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Ypsilanti Water Tower
Historic water tower in Ypsilanti, Michigan
Historic water tower in Ypsilanti, Michigan
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ypsilanti Water Works Stand Pipe |
| image | Ypsilanti Water Tower 2011.JPG |
| caption | Ypsilanti Water Tower |
| location | Ypsilanti, Michigan |
| coordinates | |
| locmapin | Michigan#USA |
| built | 1890 |
| architect | William R. Coats |
| added | October 26, 1981 |
| refnum | 81000318 |
| designated_other1 | Michigan State Historic Site |
The Ypsilanti Water Tower is a historic water tower in Ypsilanti, Michigan, United States.
The tower was designed by William R. Coats and built as part of an elaborate city waterworks project that began in 1889. Located on the highest point in Ypsilanti, the tower was built in 1890 at a cost of $21,435.63 (). Today the tower is frequently joked about for its phallic shape. It has become a well-known landmark in Ypsilanti, and due to the building's shape and location, the tower is frequently used by residents as a point for providing directions for visitors and residents.
History
An ordinance passed on April 14, 1898, established a yearly rate schedule for residences with running water. Rates were based on the number of faucets in use, the type of business that customers operated and the livestock they owned. A residence with one tap was charged $5 and a private bathtub cost an additional $2. Saloon keepers paid $7 for one faucet, $3 for each additional faucet and $1 for each billiard table. Each cow a person owned cost $1. People who failed to pay their bill were subject to a $50 fine and 90 days in the county jail.
During the construction, hoping to protect themselves from injury, the builders made at least four crosses in the stonework, one over the west door, an elaborate but difficult to find Greek Cross on the east side and two inside the water tower. It was completed on February 3, 1890, at the cost of $21,368.
The structure was the only water tower in the Ypsilanti water system until 1956. The Ypsilanti Community Utilities Authority began operating and maintaining the structure in 1974. That same year the tower was designated by the American Water Works Association as an American Water Landmark. It was also designated a Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the Michigan Section of the American Society of Civil Engineers. In 1976 it was restored.
Structure
The exterior was designed in the popular Queen Anne style of the period. Queen Anne design was less formal than other popular styles at the time; instead it experimented with different shapes particularly towers. Queen Anne buildings also often had more decoration than this structure.

The stone tower is located at the highest point of elevation of the city on Summit Street. The tower is made of Joliet limestone. The tower is 147 ft tall, has an 85 ft base. The substructure walls taper from a thickness of 40 in at the bottom to 24 in at the top. The reservoir holds a 250,000 USgal steel tank. When it was erected it had a dual purpose. Not only did it store water but the falling water also generated electricity for the city street lamps at night.
A marble bust of Demetrios Ypsilantis stands between a Greek and a U.S. flag at the base of the water tower. The city of Ypsilanti is named after this hero of the Greek War of Independence.
Present day
The phallic shape of the Ypsilanti Water Tower long been a source of humor in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, where it is nicknamed "the Brick Dick". The tower was ranked as the World's Most Phallic Building by Cabinet Magazine in 2003. An urban legend holds that the tower will crumble if a virgin graduates from nearby Eastern Michigan University.
References
References
- {{NRISref. 2008a
- Huff, Aaron. (September 25, 2011). "Ypsi tower history". [[Eastern Echo]].
- "Ypsilanti Water Tower, Michigan, USA". Building.am.
- "The YCUA Stone Tower". Ypsilanti Community Utilities Authority.
- "Ypsilanti Water Tower - 1890". Ypsilanti Historical Society.
- "EMU: Historic Tour". Eastern Michigan University.
- "The Most Phallic Building in the World". [[Cabinet (magazine).
- Schonberger, Nick. (November 12, 2012). "The 10 Most Ridiculous Phallic Buildings".
- Dicker, Ron. (Jun 6, 2014). "10 Buildings that Look like Penises (PHOTOS)". HuffPost.
- Danger, Tatiana. (October 28, 2014). "Michigan's Ypsilanti Water Tower is the world's 'Most Phallic Building'".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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