Chicago architecture has influenced and reflected the history of American architecture. The city of Chicago, Illinois features prominent buildings in a variety of styles by many important architects. Since most buildings within the downtown area were destroyed (the most famous exception being the Water Tower) by the Great Chicago Fire in 1871, Chicago buildings are noted for their originality rather than their antiquity.
History
Beginning in the early 1880s, the Chicago School pioneered steel-frame construction and, in the 1890s, the use of large areas of plate glass. These were among the first modern skyscrapers. William LeBaron Jenney's Home Insurance Building of 1885 was the first to use steel in its structural frame instead of cast iron, but this building was still clad in heavy brick and stone. Daniel Burnham and his partners, John Welborn Root and Charles Atwood, designed technically advanced steel frames with glass and terra cotta skins in the mid-1890s; these were made possible by professional engineers, in particular E. C. Shankland, and modern contractors, in particular George A. Fuller. Louis Sullivan was the city's most philosophical architect. Realizing that the skyscraper represented a new form of architecture, he discarded historical precedent and designed buildings that emphasized their vertical nature. This new form of architecture, by Jenney, Burnham, Sullivan, and others, became known as the "Commercial Style," but it was called the "Chicago School" by later historians.
In 1892 the Masonic Temple surpassed the New York World Building, breaking its two year reign as the tallest skyscraper, only to be surpassed itself two years later by another New York building.
Daniel Burnham led the design of the "White City" of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition which some historians claim led to a revival of Neo-Classical architecture throughout Chicago and the entire United States. It is true that the "White City" represented anything other than its host city's architecture. While Burnham did develop the 1909 "Plan for Chicago", perhaps the first comprehensive city plan in the U.S, in a Neo-Classical style, many of Chicago's most progressive skyscrapers occurred after the Exposition closed, between 1894 and 1899. Louis Sullivan said that the fair set the course of American architecture back by two decades, but even his finest Chicago work, the Schlesinger and Meyer (later Carson, Pirie, Scott) store, was built in 1899--five years afer the "White City" and ten years before Burnham's Plan.
Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie School influenced both building design and the design of furnishings.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's Illinois Institute of Technology campus in Chicago influenced the later Modern or International style. Van der Rohe's work is sometimes called the Second Chicago School.
The Sears Tower would be the world's tallest building from its construction in 1974 until 1998 and later for some categories of building.
Numerous architects have constructed landmark buildings of varying styles in Chicago. Some of these are the so-called "Chicago seven": James Freed, Tom Beeby, Larry Booth, Stuart Cohen, James Nagle, Stanley Tigerman, and Ben Weese.
Notable future Chicago buildings
Aqua Tower is currently slated for construction beginning in early 2007. An 82 story residential & hotel high-rise slated for the River East development in the downtown area. The building is striking for its freeflowing facade design resembling moving water. Designed by Studio Gang Architects & Loewenberg + Associates (developer). Of any high-rise in the city not currently under construction at the close of 2006, this one is the most likely to proceed due to it being incorporated into an already existing development (River East) as part of its original plan. Current status: Construction slated to start late 2006/early 2007
The Chicago Spire (formerly Fordham Spire) has been approved by the Chicago City Council, and is slated to break ground in late 2006 or early 2007. As designed, it will eclipse the Sears Tower as the tallest building in North America. Current status: Proposed
One Museum Park, totaling 68 stories in the South Loop area within the Museum Park development overlooking the Museum Campus (Field Museum, Adler Planetarium, Shedd Aquarium). Designed by Pappageorge/Haymes, Ltd. Current status: Under construction
The Park Michigan Tower in the South Loop, encompassing 80 stories, designed by Pappageorge/Haymes, Ltd. Current status: Proposed
The Trump International Hotel and Tower (Chicago) is currently under construction on the Chicago River at the site of the old Chicago Sun-Times building. Current status: Under construction
Waterview Tower, currently under construction on Wacker Drive at a site formerly used for parking. Designed by Thomas F. Hoepf of Teng & Associates, the 89 story high-rise will be a hotel-condo mixed use structure. Shangri-La Hotel & Resorts will operate the hotel portion. Current status: Under construction
Important Chicago buildings
- 1869 Chicago Water Tower, William W. Boyington
- 1872 Second Presbyterian Church 1936 S. Michigan, James Renwick 1900 Howard Van Doren Shaw
- 1877 St. Stanislaus Kostka Church1327 N. Noble, Patrick Keely
- 1885 Home Insurance Building, Chicago School, William Le Baron Jenney
- 1887 Marshall Field Warehouse, Henry Hobson Richardson
- 1889 Auditorium Building, Louis Sullivan and Dankmar Adler.
- 1890 and 1894–1895 Reliance Building, firm of Daniel Burnham
- 1891 Manhattan Building, William Le Baron Jenney
- 1893 Palace of Fine Arts, later Museum of Science and Industry, Beaux-Arts, Charles Atwood
- 1897 St. Paul Church 2234 S. Hoyne, Henry Schlacks
- 1897 Chicago Library (now Chicago Cultural Center), Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge
- 1898 Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Building, Louis Sullivan
- 1906 Sears Merchandise Building Tower, George G. Nimmons - William K. Fellows
- 1909 Robie House, Prairie School, Frank Lloyd Wright
- 1914 Wrigley Field
- 1914 Navy Pier
- 1916 Navy Pier Auditorium, Charles Summer Frost
- 1919-1924 Wrigley Building, Graham, Anderson, Probst & White
- 1920 Michigan Avenue Bridge
- 1921 Chicago Theater, Beaux-Arts, Cornelius W. Rapp and George L. Rapp
- 1922 Tribune Tower, neo-Gothic, John Mead Howells and Raymond M. Hood
- 1924 Soldier Field, Holabird and Roche; extensive renovation 2003, Ben Wood and Carlos Zapata
- 1925 Uptown Theatre
- 1929 Palmolive Building, Art Deco, Holabird & Root
- 1929 John G. Shedd Aquarium, Graham, Anderson, Probst & White
- 1931 Merchandise Mart, Graham, Anderson, Probst & White
- 1930s-1960s Illinois Institute of Technology, including S.R. Crown Hall, Second Chicago School, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill
- 1934 Field Building, Graham, Anderson, Probst & White
- 1952 860–880 Lake Shore Drive, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
- 1957 Inland Steel Building, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
- 1964 Marina City, Bertrand Goldberg
- 1968 Lake Point Tower, John Heinrich and George Schipporeit
- 1969 John Hancock Center, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
- 1974 Sears Tower, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
- 1974 Aon Center, Edward Durrell Stone (earlier names were Standard Oil Building and Amoco Building)
- 1979-85 James R. Thompson Center, Helmut Jahn
- 1982 NBC Tower, Adrian D. Smith
- 1990 American Medical Association Building, Kenzo Tange
- 1990 Athletic Club Illinois Center, Kisho Kurokawa
- 1991 Harold Washington Library Center, Thomas Beeby
- 1991 Museum of Contemporary Art, Josef Paul Kleihues
- 1992 77 West Wacker Drive, Ricardo Bofill
- 2004 Millennium Park, Frank Gehry, a showcase for 21st century modernism.
References
- Pridmore, Jay and George A. Larson, Chicago Architecture and Design : Revised and expanded, Harry N. Abrams, Inc., New York, 2005. ISBN 0-8109-5892-9.