Difference between revisions of "Equus Oils"
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(Other possible source for the station design) |
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File:Equus Oils.png|Equus Oils, without power, as seen at the start of [[Act I]] | File:Equus Oils.png|Equus Oils, without power, as seen at the start of [[Act I]] | ||
File:Equus Oils full.jpg|A full view showing the station's horse shape | File:Equus Oils full.jpg|A full view showing the station's horse shape | ||
+ | File:GasStation-FullHorse.png|Another full view of the station, in high quality | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 06:02, 9 September 2019
Equus Oils is a gas station located on Interstate 65 owned and operated by Joseph Wheattree. The station's facade features a large horse head, in reference to its name, itself a reference to the 1973 play Equus by Peter Shaffer. The station is in debt to the Consolidated Power Company who has in turn throttled its electricity.
Its design – namely the wedge-shaped canopy – is based on that of the Tramway Gas Station in Palm Springs, California, or the Phillips 66 station in Flagstaff, Arizona, photographed by Edward Ruscha for Twentysix Gasoline Stations.
Gallery
Equus Oils, without power, as seen at the start of Act I