A strange yet bizarre discovery has been found at the location of 500 Welch Blvd in Flint, Michigan! Three 30 foot long quilts have been found covering the front of the former Cook Elementary School. These quilts date back to 2015 according to Google Maps street view imagery. The quilts were placed on the rooftop, extending all the way to ground level. A portion of these quilts cover some basement windows. Is that not the weirdest thing you seen in Flint?
This is one of the many bizarre things you would never expect to see when browsing on street view using Google Maps. This is absolutely hilarious, wasteful, and staggering. Seems the quilts have been put back up. How is it that Flint is able to cover an entire school building with 3 quilts but cannot provide clean water for their citizens?
There are many questions people will ask. Why would something like this happen? Why would someone cover a school with a quilt? Why cover the school with it? Who would cover almost an entire school with quilts that big? Who would come with this idea or concept? What does this all mean? How is this even possible? So many questions that have yet to be answered.
Some say the heating at Cook School hasn’t worked in decades back when it was a functioning school. Others say people who are bored out of their minds do something strange like this. Some residents say it’s the lead in the water supply that makes people do questionable things such as this.
However there has been more information discovered after digging through extensive research on the internet. Some facts were found.
The person behind this bizarre discovery was none other than Amanda Browder. Amanda Browder is the person responsible for sewing all three 30 foot quilts together. Sewing all 3 quilts together took Amanda Browder 3 weeks. She came up with the idea to hang quilts on an abandoned school building.
Apparently Flint Public Arts is responsible for hanging those 3 quilts from. A hydraulic crane was used to hang all three quilts which was hung at the rooftop near a front entrance of Cook School. Flint Public Arts was responsible for the woven installation at Cook School.
A hydraulic crane was used to hang all three quilts which was hung at the rooftop near a front entrance of Cook School. Flint Public Arts was responsible for the woven installation at Cook School.
Those 3 quilts hanging from the rooftop of Cook School were part of the Flint Public Arts Parade of 2015. The 3 quilts were hung on the rooftop of Cook School on August 27, 2015. Flint Public Arts even held a parade for the event on August 31, 2015.
By somewhere around January or April 2019 is when the quilts were taken down. There has been no sign of these quilts being hung back up.
Why haven't you researched what the quilts represented?
ReplyDeleteI have before in another news article.
Deletewhat the first person said ^.
ReplyDeleteBecause it kinda sounds like you just scrutinized Flint. You're the one bored out of their mind.
Calm down. I had no intention of scrutinizing Flint at all. I was sharing my opinion on how bizarre covering a non-functioning school with a quilt is. That's all.
DeleteI do not think this is weird or bizarre by any means. This is absolutely very special and shows the love for the old beautiful brick school.
ReplyDeleteThanks for expressing your opinion.
Delete