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![]() By Margaret Regan THE SMART MONEY says the old No-Tel Motel is not long for this world.
The salmon-and-yellow slump block haven for sinners, on Oracle
Road just a stone's throw north of Grant, right now is being dwarfed
The No-Tel makes an appearance in Vacant Eden, a new color
photography book that lovingly chronicles Tucson's vanishing roadside
attractions. The peeling motels pictured in the book, with un-pc
names like Apache's Tears or buoyant titles like Vista del Sol,
Abigail Gumbiner, a California photographer who's teamed up with Carol Hayden on many commercial projects, lived in Tucson in the 1940s as a small child when these places were in their prime. In town last month to promote the book, her first, Gumbiner said her father, Rabbi Joseph Gumbiner, once led the Stone Temple congregation downtown. His early embrace of a socially active Judaism won him some opposition among his wealthy congregants, she said, and the family's sojourn in the Old Pueblo was not long. Still, Gumbiner threw herself into the project of photographing motels that are odd reminders not only of her youth, but of America's long-ago innocence. "I was in Tucson three or four years ago," Gumbiner said, "and early one morning I happened to drive down Sixth Avenue. I saw places like the Paradise Motor Hotel, the Arizona Motel. Their signs were magnificent pieces of sculpture...Benson Highway is a gold mine, full of motel buildings, signs and swimming pools."
Gumbiner threw herself into the project, cajoling Hayden to sign
on as well. The book, with 80 color plates, is a memento not only
of her own youth but of America's long-ago innocence. It's even
become a kind of a historical document. Already, she said, "one-third
of the images in the book are now gone."
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