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A daily blog on architecture in Chicago, and other topics cultural, political and mineral.
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Tuesday, April 22, 2014
(Architectural) Scenes from the City
We continue to work on several pieces, from 740 North Rush to Jones College Prep. To hold you over for the moment, here's some shots from the city over the last few days.
Labels:
111 West Wacker,
Harry Weese River Cottages,
IBM Building Chicago,
Illinois Masonic,
River Point
Saturday, April 12, 2014
First Warm Day in April
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Labels:
Ferris Whell,
Lincoln Park Nature Boardwalk,
Navy Pier,
North Avenue Beach,
Oak Street Beach
Tuesday, April 08, 2014
Jeanne Gang updates Freud: Will Tell - Not Ask - "What Mammals Want" at the Logan Center
Sigmund Freud finally admitted he didn't have a clue . . .
Alexander Pope wrote, “The proper study of Mankind is Man” but his words became less an invocation for deepening human knowledge than a license for an geometrically accelerating stream of narcissistic rationalizations for our appetites and aggressions. Now that our technology is giving us an unprecedented and frightening domain over the earth's ecologies, might we be better off, as we send species after species hurling towards extinction, spending a little less time in infatuated self-contemplation and a lot more studying the living things with which we share not just the world but the fundamentals of our animal nature?
But I digress.
To sell a great story, a great headline is half the battle, and architect Jeanne Gang has certainly picked a provocative one for her April 28th lecture at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts on the University of Chicago campus. The flyer, shown at the top of this post, sends mixed signals. First it says seating will be first-come, first served, and then in the very next paragraph asks us us to click to respond to the invitation by April 23rd. The flyer is a jpg, so clicking the link goes nowhere. If we get more information, we'll pass it on.
I have no idea what a lecture called “What Mammals Want” will be about. Almost certainly it will nothing to do with my own musings. But when an architect declares they are going to give a talk that has neither “Form”, nor ”Autonomy”, “LEED”, ”Theory”, “Parametricism” or even “Architecture” in its title, and it references humans only by their parent class, well, that's a very interesting proposition.
Gang was last year's recipient of the U of C's Jesse L. Rosenberg Medal, recognizing achievement “deemed of great benefit to humanity.” Yet, Gang will be at the Logan Center Performance Hall, 915 East 60th, at 5:15 p.m. on Monday the 28th, telling us - not about humanity - but about the Mammals. And what they want. And what it might have to do with us.
The great question that has never been answered, and which I have not yet been able to answer, despite my thirty years of research into the feminine soul, is 'What does a woman want?'Was it that he didn't know or that, push to shove, he wasn't all that curious?
Alexander Pope wrote, “The proper study of Mankind is Man” but his words became less an invocation for deepening human knowledge than a license for an geometrically accelerating stream of narcissistic rationalizations for our appetites and aggressions. Now that our technology is giving us an unprecedented and frightening domain over the earth's ecologies, might we be better off, as we send species after species hurling towards extinction, spending a little less time in infatuated self-contemplation and a lot more studying the living things with which we share not just the world but the fundamentals of our animal nature?
But I digress.
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Studio Gang/s Peoples Gas Pavilion, inspired by a tortoise's shell, at the Lincoln Park Nature Boardwalk |
To sell a great story, a great headline is half the battle, and architect Jeanne Gang has certainly picked a provocative one for her April 28th lecture at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts on the University of Chicago campus. The flyer, shown at the top of this post, sends mixed signals. First it says seating will be first-come, first served, and then in the very next paragraph asks us us to click to respond to the invitation by April 23rd. The flyer is a jpg, so clicking the link goes nowhere. If we get more information, we'll pass it on.
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Studio/Gang Architects, Chinese American Service League, with titanium shingles like the scales of a dragon's skin |
Gang was last year's recipient of the U of C's Jesse L. Rosenberg Medal, recognizing achievement “deemed of great benefit to humanity.” Yet, Gang will be at the Logan Center Performance Hall, 915 East 60th, at 5:15 p.m. on Monday the 28th, telling us - not about humanity - but about the Mammals. And what they want. And what it might have to do with us.
Sunday, April 06, 2014
Inaugural Garofalo Fellow Molly Hunker shows her cards: at UIC with Myth, through May 10; at the Graham in person Monday night with Spiritual Kitsch
Last August, architect and designer was Molly Hunker, co-founder of the Los Angeles design firm SPORTS, was named as the first recipient of the Douglas A. Garofalo Fellowship, established by the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago to honor the talented architect who died far too soon in 2011.
Hunker took up residence at UIC last fall, with the plan of teaching courses, pursuing independent research, and preparing a public exhibition and lecture. That exhibition, Myth, is now up in the South Gallery of the Arts and Architecture Building at UIC, 845 West Harrison, where it runs, 9 a.m. through 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday through May 10th. The exhibition . . .

. . . focuses specifically on the religious genre of the home shrine, re-envisioning the richly decorative and kitsch assembly through the lens of the architectural installation. . . . Myth re-envisions the home shrine through the lens of the contemporary architectural installation. The project learns from the careful collection and curation of sentimental objects commonly found in home shrines, producing an emotionally resonant experience that recalibrates contemporary notions of atmosphere and engagement.
Myth uses the decorative prayer candle as the primary object through which to explore how home shrines can provoke new understandings of visual and atmospheric opulence in the architectural interior .
The project suspends hundreds of handmade wax container - candles on cotton wicks, creating a semi-enclosed shrine-space by the accumulation of the colorful objects . While the overhead candles are geometrically simple, the candles closer to the ground are increasingly articulated with a grotesque featuring strategy inherent to the transformation of wax from liquid to solid . This articulation technique partners with a gradient of increasing color saturation and shimmering cosmetic in order to engage with a kitsch sensibility that provokes greater emotional resonance with visitors.Tonight, Monday, April 7th, 6:00 p.m. at the Graham Foundation, 4 West Burton Place, Hunker will deliver a lecture, Spiritual Kitsch.
The discussion will explore how home shrines and related assemblies can provoke new understandings of visual opulence and lead to the production of emotionally resonant architecture.More information and registration here.
Facade slices cut from pizza building - Fewer rounded brick columns at 740 North Rush in renderings for new 45-story Hyatt
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When Crain's Chicago Business first revealed the project in February, the site identity was pegged to 740 North Rush, the former Crain's Communications headquarters building best known as home to a very busy Giordano's pizzeria. As now revealed by Reilly and the renderings, however, 740 isn't being slated for annihilation but truncation. About half of its Superior Street elevation is set to be demolished for the new tower. This is not unprecedented. The landmark 1872 Delaware Building at Randolph and Dearborn, for example, not only had floors added to it in 1888 - several of its easternmost bays were demolished to make way for the Oriental Theater Building.
Even less lucky is the blocky seven-story stone-faced structure with three large displays on the ground floor (was it originally an auto showroom?) that currently serves as Giordano's annex.
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Image courtesy Google Streetview |
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image courtesy Google Streetview |
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Aloft, Hyatt Place, Fairfield Inn River North, HOK Architects |
A similar mashup is planned for Superior, countering the high priced Four-Star Peninsula right across the street with an extended-stay Hyatt House and mid-priced Hyatt Place. At least in the preliminary renderings released by Reilly, the design of the new 45-story tower is numbingly generic, but at least we get to keep the delightfully funky 740 with its long arcades of three-story rounded columns done up in the same brick as the rest of the facade. In full along Rush, in sample along Superior.
Saturday, April 05, 2014
Four Chicago Rooftop Scenes
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Cuppola with |
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bottle in mesh carry |
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Renaissance Scrabble |
Labels:
203 North Wabash,
Jeweler's Building,
London Guarantee Building,
Renaissance Chicago Hotel,
Virgin Hotel Chicago
Thursday, April 03, 2014
Chicagoisms, Dyja, Szot, Baker, Carson, Krueck iandSexton, Kwinter, Manferdini, Metter, Tham and Videgard, Kamin, Enquist, Johnson and much more - it's (finally) The April Calendar
It's the third of the month, so it must be time for the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
We have another jam-packed month. Over the next week. there's a discussion on Jane's Walk for Friends of Downtown lunchtime today, Bolle Tham and Martin Videgård at Crown Hall, IIT on Friday, and on Saturday afternoon at the Graham, editor Alexander Eisenschmidt will lead a panel including Penelope Dean, Ellen Grimes, Sam Jacob, Mark Linder and Jonathan Mekinda marking the publication of Chicagoisms: The City as Catalyst for Architectural Speculation, which is both a book (available for purchase), and a new exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Next Tuesday lunchtime at the Cultural Center, Thomas Dyja, author of The Third Coast: When
Chicago Built the American Dream, will discuss The Battle for the Mecca, inside the must-see exhibition Mecca Flat Blues. Tuesday evening at the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Metropolis editor Susan S. Szenasy will be in conversation with Bill Baker on the Well-Oiled Machine of SOM Chicago Structural Group, while architect John Szot talks and offers up the premiere of the third and last part of his video project, Architecture and the Unspeakable, for MAS Context at the Logan Share.
Architecture and the Unspeakable 3 - TEASER by brooklynfoundry
Next Wednesday, Lisa Napoles discusses The Unrepentant Revivalist: William Carbys Zimmerman
at CAF lunchtime, where in the evening the Trib's Blair Kamin will lead a panel including SOM's Phil Enquist and Silas Chiow, Ralph Johnson of Perkins+Will and Jonathan Solomon of Syracuse University on the topic of Kamin's recent Tribune series, Designed in Chicago, Made in China.
And that's just the next week, and not everything at that. Coming up later this month.
Architects, designers and thinkers:
David Carson, Ron Krueck and Mark Sexton, Sanford Kwinter, Elena Manferdini, Andrew Metter, Ernest C. Wong, Wright and His Assistants, Louis Sullivan and John Edelmann
Topics:
How Paris Became Paris: The Invention of a Modern City; the GSA rehab
on State Street; Tracking the Lost Treasures of the Auditorium; First American Skyscrapers: Chicago and New York; Chicago's Historic Hyde Park
Seminars:
Designing the Classical Interior, 11th Annual Midwest Bridge Symposium
This are just some of the highlights. To learn the who, what, when and where on nearly 50 great items, check out the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.

Next Tuesday lunchtime at the Cultural Center, Thomas Dyja, author of The Third Coast: When
Chicago Built the American Dream, will discuss The Battle for the Mecca, inside the must-see exhibition Mecca Flat Blues. Tuesday evening at the Chicago Architecture Foundation, Metropolis editor Susan S. Szenasy will be in conversation with Bill Baker on the Well-Oiled Machine of SOM Chicago Structural Group, while architect John Szot talks and offers up the premiere of the third and last part of his video project, Architecture and the Unspeakable, for MAS Context at the Logan Share.
Architecture and the Unspeakable 3 - TEASER by brooklynfoundry
Next Wednesday, Lisa Napoles discusses The Unrepentant Revivalist: William Carbys Zimmerman
at CAF lunchtime, where in the evening the Trib's Blair Kamin will lead a panel including SOM's Phil Enquist and Silas Chiow, Ralph Johnson of Perkins+Will and Jonathan Solomon of Syracuse University on the topic of Kamin's recent Tribune series, Designed in Chicago, Made in China.
And that's just the next week, and not everything at that. Coming up later this month.
Architects, designers and thinkers:
David Carson, Ron Krueck and Mark Sexton, Sanford Kwinter, Elena Manferdini, Andrew Metter, Ernest C. Wong, Wright and His Assistants, Louis Sullivan and John Edelmann
Topics:
How Paris Became Paris: The Invention of a Modern City; the GSA rehab
on State Street; Tracking the Lost Treasures of the Auditorium; First American Skyscrapers: Chicago and New York; Chicago's Historic Hyde Park
Seminars:
Designing the Classical Interior, 11th Annual Midwest Bridge Symposium
This are just some of the highlights. To learn the who, what, when and where on nearly 50 great items, check out the April Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Abandoned Building To Luxury Tower: 111 West Wacker Sikorsky's towards completion
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A Sikorsky S-64 put in a very noisy appearance along the Chicago river Saturday. There were some last bits of metal to be hauled up to the roof of 111 West Wacker. The building was topped out last October, the tall red crane that had clung to its full height dismantled the following month. So if it was too big for the freight elevator, bring in the copter.
The Clark Street bridge was closed off as trucks brought in the parts and crews attached them to long ropes dropped from the S-64 for the careful trip to the roof.
The airlift was kind of an impromptu celebration of one of the more remarkable turnarounds in Chicago construction history. 111 West Wacker started out all the way back in 2006 as Waterview, an 80-story tower combining a four-star Shangri-La Hotel with luxury condos. The projects architects/engineers - Teng and Associates - made the fatal mistake of deciding to also be the developer. Bad move. Construction halted when continuing financing failed to materialize and checks stopped clearing, and the 2008 economic crash sent the structure into what seemed to be an game-ending code blue, leaving behind bare concrete bones truncated at the 25th floor.
Waterview became the cautionary eyesore on the river, exposed and decaying, year and year. Then, in 2011, the development firm Related Midwest signed a letter of intent to acquire the site and the stub structure for somewhere around $26 million. The hotel was cut, the tower shortened to a 60 stories, and a second groundbreaking ceremony was held in November of 2012 - on the 28th floor.
Although the company has also recently completed a new apartment tower at 500 North Lake Shore Drive, Related Midwest is kind of the hermit crab of Chicago development. They've been assigned to develop a plan for the historic Lathrop Homes public housing site. In addition to 111 West Wacker, Related took on three failed condo buildings in the Central Station development designed by Pappageorge Haymes, with all the buildings rebranded. Museum Park Place 2 became Harbor View, One Museum Park West became The Grant, and 1600 Museum Park, the most irremediably lunkish of the designs, rechristened Adler Place.
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The Adler |
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845 North State at Chestnut, image via Curbed Chicago |
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GEMS World Academy - photograph: Bob Johnson |
The plywood strip along the west facade at 111 West Wacker . . .
. . . still needs to be zipped up with glass, but the curtain wall is finally wrapping around the concrete honeycomb of the original 25-story base that remained bare even as the shiny tower rose above it.
“It's not perfect”, to pre-empt Blair's usual phrase, but 111 West Wacker is shaping up to be a striking - if unadventurous - addition to the Chicago river skywall.
Read More:
Waterview Has Risen From the Grave!
The Three Red Cranes of 111 West Wacker
111 West Wacker's Red Crane Flies the Coop
Cranes (No) Chicago Business
Labels:
111 West Wacker,
Handel Architects,
Related Midwest,
Sikorsky S-64,
Teng Associates,
Waterview
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