Thanks.
From "Devon's Saturdays with Santa" facebook page (no, really):
Nice to see the families out on the lawn
Size is not everything (or is it?)
I wonder what that space is ordinarily, with the giant ball gone. Just more lawn? Perhaps they should have something there all year long -- something photo-op-ish.
Yes it is entirely lawn.
Oh yes, this was the green space that was so non-inviting.......according to some of the theories thown out here. In the last few weeks, I've been by there a dozen times during all times of the week, and it's usually pretty well occupied with people.
Interesting that the Devon Lawn seems to be more used than MBG. That doesn't bode well for Central Park ... or Prominade Park ...... or Wheller Park.
The devon lawn obsolutely does now get used more than the myriad gardens. There is just a giant red ball on the lawn right now so people are drawn to it and want to take pictures.
This is the perfect example to what I have said in the Central Park thread and various other discussions. We need a permanent piece of public art downtown that attracts people to interact with it, take pictures with it, etc. Devon's large, smooth, red balls are the perfect example -- look at how many people they attract and how many people walk around to interact with it.
We need a permanent piece of art that inspires imagination and promotes interaction and is a central focal point for people to walk to. The Bean in Millennium Park in Chicago is a terrific example of this, it draws a similar level of interaction as these large red balls do.
I'm just glad there are more than just two giant red balls at the base of the tower.
Sorry, bad joke.
Amen. And it needs to be very large. I looked for the new "earth meets sky" sculpture by City Hall for about 10 minutes before I found it, and I knew what I was looking for.
I think if it were some kind of public art where people could climb through it like that bubbly structure at the Oklahoma Science Museum (don't know if it's still there), that would be pretty cool. Not much of a way to outdo the bean in Chicago unless you make it totally interactive.
Totally agree. We do need a great piece of public art. But, I'm not really worried about the central park. I've always felt the Myriad Gardens is too programmed to be a place of relaxation. It feels busy. The central park (and perhaps we should thank financial constraints) will be an open area that I think people will be drawn to because of what it does and doesn't have. But, a big piece of interactive art would help as well.
Those were stunning photos of the Devon (and other) Christmas decorations, Praedura ... truly nice that Devon takes its civic pride so magnanimously as to produce such pieces of beautiful yet simple art that everyone can relate to, in terms of both quality and quantity. My hat is very much off to Devon for doing this.
As an aside and a somewhat related topic, I'm wondering what became of the Compass Rose sculpture that the City Council approved in March 2010. Now that it is obviously not going to be placed in the Bicentennial Park as originally planned, I do hope that it will be resurrected and placed somewhere ... perhaps in a highly visible area in Central Park. I'll search OklcTalk to see if I can find any information about this splendid project.
The thread on the Compass Rose is here, in the General Development area. It hasn't been updated for quite some time and it doesn't have a Wiki piece on it. I'll give that a stab, if I can figure out how to do that.
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