Never too late to add to the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
This Thursday, April 25th, at the Norris Center at Northwestern in Evanston, Barbara Mann will lecture on Makom: The Place of Space in Jewish Cultures. The week kicks off with Mark Linder at UIC on Monday, then on Tuesday Greg Walters talks about Unraveling Gridlock at the Chicago Center at Green Technology. Does Chicago Plan Anymore? is the topic of this Wednesday's lunchtime lecture at CAF, with D. Bradford Hunt and Jon B. DeVries, and in the evening there's another panel at DePaul Center on Chicago's New Eastside.
On Thursday, the Structural Engineers Association of Illinois is sponsoring its tenth annual Midwest Bridge Symposium at Maggiano's, while on Friday new IIT Dean of Architecture Dean Wiel Arets is at the Graham Foundation, and Saturday is both Rebuild Together - Working Together Day, and a lecture by Argonne Lab's Don Hillebrand on Chicago: A Leader in Energy and Technology Breakthroughs at Francis Parker.
And these are just some of the highlights still to come. Check it all out on the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
39th Annual Wright Plus Architectural Housewalk.
We also learned last week that as of today, there are still tickets available for this usually sold-out annual event. This year's edition takes place Saturday May 18th, and offers rare interior tours of nine private homes designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, including the 1913 Harry S. Adams House, and such contemporaries as John S. Bergen, plus three other landmark FLW buildings. Tickets - $85.00 for Frank Lloyd Wright Preservation Trust members, $100.00 for non-members - can be purchased on-line. More information here.
A daily blog on architecture in Chicago, and other topics cultural, political and mineral.
Click on the COMMENTS link under each post to join the discussion.
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Friday, April 19, 2013
Mies: "I am not a polygamist" - so says the Digital Public Library of America
![]() |
click images for larger view |
According to Harvard Librarian Robert Darnton in the New York Review of Books . . .
The Digital Public Library of America . . . is a project to make the holdings of America’s research libraries, archives, and museums available to all Americans—and eventually to everyone in the world—online and free of chargeSo, at least in its initial iteration, the NDPL isn't creating new digitized content itself, but is, instead, a kind of digital clearinghouse, drawing on already existing resources. It looks to pick up where Google's failed Google Book Search project, and allows you to search a massive - and growing - collection of sources from a single interface..
How to think of it? Not as a great edifice topped with a dome and standing on a gigantic database. The DPLA will be a distributed system of electronic content that will make the holdings of public and research libraries, archives, museums, and historical societies available, effortlessly and free of charge, to readers located at every connecting point of the Web.
I decided to take it through its paces. A search for ‘Chicago’ came up with nearly 20,000 items. Not surprisingly, a large number of those items came from the digitized collection of the University Library of the U of I, Champaign/Urbana. One of the first interesting things I came across, once I had decided to forgo, at least for the moment, 1909's The Higher Fungi of the Chicago Region, was Marian Ainsworth White's The Book of North Shore, from 1910, a collection of photographs of the mansions that lined Sheridan Road in Rogers Park before they were almost all demolished for the current canyon of residential towers, including Frank Lloyd Wright's house for Oscar Steffens at 7631 North Sheridan, constructed in 1909, which had a long life as the King's Arms restaurant before being razed in 1963.
From the University of Utah's J. Willard Marriott Library, there's a set of 1911-12 photographs by Taylor Woolley of Frank Lloyd Wright's original Taliesen under construction. From the U.S. Department of Labor collection, there's a 1920's photo of Oak Street beach overrun with bathers . . .
There are any number of books published to take advantage of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition . . .
and a snuff box with the Agriculture Building on its cover . . .
There are books that compile information on hundreds of Chicago companies which long ago disappeared from existence . . .
From eighty years before the monorail at Disney World, there's the Forsyth Elevated Suspension Railway. Labeled a “radical departure’, it appear to have never left the station.
. . . and, from the National Archives, we have the paperwork surrounding Mies van der Rohes emigration to America, including the certificate of arrival on August 29, 1938 aboard the SS Europa, and his Declaration of Intention to become a citizen, in which Mies attests that he is neither an anarchist nor a polygamist . . .
His Petition for Naturalization, including his oath of allegiance, is signed in spare and clear Miesian style . . .
The DPLA has been structured as an open platform, encouraging developers to create apps that interact with the metadata in new ways. There are only two apps listed on the site currently, but one of them, Search DPLA and Europeana, allows you to search, in one place, not only the DPLA but Europeana, which includes millions of digitized items from European museums, libraries and other collections. Stay tuned.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Next Stop: BRT Stations - As Chicago Transit Moves Forward, Will Design Move Beyond Backward?
![]() |
click images for larger view |
This coming Friday, April 19th, is the deadline for the Question and Answer period for Chicago Architectural Club's 2013 Burnham Prize architectural competition Next Stop: Designing Chicago BRT Stations.Are we exhausted, or just older and wiser?
Once upon a time, great cities built epic infrastructure. At the turn of the 20th century, this meant such boodler visionaries as Charles Yerkes creating Chicago's first ‘L’ system. By mid-century as government had taken over, it was O'Hare airport and the game-changing expressways that carved up neighborhoods like so much deli meat. In dreams begin nightmares.
In World War II, the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers coined a famous motto: “The difficult we do immediately. The impossible takes a bit longer.” Today, shell-shocked by - what: failure? decline? the death of the public realm? - our best answer too often seems to be a defensive, “We're working on it!” New York City began digging a new Second Avenue Subway in 1972. After numerous false starts, if they're really lucky, the first phase may open in 2016, 44 years later.
Sometimes, however, a little delay is a good thing. It was enough to kill off enthusiasm for a Crosstown Expressway that would have slit open neighborhoods north to south throughout the city. Similarly, delay seems to have also back-burnered an idea from the revised Chicago Central Area Plan, issued early last decade, that everyone seemed to have been swallowing hook, line and sinker: a West Loop Transportation Center that would burrowed commuters like mole rats down into no less than four subterranean levels beneath Clinton, at a hallucinatory low-ball estimated cost of $2 billion.
You don't hear much about the West Loop Transportation Center these days, especially after the CTA buried $320 million of your tax dollars under Block 37 in a “superstation” abandoned in 2008 when the CTA conceded it couldn't see any other light at the end of the tunnel than an all-consuming flame of never-ending cost overruns.
Less remembered was a Central Area Plan proposal for a new below-grade transitway from Michigan Avenue to Clinton, running under Monroe Street in a right-of-way the city had reserved for a new distributor subway back in the 1970's. The estimated price tag of $200 million seemed a bit optimistic.
Now there's a new buzzword: Bus Rapid Transit (BRT). That's right: we don't need no stinkin’ electrification. No tracks. No expensive burrowing. You simply seize lanes of existing streets and dedicate them to the exclusive use of buses.
Recently, the CTA entered this brave new world - gingerly - with the Jeffrey Jump, an express service that runs from Ogilvie and Union stations to 103rd street in as little as 46 minutes. Most of the speed-up comes from limited stops and no stops at all along a seven mile segment from 11th to 67th. The route has access to dedicated bus lanes only from 67th to 83rd, and only during rush hours. Traffic signals have been reconfigured to favor the buses at just one intersection.
The CTA is now getting ready to bring BRT downtown, with its Central Loop East-West Corridor. Instead of a Monroe Street transitway, the corridor will create a two-mile, BRT loop connecting the commuter stations to Michigan Avenue. The CTA's proposal is really a kind of BRT-lite. Only one segment - along Washington - will feature a dedicated bus lane. The segments on Madison, Clinton and Canal will use “priority” bus lanes, shared with autos. In a February press release, CTA President Forrest Claypool identified Washington and Madison as two of the agency's most heavily trafficked corridors, with buses running every three minutes at peak. The release projects the new corridor, extending to Navy Pier, will eventually run 1,700 buses a day.
As part of the project - financed by $24.6 million from the feds and $7.3 in TIF funds - the CTA is acquiring a surface parking lot at Jackson and Canal for a transportation center that will include both a staging area for the buses and an underground passage to Union Station across the street.
Judged from the rendering above, the transportation center, cordoned off in a stitching of ugly concrete bollards, will be a very drab affair that wears its parsimony on its sleeve even as it kicks Chicago's design reputation into the gutter.
A new design competition has the potential to improve things. CDOT and the CTA have teamed up with the Chicago Architectural Club and Chicago Architecture Foundation for Next Stop: Designing Chicago BRT Stations, the 2013 Burnham Prize Competition seeking ideas not quite as dreadful as what we'll probably wind up with. The competition offers a $3,000 first prize, $1,500 second, and $750 third. Submission deadline is noon, May 13th; winners to be announced at CAF June 6th. Registration is $90.00, $50.00 for students. See all the details and download the brief here.
Entries must include concepts for three different BRT corridors. That for Central Loop would be at Madison and Dearborn, and would expect to serve 4,500 riders a day, accommodating up to 40 them at a time. A second would be for a Logan Square station along a projected Western Avenue BRT corridor, adjacent to the Blue Line stop - 3,000 riders a day, 30 at a time; a third for an Ashland BRT between 17th and 18th in Pilsen - 1,500 daily riders, 20 patrons capacity. Goals include easy pedestrian access, pre-boarding fare collection, shelter from the elements, ADA compliance, sustainability, and - bien sûr - advertising, no doubt in remunerative abundance.
There's little doubt that the competition will bring in some very creative, well-researched proposals. There's also little doubt that, given history, the odds are CDOT/CTA will completely ignore the results.
The last partnership between CAF and the CAC was a design competition, Future Prentice seeking reuse concepts for Bertrand Goldberg's landmark hospital building. It got a fantastic response. Architects from Chicago and throughout the world ponied up thousands of hours of their time, worth probably a million dollars or more, to come up with intensely researched, practical and frequently brilliant proposals that would have saved Prentice while supporting Northwestern University's long-term goals. The operation was a great success. Too bad the patient died. Euthanized, actually, as Northwestern threw the portfolio of great ideas into the trash without a second look (or, most probably, even a first).
CDOT and CTA have made no visible commitment to draw upon the Next Stop entries for their actual BRT station designs. What do you want to bet that, in the end, the advertising component trumps all, and we wind up with the entire process controlled by JCDecaux, with stations offering only slight tweaks to their graceless, thick-limbed Robert Stern bus shelters that have proven much more effective in selling advertising than protecting commuters from winter winds, or contributing anything much beyond anonymous clutter to the visual quality of the Chicago's streets?
Cynical? I confess, with apologies. Nothing would make me happier than to be proven wrong. In our current constrained economy, we can no longer afford to consign architectural competitions to being a mere PR stratagem, the results applauded and ignored, a purchased indulgence for mediocre design whose sting will afflict the city for decades to come.
Gratuitous Postscript: CDOT isn't the only one who gets to dream. When all those billion dollar proposals were floating around a few years back for an new, far outer Loop circle rapid transit line, I imagined my own circle line, one that linked Navy Pier to the hotels and offices of North Michigan, took the Carroll Street corridor to the Merchandise Mart, south to the Amtrak corridor through Union Station using lanes created by demolishing unused baggage platforms, down to the emerging Roosevelt Road residential/commercial district, across via the St. Charles Airway, south to McCormick Place and back north to the Museum Campus and Millennium Park using the existing Metra corridor busway, and past Lakeshore East on the way back to Navy Pier. Dream on.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
New Geographies 5, Shirley King for CAF, new items for logjam week on the April Calendar!
Yep, still adding items to the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
This Thursday, April 18th, the publication of New Geographies 5 - The Mediterranean: Worlds, Cities, Regions and Architectures will be marked with a panel discussion at the Graham with editor Antonio Petrov, architect Clare Lyster, Sean Keller of IIT, Hashim Sarkis of Harvard and Stephen J. Ramos of the U of GA.
It's one of those logjam evenings that will also include 99% Invisible's Roman Mars at Unity Temple, Erin Feher on The Architectural Rise of San Francisco at the Driehaus, and Paul Stoller of Atelier Ten at AIA/Chicago.
We've also learned that this Friday's Chicago Architecture Foundation Gala, Architecture is Art, at the Radisson Blue at Aqua, will feature, in addition to dinner, dancing and an auction, a performance from Shirley King, who will perform with the Blue Road Band. About the same time, Preservation Chicago will be hosting it's own Spring fundraiser at the Union League with live music, an auction, and a presentation by Lost Chicago author David Lowe.
As if that's not enough, there's also the final days of the American Planning Association's 2013 National Planning Conference, an AIA/Chicago panel on the Chicago Infrastructure Trust, Michael Webb of Cooper Union at UIC, the principals of Project Projects at the Art Institute, UrbanWorks' Patricia Natke talking about Pilsen at CAF lunchtime on Wednesday.
Hashim Sarkis returns for a lecture, The World According to Architecture at Wishnick Hall, IIT , a Landmarks Illinois presentation on the restoration of Hairpin Lofts at the Chicago Cultural Center and a DePaul University Real Estate Center symposium on Chicago's New Eastside.
Next Saturday the 20th sees a symposium at Evanston's Block Museum, The Modern Capital: City, Utopica, or Spectacle?, on the occasion of the opening of its new exhibition, Drawing the Future: Chicago Architecture on the International Stage, 1900-1925.
And believe it or not, that's not all, not by a long shot. Check out all the great items and get the who/what/where's on the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.

It's one of those logjam evenings that will also include 99% Invisible's Roman Mars at Unity Temple, Erin Feher on The Architectural Rise of San Francisco at the Driehaus, and Paul Stoller of Atelier Ten at AIA/Chicago.
We've also learned that this Friday's Chicago Architecture Foundation Gala, Architecture is Art, at the Radisson Blue at Aqua, will feature, in addition to dinner, dancing and an auction, a performance from Shirley King, who will perform with the Blue Road Band. About the same time, Preservation Chicago will be hosting it's own Spring fundraiser at the Union League with live music, an auction, and a presentation by Lost Chicago author David Lowe.
As if that's not enough, there's also the final days of the American Planning Association's 2013 National Planning Conference, an AIA/Chicago panel on the Chicago Infrastructure Trust, Michael Webb of Cooper Union at UIC, the principals of Project Projects at the Art Institute, UrbanWorks' Patricia Natke talking about Pilsen at CAF lunchtime on Wednesday.
Hashim Sarkis returns for a lecture, The World According to Architecture at Wishnick Hall, IIT , a Landmarks Illinois presentation on the restoration of Hairpin Lofts at the Chicago Cultural Center and a DePaul University Real Estate Center symposium on Chicago's New Eastside.
Next Saturday the 20th sees a symposium at Evanston's Block Museum, The Modern Capital: City, Utopica, or Spectacle?, on the occasion of the opening of its new exhibition, Drawing the Future: Chicago Architecture on the International Stage, 1900-1925.
And believe it or not, that's not all, not by a long shot. Check out all the great items and get the who/what/where's on the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
Labels:
April 2013 Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events,
Block Museum,
Chicago Architecture Foundation,
Hashim Sarkin,
Michael Webb,
New Geographies 5,
Preservation Chicago,
Roman Mars,
Shirley King,
Unity Temple
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Grossman and Kent's Final Word on how Chicago's Good-Old-Boys network rallied to Wreck Prentice
![]() |
click images for larger view |
The paper's Ron Grossman and Cheryl Kent have done a bang-up summary of the clout-ridden process that doomed the landmarking of Bertrand Goldberg's Prentice Hospital. If you're one of the Trib's pathetic handful of digital subscribers (half that of the Sun-Times), you can read it. For anyone else, it's carefully stuck behind their paywall.
Even if you don't read the Trib, it's well worth picking up a copy today. (Try not to be shocked by the fact that the Trib just raised the price a whopping 50%, to $1.50.) When politics get in the way doesn't really include anything we haven't written before in our own copious coverage of the battle for Prentice, but it fleshes out the details and mechanics of how the good-old-boys-network that runs the city - of which the Trib, which shilled relentlessly for Prentice's destruction, sees itself as a key member - circles the wagons to support its own, in this case Northwestern University, who has turned their substantial chunk of Streeterville into a kind of high-tech colonial plantation where the rules that constrain all the rest of us don't apply and truth is whatever they want it to be.
Grossman and Kent document how Chicago's Department of Housing and Development simply dumped facts and figures they got from Northwestern into their report calling for Prentice's demolition. Nothing was vetted or substantiated. The Commission willingly became part of Northwestern's propaganda machine.
![]() |
from left: Rafael Leon, Ernest Wong, Andrew Mooney, James Houlihan |
Grossman and Kent underscore the uselessness of these appointed bodies. As with the Plan Commission - which began as independent entity - the concept is that they provide an essential check on city government, representing the larger public in objectively vetting important city actions. That role has long since been abrogated. They have become rubber stamps that never - and I emphasize never - do anything other than follow the scripts they've been handed by the mayor. At a time when the city is closing schools for lack of money, a Landmarks Commission that is nothing more than an expensive extension of the mayor's PR office is a pointless luxury we can no long afford. Keep the staff; abolish the Commission.
Read:
Landmarks Commission Unanimously Votes Itself Completely Useless
A Modest Proposal: Abolish the Commission on Chicago Landmarks
An Open Letter to Mayor Emanuel on Bertrand Goldberg's Prentice Hospital
Labels:
Cheryl Kent,
Chicago Tribune,
Christopher Reed,
Commission on Chicago Landmarks,
James Houlihan,
Prentice Hospital,
Rafael Leon,
Rahm Emanuel,
Ron Grossman,
When politics get in the way
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Five Things I learned from Dirk Lohan about Mies van der Rohe's IBM Building
![]() |
The IBM Building before Trump Tower - click images for larger view |
1. Unlike buildings like Aqua even today, the IBM, completed in 1972, incorporated thermal breaks in its steel construction that insulated the building from outside weather conditions and made it much more energy efficient than most of the skyscrapers of its time.
2. When you walked over the IBM's south plaza, you were walking over the next day's news. The space beneath the plaza was controlled by the Chicago Sun-Times, which operated out of its own building across Wabash from the IBM until it was demolished to make way for Trump Tower. The below-grade space was where the Sun-Times stored its supply of massive roles of newsprint.
That is why the plaza along the river edge is basically a flat surface that goes vertically down to the river without any gesture to bring the river into this [IBM] development . . . I've always regretted that in a way because I think it would have been wonderful to open up the plaza and cascade down, similarly to what Trump has done since then.3. The newsprint was delivered via the train tracks that run under the IBM, under Marina City and points west, part of an original railyard dating back to the time when the Wells Street Station was on the current site of the Merchandise Mart. These tracks ran right under the center of the IBM, and so instead of the usual central service core for elevators and staircases, the IBM actually has two cores, split on either side of the old tracks.
4. If they had followed an initial scheme done by the Mies office, the IBM might well be known today as The Bow Tie Building. That was because Wabash originally ran in a way that cut a triangle into the middle of the IBM site, making the usual rectangular box impossible.
Mies was willing to live with it . . . It was a triangular piece that came right into the property that was public right-of-way for Wabash Avenue, and it would have meant to build the building with a reduced width in the center of the building and then towards the north and south make it wider again as a typical office building. And we developed this scheme in the Mies office that expressed that. So it was in a way very un-Miesian, but we of course rebelled and we said why don't we go and talk to the city about IBM acquiring it. And in the end, they did.5. “The building was also fairly expensive at that time, ” recalled Lohan. “I think it cost $33.00 a square foot.” Looking at the IBM's enduringly iconic place in the Chicago skyline four decades later, I'd have to say it proved to be a pretty good bargain.
![]() |
first floor hotel lobby. Image Courtesy The Langham Chicago |
Monday, April 08, 2013
Return of the Flown Gargoyles
![]() |
photograph: Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. - click images for larger view |
A case in point is Karl M. Vitzthum's Steuben Club building on Wells, now reborn as the apartments of Randolph Tower. We related the story of its origins, decline and rebirth last week, and got an highly illuminating email - with photos - from Brett Laureys of Wiss, Janney, Elstner, the company behind the spectacular restoration of the terra cotta facades.
![]() |
photograph: Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. |
![]() |
photograph: Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. |
Read:
Baron von Steuben Refashioned - Randolph Tower: Restored Faux Gothic with a Candy Core
. . . and speaking of gargoyles . . .
When you walk by the Ford Oriental Theater on Randolph, do you ever get the creepy feeling that you're being watched? Well, look up . . .
. . . Way up, to the top of the building.
Perched 300 feet above the sidewalk, these may be the world's only guard dogs with a bird's-eye view.
Labels:
Brett Laureys,
flying buttresses,
gargoyles,
Karl M. Vitzthum,
Oriental Theater,
Randolph Tower,
Steuben Club,
Wiss,
Wiss Janney Elstner
No Maas Tuesday, but Stroik, Hillebrand, Mars (Roman) Holy Name, Mischa Leiner, Bill Latoza, John Norquist and more - New Additions to the April Calendar!

First the bad news: MVRDV's Winy Maas has cancelled his Tuesday lecture at UIC, to be rescheduled this Fall. However, that afternoon, architect Duncan G. Stroik will be at Fourth Presbyterian Church for the Society of Architectural Historians/Chicago Chapter (registration was officially closed last Monday, but if you're motivated, engage your inner resourcefulness.)
This Wednesday, April 10th, the Graham has a panel discussion on The Artist as Philanthropist: Artist-Endowed Foundations as a New Force in Cultural Philanthropy. This Saturday, the American Planning Association kicks off its five-day 2013 National Planning Conference at the Hyatt Regency.
On Thursday, the 18th, Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple in Oak Park hosts 99% Invisible's Roman Mars, while on Friday the 26th, the IIT Armour College of Engineering will be at Maggiano's Little Italy with a lecture by Richard Kristie of Wiss, Janney, Elstner on The Repair of Holy Name Cathedral, and on Saturday the 27th at Francis Parker, Argonne Lab's Don Hillebrand will talk about Chicago: A Leader in Energy and Technology Breakthroughs.
This week, Mischa Leiner of CoDe will be at UIC on Monday the 8th, Bill Latoza discusses Walter Netsch's Legacy in Chicago's Parks for Friends of the Parks at the Cliff Dwellers on Tuesday, the Congress for the New Urbanism's John Norquist will talk about The Market Embraces Urbanism at CAF lunchtime on Wednesday.
And there's much, much more, this week and beyond. When we first put up the calendar, we said we had over 50 items. Now, we're a week into the month and we still have over 50 great items. Check out the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
Labels:
April 2013 Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events,
Bill Latoza,
Duncan Stroik,
Mischa Leiner,
Roman Mars,
Walter Netsch,
Winy Maas
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)