Showing posts with label Open House Chicago 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Open House Chicago 2012. Show all posts

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Chicago Architecture Sacred and Profane at Open House Chicago

click images for larger view (highly recommended)
If you haven't caught out on our admonition Open House Chicago 2012 is one of great events of the year, I've included this gallery to convince you, starting with the image above, from the delirious Oriental Theater.  There's one more day, Sunday, October 14, to take in your own selection of the 150+ participating sites from Rodgers Park to South Shore and all points in between with a bunch sites that were closed Saturday opening up on Sunday.

Check it all out at Open House Chicago 2012.
MDA City Apartments



from the rooftop terrace of MDA, at the top of 203 N. Wabash, soon to be a Virgin International Hotel
Illinois Center from the MDA rooftop terrace
Essanay Studios
Bridgeview Bank (former Uptown National Bank)
Bridgeview Bank
Agudas Achim Synagogue
Agudas Achim Synagogue
Frank Fisher Apartments
organ loft, former Scottish Rite Cathedral, now Harvest Bible Chapel
a bird

a minkey, and a few more Oriental images
And here's a few more shots, from day two:
Aragon Ballroom

Civic Orchestra Brass Quintet at the top of the Original Sears Tower

Power House High
Riviera Theatre


Friday, October 12, 2012

Open House Chicago, complete with custom scores, opens up 150+ Chicago marvels Saturday and Sunday

click images for larger view
I make no secret of it:  I think Open House Chicago is as absolutely great event.  If you don't know about it already, let the experts describe it:

"It's a free event for all Chicagoans." says President Lynn Osmond,  "Chicago Architecture Foundation's mission is to help inspire people to discover why design matters, and what better way than by opening up over 150 sites  for Chicagoans to go out and explore.  Last year we had over 85,000 people visit our sites, and it was really exciting to see how they discovered the sites of Chicago and our neighborhoods.  86% of those people were actually residents of the city of Chicago.  But we also had visitors that we welcomed from all around the world and from all 50 states."
original Sears Tower
"Last year, we had visitors from more than 54 countries," adds Bastiaan Bouma, Open House Chicago's Managing Director.   We're thrilled with the participation we received last year .  We're nearly twice the size this year.  We're in 25 neighborhoods, as opposed to 13 last year . We're in 13 community areas.  We're in 21 of the city's 50 wards . . . from Rogers Park to West Ridge to South Shore to Garfield Park , Little Village , Pilsen,  - it's a tremendous opportunity for people to rediscover the city of Chicago from a brand new perspective."

"Someone once said that Chicago is a city of 2.8 million architecture critics, and this is your weekend to take advantage of that instinct.  Free, behind the scenes, no tickets, no reservations.  Develop your own itinerary.  We do think that the bicycle is the ultimate Open House Chicago accessory.  The record last year was something over 50 visits by one individual , so we're looking forward to seeing somebody beat that record this year and I'll bet he or she is going to be on a bicycle."
St. Philip Neri Church
Most of the sites are open 9 to 5 both Saturday and Sunday, but there are exceptions - Churches, as is to be expected, are open later on Sunday - so double-check the sites you want to see.
Bridgeview Bank - photograph: David Suarez
Also very neat, four composers from Access Contemporary Music have written musical compositions that will be composed at the sites they will be created for:  Jude Matthews for the Bridgeview Bank (12:00 to 3:00 p.m. Saturday), Katherine Young for the Nickerson Mansion (1:00 to 4:00 Saturday); Eric Malmquist for the Poetry Foundation (12:00 to 3:00 Saturday), and Timothy Corpus for the Arts Club (12:00 to 3:00, Sunday).  All events free.
Among the new locations are places that almost never open to the public, such as the observation deck atop the Kemper Building, open for the first time in 40 years and offering a spectacular 360 degrees panorama of Chicago from 500+ feet up.  In the case of historic Agudas Achim North Shore Congregation, it's a space that's been closed even to its congregation since 2008.

Poetry Foundation, John Ronan Architects
Contemporary architecture?  You've got  VOAs new Wabash Tower vertical dorm for Roosevelt University, you can see Jeanne Gang's Kam Liu Building in Chinatown and Columbia College Media Production Center , Helmut Jahn's State Street Village at IIT, Farr Associates, Christy Webber Landscapes, Nagle Hartray's Ogden  International School, Williams and Tsien's Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts at U of C, Krueck and Sexton's Spertus Institute, Rem Koolhaas's Campus Center at IIT, and John Ronan's Poetry Foundation and South Shore International College Prep, to name just a few.
Theaters:  Check out Rapp and Rapp's hallucinogenic  Oriental Theater, the lovingly restored Apollo 2000 (the former Marshall Square Theater), Uptown's Riviera (Sunday only), and Adler and Sullivan's Auditorium.
The Green Mill
I've included here photos of many of the most spectacular interiors, but don't forget the equally spectacular smaller spaces, from the offices of many of the Chicago's leading architects, to the former Sunset Cafe in Bronzeville, Andrew Rebori's Frank Fisher Apartments, the Downtown Islamic Center, the former Swift Mansion, Jayuya Barbership , Shedd Park Field House, Thalia Hall, the Green Mill, the Berghoff, and even the Trib Tower aerie (a/k/a the Colonel's office) that was the site for Randy Michaels' notorious poker games.

I could go on, but I think you get the idea.  Right now, the weekend looks warm and rainy.  What could be more perfect weather to check out the great interiors of Chicago.?  Take a few minutes to explore, and you'll discover wonders you may never have known existed.

Start here.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Moving Marina City to North Michigan for Open House Chicago 2012

click images for larger view
For competent photographers it would just be a bad shot.  For me, it's fun with reflections.

The Chicago Architecture Foundation held a press conference this morning to herald this weekend's Open House 2012, the amazing event that opens up over 150 Chicago buildings and places many not usually accessible,  to the public.
One spectacular addition this year is the top floor of Shaw, Metz's 1962 United of America  - now Kemper - Building, at State and Wacker, which was the location for CAF's Wednesday press event.  Its Club on 39, long forgotten, was once one of Chicago's "Lofty View" fine dining options  For the first time in decades, the top floor has been been re-opened for Open House Chicago.  Some of the windows may bit a bit clouded, but the views from the 500+-foot-high structure remain spectacular.
Check out all the great locations at  Open House Chicago 2012.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Amazing Open House Chicago 2012 Looking for a Thousand Good Women (And Men)

Corpus Christi Church (click images for larger view)
The full schedule of 150 locations has been published for the 2012 edition of Open House Chicago, the Chicago Architecture Foundation's remarkable two day point of entry to . . .
. . . over 150 of the city’s great places and spaces.  Explore repurposed mansions, hidden rooms, sacred spaces, private clubs, iconic theatres, hotels, community murals and more—all for free.
As you can imagine, such an event takes a lot of planning, and a lot of help.  Specifically, the CAF has put out the call for volunteers.  Shifts are four hours, either/and Saturday and Sunday, October 13th and 14th.  You must be at least 18, and you must wear clothes.

In addition to the satisfaction of a job well-done for a great event, being a volunteer has its benefits:
  • Priority access at all OHC sites for you and a companion
  • 50% off a CAF membership
  • Member discount at CAF shop for the week following OHC
  • OHC T-shirt and lanyard souvenirs
  • Two free CAF walking tour passes
Get all the details and sign up on-line here.

The site list is remarkable, from downtown to all across the city, with a large roster of "hidden gems" not usually open to the general public.  To cite just one example, you can visit the 41st observation deck of the 1962 Shaw, Metz designed United of America/Unitrin/Kemper Building - open for the first time in nearly 40 years - and, unlike the guys in the photograph above, you can actually enjoy it from the inside.

You can also visit the offices of such firms as Goettsch Partners, Holabird and Root, Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill, Murphy/Jahn, Perkins+Will, SOM, Thornton Tomasetti, VOA, Wheeler Kearns, and Wright Heerema.  You can see Dankmar Adler's last commission, Isaiah Temple, now  Ebeneezer Missionary Baptist Church, get inside the Germania Club, the Powhatan Apartments, Apollo's 2000 (the former Marshall Square Theater), Jens Jensen's Park Castle, and the historic Agudas Achim North Shore Congregation.  You can visit the Lohan Associates designed Police Headquarters, and go directly to (Cook County) Jail.
Ogden School, Nagle/Hartray Architecture
And lest you think the architecture of today is being slighted, you can see Jeanne Gang's Kam Liu Building in Chinatown and Columbia College Media Production Center , Helmut Jahn's State Street Village at IIT, Farr Associates, Christy Webber Landscapes, Nagle Hartray's Ogden School, Williams and Tsien's Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts at U of C, Krueck and Sexton's Spertus Institute, Rem Koolhaas's Campus Center at IIT, and John Ronan's Poetry Foundation and South Shore International College Prep, to name just a few.
Poetry Foundation, John Ronan Architects

This is an absolutely fantastic event, and you can become a part of it here.