Sunday, May 24, 2009

Ogden’s Historic Building Scavenger Hunt


Time to brag a little:  I won a prize in Ogden’s Historic Building Scavenger Hunt!

This annual event, held every spring, is a terrific idea.  The city prints up a brochure (download a copy here) with a dozen closely cropped photos of interesting features on historic buildings.  Along with each photo is a brief hint.  A map highlighting all candidate buildings is also provided.  Your job is to go out and find the 12 buildings in the photos.  Turn in your brochure with at least one correct answer and you’re eligible for a prize drawing.  Get all 12 answers correct and you’re also eligible for the grand prize (a gift certificate to a restaurant and a copy of a Weber County history book).  The contest is jointly sponsored by the Ogden City Landmarks Commission and the Weber County Heritage Foundation.

I’ve now participated for three years in a row.  It’s a great excuse to get on my bike on a nice spring day and pedal around at a leisurely pace, enjoying the city and looking at amazing architecture that I never would have noticed otherwise.  I’d do it even if there were no prizes, though I do appreciate the bragging rights.

To avoid traffic I try to do most of my scavenging on Sundays.  This year it took me a couple hours each on two Sundays and a Monday--and I still found only 11 out of 12.  (I missed the one pictured above, then went back afterwards and took this photo, which shows a lot more of the building.)  But this year’s scavenger hunt was on the hard side, and apparently only a handful of people found all 12 buildings.  For whatever reason, my entry did win a nice prize:  a $40 gift certificate to a restaurant on 25th Street.

3 comments:

  1. I participated this year, too. Good times, although it was tough. This contest always opens my eyes as Ogden truly has a remarkable number of nice historic neighborhoods and buildings.

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  2. And many of the nicer buildings aren't even on any historic register. It always seems odd when you're looking at an officially recognized historic building, and the one right next to it looks just as interesting but isn't officially recognized.

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  3. Yeah, I think National Register listing is more of a political or economic decision (although I think it is great that a building gets recognized by being listed), not necessarily what is most historically or architecturally significant.

    Nice Blog you have here.

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