Til today it had been a day or two or three since I rolled my newly refurbished bike for a tour around my neighborhood.
Today's bike tour eventually took me to the Midwestern State University, also known as MSU, campus, which is currently crowded with new students.
The start of the new school year is when the campus seems to be the most crowded, soon be thinned by the 2019 versions of Limbaugh and Hannity, not able to pass a college level course, and thus turning into college dropouts.
I digress.
The four horses you see here, splashing though a pond, are Mustangs. My first car was a 65 Mustang Fastback.
Again, I digress.
Mustang is the MSU mascot, so you see various iterations of that particular horse all over Wichita Falls.
The four Mustangs you see splashing above are part of MSU's new Centennial Hall, construction completed yesterday, building dedication scheduled for some time today.
Construction began in December of 2017, completed in less than two years.
Construction of Centennial Hall began over three years after the small town of Fort Worth began trying to build three simple little bridges over dry land, to try and connect the Fort Worth mainland to an imaginary island.
I assume building a big building is a bit more difficult construction project than building three little bridges over dry land. But, those Fort Worth bridges still are no where near being completed, with the current completion timeline some point in the next decade, if money can be found.
I suspect MSU's Centennial Hall was a fully funded building project before construction began, whilst Fort Worth's hapless project has never been fully funded, waiting for the public works project equivalent of federal food stamps.
Unlike Fort Worth's pitiful bridges this new MSU building, to my eyes, is an interesting, well designed structure. The building seems to pay homage to all the various architectural styles one sees on the MSU campus, from the old to the new, with the part of the new building you see behind the Mustangs, that tall glass wall, being the modern, 2019 style, part of the building.
I also like how Centennial Hall looks different from every angle. Lots of curves, angles and arches. Every color of brick on the MSU campus is incorporated into the various facets of the building.
I strongly suspect no local politician's unqualified son had anything to do with engineering this new MSU building.
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