[lbo-talk] Kodachrome R.I.P.

Dennis Claxton ddclaxton at earthlink.net
Thu Dec 9 11:05:26 PST 2010


Notice from Dwayne's Photo in Parsons, Kansas, the only remaining lab in the world processing Kodachrome:

http://www.dwaynesphoto.com/index.html

The last day of processing for all types of Kodachrome film will be December 30th, 2010. The last day Kodak will accept prepaid 35mm Kodachrome film in Europe is November 30th, 2010. Film that is not in our lab by noon on December 30th will not be processed.

Dwayne’s Photo IS NOT CLOSING! We will continue to process other types of film and provide all our other normal services in 2011. Only Kodachrome film processing is being discontinued.

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The Center for Land Use Interpretation did a story, with photos, on Kodak Park earlier this year:

http://www.clui.org/lotl/v33/l.html

[....]

Kodak Park is the epicenter of this global reformulation of one of the most formative elements of the information age. This is where mass imaging – analogue, chemical – was birthed. Within its 22 mile perimeter, and over its 1,100 acres lies the physical history of physical imaging.

Kodak Park is said to be the largest industrial complex in the northeast. Though it is surrounded by the city of Rochester, Kodak Park is self-contained, with 30 miles of roads, its own power plant, rail system, and water treatment facility. It is also, as would be expected, one of the most contaminated places in the nation. Taking pictures was a dirty business. In 1920, George Eastman, Kodak’s founder, established the Eastman Chemical Company to supply chemicals for film-based photography. The company’s principal plant, in Kingsport, Tennessee, became one of the largest chemical plants in the world (and still is, though it is no longer part of Kodak). With over a thousand storage tanks on site, and millions of square feet devoted to chemical-based manufacturing, Kodak Park was often ranked as the worst polluter in New York state. Though a decrease in production and emissions have dramatically improved the situation, the legacy of over a century of liquid intensive R&D and manufacturing is left in the ground of the Park.

A hydraulic containment system under the plant provides suction, pulling contaminated groundwater towards it instead of away from it, (a technique used in other places where pollutants migrate from the ground into the groundwater.) The 33 continuously pumping wells pull 55 million gallons a year out from under the plant, water which is then treated at Kodak’s liquid waste plant on the Genesee River. Hydrofractured wells use explosives detonated below ground to break open the rock structure, making the wells more effective over a wider area. Still, contaminated groundwater has been known to migrate off-site.

Change has come rapidly, and recently, to Kodak Park, reflecting the transition of imaging from analog to digital. Over the past ten years, thousands of workers have been laid off and fifty buildings have been removed, several in dramatic implosions. The company operates out of 80% of the remaining buildings on site, with around 8,000 employees continuing its R&D and manufacturing. This is still the only place where Kodak makes coated photographic film, though it is mostly for the dwindling motion picture market. The demolition of buildings has stopped, for now, and the company is marketing the empty spaces to potential tenants. The industrial campus is being retooled as “Eastman Business Park,” though the company acknowledges that for its employees, the community, and history, it will always be known as Kodak Park.



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