Sunday, January 26, 2014

9/30/10


I’d clocked just under two hundred miles on the trip from Buffalo to Cleveland. Hardly a long journey, the expedition along Lake Erie had still managed to wipe me out. I slept crazy late into the afternoon (like 2pm late) while Neil studied law at the far end of the room. It was the hunger that finally roused my senses, and there was only one place Neil could think for me to satiate it: Melt Bar and Griddle, an establishment known for its colossal grilled cheeses.
With stomachs sufficiently packed with cheddar we headed to the hart of downtown for the requisite sight seeing. The day was bright and warm and Neil was excited to played tour guide again. We wandered in and out of the public squares, parks, and malls nestled in-between the federal buildings, libraries, and skyscrapers of  the city center. It seemed quiet for a Wednesday afternoon, a testament to the decline of the once vibrant American hub. But it was cleaner and less destitute than Buffalo’d been. After the monuments in Cleveland square and the fountain at the Mall we migrated across Superior Av. to take in The Arcade. Built in the 1880s as one of America’s first indoor shopping center I was met with three hundred feet of four-tiered atrium, gilded and lustrous under an arched glass celling. The top two tiers, as well as the adjacent buildings had been turned into a hotel, but the bottom two were still boutique-laden. My first ‘arcade’ of the trip (I’d run into a few along the way), Cleveland’s would prove to be the benchmark for all future ones - and none would quite live up to its extravagance.
Committed to making it a true lazy day on the road, I supplemented my late start with a quiet night back at Neil’s apartment: T.V, beers, and some Chinese food delivered to the door.