Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Only through Friday to see Boom Towns!

Friday afternoon will be your last chance to take in Boom Towns!. Chicago Architects Design New Worlds, the exhibition I guest curated at the Chicago Architecture Foundation, 224 South Michigan. It compares projects of Chicago architects in today's booms towns in the Middle East and China with counterparts in Chicago's own era as a boom town in the 19th century. Despite my own participation, it turned out to be a compelling and entertaining show, with great stories, models, and a lot of striking period and contemporary images of some of the most iconic architectural projects of the last century and a quarter. You can read more about the exhibition in my previous post here. And don't forgot to check out Iker Gil's great exhibition Shanghai Transforming, in CAF's John Buck Gallery, where it runs through January 9.

Monday, November 17, 2008

This Week: Urban Waterfronts Conference, Environmental Hall of Fame

Ok, it's cold, damp, and deteriorating. I don't like where this is heading. What better time to contemplate not just the challenges, but the more inviting - and warmer - natures of our waterfronts?

Urban Waterfronts 26th Annual Conference 2008
is a three-day event that begins Thursday evening, November 20th, and continues through Saturday. The conference will be book-ended by an open plenary address by Sadhu Johnston, chief environmental officer of the City of Chicago, and a closing address by Gerald W. Adelmann, executive director of Openlands. In between, there's a generous array of panels on such topics as the effect of global warming on coastal cities, waterfront transformations, signature bridges, the preservation and re-use of historic waterfront architecture, and many more. The wide roster of participants includes Elgin mayor Ed Schock, Biloxi mayor Gerald Blessey and Riek Bakker (not the make-up artist, but the architect), from Rotterdam. A champagne reception and gala dinner will recognize the 22nd Excellence on the Waterfront Honor Award winners. You can find program and registration information for the conference here.

And if you just can't get enough of awards, there's the rather curious rolling series of them being passed out as freely as party favors this Thursday to Saturday by a group called the Environmental Hall of Fame, inducting into multitudinous repositories of honor national, state, and city, animal, vegetable and mineral. With no fewer than 36 "honorees", there's something for just about everyone, including the Chicago Park District, the Chicago Public Schools, the CTA, Kimpton Hotels, Pat Quinn, Whole Foods, the Merchandise Mart and Pierce and Keely Shaye Brosnan. (I think I may also have seen Svengoolie on the list, for his heroic recycling of rubber chickens, but I could be mistaken.) Who knows? Maybe if you show up at one of the receptions at the Hotel Allegro, "rated the Greenest Hotel in Chicago," you'll get an award, too. Info here.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Weekend Reading - Ouroussoff Buffaloed, Kamin at the Piano

Sunday's New York Times offers up architecture critic Nicholai Ouroussoff's overview of the architecture of Buffalo, the one-time Empire City of Lake Erie that, after the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1957 reduced it's importance as a port, began an economic free fall that has seen it lose half of its population. At it's prime, however, Buffalo was the eighth largest city in America, and called upon the best architects of the time - Daniel Burnham, Louis Sullivan, H.H. Richardson and Frank Lloyd Wright, among others - to design its iconic buildings. Ouroussoff begins his article commenting:
One of the most cynical clichés in architecture is that poverty is good for preservation. The poor don’t bulldoze historic neighborhoods to make way for fancy new high-rises.
But, of course, historic architecture has two great enemies. One is prosperity, where a historic building is the obstacle to recycling the site to higher density and greater economic gain. The second, however, is poverty, where historic buildings are considered expendable because they no longer seem to possess any residual economic potential.
Among the structures mentioned by Ouroussoff is Burnham's 1896, $3,5000,000 Ellicott Square Building. At ten stories high and half a million square feet, it was the largest office building in the world at the time of its opening. Like Union Station in Chicago, it was designed to support an additional 10 floors, but, also like Union station, the addition was never built. Ellicott Square is the product of Burnham's chief designer Charles Atwood, who was said to be able, at a moment's notice, to create a building derived from any historical style you might fancy. Here, he seems to be channeling Adler & Sullivan's Auditorium Building, sans tower or theater, with a base by way of William LeBaron Jenney and a pasted-on grand entrance that's a Rapp and Rapp-like reimagining of Renaissance Italy.
The glory of Ellicott Square is its light-filled central court (the photos here are via TonyTheTiger at Wikipedia), with a brilliant mosaic floor made up of over 23,000,000 tiles.

The web version of Ouroussoff's piece beats out the print with an expanded slide show of photos. You can see more of Ellicott Square, including a sequence of construction photographs, on the Buffalo as an Architectural Museum website, a wonderful compendium of information and images.

Closer to home, the Trib's Blair Kamin takes an early tour of Renzo Piano's Modern Wing of the Art Institute of Chicago, considering the tensions that arise between museum architecture and the art it was designed to display.
Modern Wing galleries with northern exposures have to compete with the spectacular tableau, flooding through Piano's wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling windows, of Millennium Park, centered by the billowing metallic scallops of Frank Gehry's Pritzker Pavilion backdropped by the east Randolph Street skyline.
The Art Institute's solution? Put a wall in front of part of the window both to display art and break up the view. It will be interesting to see how the art, itself, will fare in galleries with such large windows. Kamin, who has a Pulitzer, gets to contemplate it now, while I, a mere blogger, will wait for the public opening next Spring.

As with Ourousoff, Kamin's piece is actually better in the web version, where it is accompanied by a short video where several Art Institute curators show off the wonders of their new baby.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Chicago Streetscene - Halsted Street

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Union Station 2020, Lifestyle Building Challenge winners on display

The big news over the weekend was the announcement of the winner of the Chicago Architectural Club's 2008 Burnham Prize competition, Union Station 2020: A Crossroads for the High Speed Rail City, which solicited ideas of how architecture can support the creation of an inter-city high-speed rail network in the greater Chicago area. The first prize team of Michael Cady, Elba Gil, David Lillie, and Andres Montana, which Blair Kamin reports is made up of employees of the Chicago office of Thompson Ventulett Stainback & Associates ,will receive $10,000 for their proposal for a modern reimagining of the lost great concourse of Union Station which would link the high-speed trains to water taxi's along the Chicago river - and require the demolition of the 35-story 222 S. Riverside currently on the site. You can see a rendering of the proposal on this post on Blair Kamin's Skyline blog.

A selection from the over 75 entries to the competition are on display at the Chicago History Museum as part of the exhibition, Burnham 2:0: A Patchwork Plan for the High-Speed Rail City, which runs through next April 26th. (Find it in KMPG Snyder gallery - enter the Chicago: Crossroads of the America Exhibition on the 2nd floor, head past the "L" car, find the Pioneer locomotive and hang left.) I had a chance to visit the exhibition this weekend, and I'll be writing more about it soon.

The CAC is promising it will post images of the competition winners to its website. Let's hope they'll be of the entire entry board, that they won't be pdf's, and that they'll be legible. It often seems as if posting competition boards to the web in a complete and readable form is considered an insurmountable challenge, but lest anyone think it's rocket science, check out the winners page of the Lifecycle Building Challenge competition website. It's not perfect - one of the jpg's is actually almost 6MB (!) - but you'll find a fully readable, zoomable jpg of the board for every winning entry.

tran/spot: Transient Awareness Center, a proposal created out of the HOK Intern Program at UIC with the participation of students from Washington University, the HSD, Kansas State and IIT's Chris Housley, won recognition in the Student/Innovation category. The focus of the exhibition, sponsored by the U.S. EPA, was on ideas to reduce the huge amount of waste materials created by traditional construction processes, a major environmental goal. tran/spot proposes "a modular structure that is assembled in empty lots to provide information to the local residents . . . but always returning downtown to represent the neighborhoods it has visited in its travels."

The intial circuit for the structure would be from Pilsen, to Wicker Park, and back to Pritzker Park, that abject, (oxymoron alert) gated open space across from the Harold Washington Library at State and Van Buren. At each location the structure would connect to a CTA line - Pink, Blue, and, at the Library Stop, Motley - and center a small plaza that would be "gathering area for movies, presentations, lectures, rallies, protects, or anything else the community requires or desires" and would "allow blighted neighborhoods access to vital information that in the past hindered their opportunities and involvement." The side of the structure away from the "L" would function "as a community display board, or learning center (exhibiting) job openings, events, community news and other information." Just as the structure when returned to the Loop would retain memories of the neighborhoods where it had journeyed, the foundation for the structure and, it is hoped, a continuing gathering place for community cultural exchange, would remain at each locale .

You can see the entire winning board here.

Monday, November 10, 2008

He thinks development is planning . . .

Ada Louise Huxtable, the long-time architecture critic of the New York Times, and more recently the Wall Street Journal, has a new book out, a very heavy book. On Architecture: Collected Reflections on a Century of Change brings together her writings from over five decades. She talks about the current state of the art in an interview with the Times' Phillip Lopate, covering, among other topics to which she continues to bring a keen eye and sharp perspective, preservation, "eye candy" buildings versus those that actually resolve problems, and, of course, planning:
Everything in this city is totally developer driven. You do not get Rockefeller Center-type development unless you have some kind of leadership that will commit to it." Of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's role in the process: "he thinks development is planning."
Sound like any other big-city mayor we all know?

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Lola Lulu Chicago

Laaaaadies! - and - Gentlemen!

In this corner! . . . representing the North side, child of Ireland, lover of students, composers and kings, dancer, actress, aerialist, Protestant apologist, the Countess of Landsfield and Queen of the Mammoth Circus: Max Ophüls' Lola Montes!

And in this corner! . . . representing the West side, seed of Frank Wedekind's fevered imagination, nutured by Mahler and Schoenberg, beloved of composers, painters, countesses and high school gymnasts, murderess of newspaper editors, victim of Jack the ripper: Alban Berg's Lulu!

THIS WEEK ONLY! you have the amazing, once in a lifetime opportunity to spend quality time with not merely one, but two of the most legendary femme fatales in the history of the dramatic arts! Scandal! Perversity! Murder! Redemption! Restoration! Read all about it - with Pictures! - here.

Obama x World x 208 front pages

O beautiful age of illusion and utopias!
We believe, we hope, and everything seems possible!
Marcello, Puccini's La Boheme
Apologies to my reader Stephen who commented, regarding my own modest acknowledgement of Barack Obama's stunning victory, " it would've been nice if it could've been a respite from political oriented material," but in light of the such a momentous event, blogs as disparate as Opera Chic, Andrew Patner's The View from Here, and Lee Bey's The Urban Observer all felt compelled to add their own take on the event.

For die-hard Republicans, it may have been only politics, but for the rest of us, it was like the scene in Beethoven's Fidelio where the prisoners are finally liberated out of their dungeon into the bright sunlight and clean air. After eight dark years in which our public treasuries were plundered, our reputation trashed, our friends repulsed and our Constitution defiled, last Tuesday's election finally gave us at a least a moment to hope that our better days may still be ahead of us.

When I titled my own modest post Now Comes the Hard Part it was in full recognition of the fact that translating that hope into a new, better reality will be a Herculean task. Last week the Chicago Reader took a lot of flak from Afro-Americans and others offended by its cover portrait of Obama with a bottom banner reading "Don't Screw This Up." (The alternative cover, which would have run if John McCain had won, was even funnier: "Please Don't Die.") The misconception is that the cover was degrading Obama's ability, which couldn't be farther from the truth. It's a recognition of the enormous and perilous task, greater than that facing any incoming U.S. leader since FDR took office in the depth of the Great Depression, facing our new President.

But like Rick and Ilsa's Paris, we'll always have last Tuesday, and the glow of that golden moment when the clouds lifted and everything seemed possible. And I've seen no more eloquent evocation of that moment than that just put up on the website of artdaily.org, the invaluable newsletter that bills itself as "The First Art Newspaper on the Net." Editor Ignacio Villarreal chose to represent the occasion with an extraordinary mosaic of 208 newspaper front pages, from across America, and all around the world. When you place your cursor on one the images, it expands to a larger size for better viewing. Writes Villarreal:
There are 208 newspaper front pages from around the world that we have gathered here so that our visitors can see the beauty in the formats. What talent of those who with only one word, with just the name or a simple phrase, shape their respective newspapers with this story that occupied the front page of many dailies throughout the world.
An unstated parallel story of the mosaic is this may be one of the last times such an epochal event will be able to be expressed through the front pages of daily newspapers, which, after several centuries, are in often precipitous decline, reportedly on their way to history's dustbin. (Chicago's two storied dailies, the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune, are especially endangered, poised at the precipice of an annihilating fall, greased, respectively, by the lootings of a predatory, now imprisoned, press lord and a high stakes financier's $8 billion noose of debt.)

But for one day, at least, we put that aside. Thanks to artdaily.org, we have their exhilarating portrait both of the audacity of hope, and a reminder of the delight and democracy that was the daily newspaper.

Friday, November 07, 2008

Last Day to Register for New Ways to Inhabit the City

Friday, November 7th is the last day to register for New Ways to Inhabit the City, a series of five events co-sponsored by UIC and the Instituto Cervantes. The series kicks off with Stan Allen's 6:00 P.M. lecture on Monday the 10th, and continues on Tuesday, November 11th, with two panels, one at 3:30 - 5:00 P.M., moderated Robert Somol, where Dana Cuff, Clare Lyster, Sam Jacob, and Alexander Lehnerer will discuss Urban Economies, and the second, a panel, Urban Environments, from 5:30 - 7:00 P.M. with Allen, Sarah Dunn, Xavier Vendrell, and Juan Manual Rois, moderated by Penelope Dean. Wednesday the 12th see's a 1 P.M. lecture by Vendrell, Before Landscape Urbanism, and on Friday the 14th at 1:00 Jose Antonio Acebillo will discuss present a lecture titled Urban Turn.

All events will be at Gallery 1100 in the UIC's Art and Architecture Building, 845 W. Harrison. RSVP by calling 312/996.3335 or via email. Information on-line.

Thursday, November 06, 2008

Chicago Streetscene - Hubbard's Cave

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

November 4, 2008 - Now Comes the Hard Part

Monday, November 03, 2008

Election Day

Vote Early and Often
(Gonzalo Santos, California State University, Bakersfield)

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Oh, the Humanities! - Pran, Mau, Jacob, Allen, Landscape, Bridges and SuperTalls - over 50 events on November calendar

Big Thinkers (patent pending) is one of the key themes of this year's Chicago Humanities Festival, and it's resulted in a series of programs to "celebrate architects, designers, and Big Thinkers (patent pending) throughout history and into the 21st century." We wrote yesterday about this past weekend's programs, but if you missed them, there are several more next weekend. Among them are Offshoring Audacity, and the opening on a new exhibition, Burnham 2.0, at the Chicago History Museum, both on Saturday, and on Sunday, Bruce Mau and Elva Rubio's The Chicago Project.

It's just part of a rich array of 50+ different programs on the November calendar that will also include a three-day conference, The Second Wave of Modernism in Landscape Design in America, Structural Engineers Association of Illinois' Evolution of Bridge Technology, and the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat's annual wards dinner. Friends of Downtown sponsors a look at the redevelopment of the Old Post Office with an expressway running through it, closed and empty since 1996. Carolyn Armenta Davis discusses 21st Century Designs from Black Diaspora Architects at CAF, which is also sponsoring tours of the Goettsch Partners and SOM offices on separate dates. AIA/Chicago offers a tour of Carol Ross Barney's office. There's a walking tour of the Cecil Balmond Graham Foundation exhibition, Solid Void, by IIT's Eric Ellingsen and Director/Curator Sarah Herda.

There are lectures by Vince Michael on preservation in China at CAF, William Tyre on Prairie Avenue at the Cultural Center for Landmarks Illinois, Peter Pran and Christoff and Finio at IIT, and Stan Allen, Interloop Architecture's Finley and Wamble, and Realtities: United's Jan and Tim Edler at UIC, and much, much more, including the last chance this Friday to be dazed and confused by my gallery talk for the exhibition, Boom Towns!, at CAF.

With the economy continuing to tank, you have to wonder if all these institutions will be able to continue their programs at the current pace, so gather ye rosebuds while ye may, and check the more than half a hundred great November events here.

Plan of Chicago+100, CHF panel, noon today, at the Harris

We'll have a larger blurb later, but the November calendar, with over 50 architecture-related events, is up, and it's pretty heavily front-loaded with items, included a number of Chicago Humanities Festival events this weekend and next.

Several are already sold out, but today, Sunday, November 2 at noon, there's a panel at the Harris Theatre, The Plan Of Chicago: 100 Years of City-Building, with Carl Smith, Paul O'Connor, Gerald Adelmann and Jeanne Gang, moderated by Lee Bey. At 2:30 P.M. - same location, there's another panel, The Global City of the Future, with Saskia Sassen, Richard Burdett, and SOM's Phil Enquist, moderated by Adele Simmons, vice-chair of the Burnham Plan Centennial Committee.

Next Saturday, it's The GO TO 2040 Plan: Bold Innovations for a Better Chicago, 10:00 A.M., and at 2:30, Offshoring Audacity, with Joseph Grima, Jeffrey Inaba, Sam Jacob and Geoff Manaugh, both at the Chicago History Museum. Sunday at Noon at DePaul's Merle Reskin Theatre, Bruce Mau and Elva Rubio: Designing Chicago's Next Century will present the project they've created with SAIC and UIC students to "radically re-envision the future of Chicago's built environment: a Burnham plan for the next century."

Tickets at the door are $10.00.

Preview all the goodies on the November calendar here.

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Take It Easy . . . But Take It

Studs Terkel - 1912-2008

At 2:40 P.M., Friday afternoon, the heart of Chicago stopped beating. Disk jockey, rabble-rouser, raconteur, actor, interviewer, historian, mensch, Louis "Studs" Terkel managed to be a cast of thousands while somehow always remaining true to himself. I'm sure he found no small irony in the fact that the cavalcade of his life stretched from one Great Depression to another. He had seen it all, but he never lost his sense of wonder. He knew where he stood, but he never demonized his enemies.

Early in his career, Studs spun records for a show he called The Wax Museum. I doubt many young people today would get the joke, but it's funny how things turn on themselves. We've gone from the era of 78 rpm records that held 3 minutes of music - great for songs, but requiring a stack the size of a Great Dane for a complete opera - to the era of the iPod, where you buy an opera an aria at a time.

Studs was the ultimate elitist-egalitarian. His tastes ranged from pop, to jazz, to blues, to opera. He believed what Arnold Schoenberg told a George Gershwin suffering from an inferiority complex over his tin pan alley origins. "There are only two kinds of music," said Schoenberg, "bad music and good music."

As I write this, the usual mixmaster traversal of my iPod library is playing through my headphones, so I thought I'd pay tribute to Studs with a selection from my own mini Waxless (other than ear wax, of course) Museum.

Four Songs for Studs

I. The beginning of Prokoviev's Lt. Kije, a sleepy, plaintiff morning song on a trumpet, then a snare drum, revving up, a piccolo chirping, then a flute, horns giving the parade an oomph, more woodwinds, then the strings setting the horns speeding up, chased by trombones, and finally a huge bass drum gleefully being whacked hard enough to set a building shaking, an entire village waking up and bursting with the sheer physical joy of being alive.

2. Io so che alle sue penne non ci sono conforti! sings Pinkerton, I know there is no consolation for her grief. He has come back to Japan, after three years absence, with Kate, his American bride, to reclaim the child he fathered with Madame Butterfly. Pinkerton, the American Consul Sharpless, and Butterfly's servant Suzuki - they all know that the situation is cruel and unjust, but as Jean Renoir once noted, "Everyone has their reasons" and in a trio of heartbreaking beauty they pour out their pain even as they blindly push the story forward to Butterfly's tragic end.

3. At the conclusion of an all-star memorial concert featuring Arlo Guthrie, Pete Seeger and others, as the voice of Odetta rises above the ensemble singing This Land is Your Land, another voice, that of actor Will Geer - another incorrigible, unrepentant, blacklisted lefty - comes in, defiantly declaiming Woody Guthrie's credo:
I hate a song that makes you think that you are not any good. I hate a song that makes you think that you are just born to lose, bound to lose. No good to nobody. No good for nothing. Because you are too old or too young or too fat or too slim too ugly or too this or too that. Songs that run you down or poke fun at you on account of your bad luck or hard traveling. I am out to FIGHT those songs to my very last breath of air and my last drop of blood. I am out to sing songs that will prove to you that this is YOUR world and that if it has hit you pretty hard and knocked you for a dozen loops, no matter what color, what size you are, how you are built, I am out to sing the songs that make you take pride in yourself and in your work.
4. You could say there's a born-to-lose element in the last symphony Gustav Mahler would live to complete, his Ninth, whose four movements Leonard Bernstein heard as a series of farewells. At the end, the music breaks up into melodic fragments that finally just die away. That's how it's usually heard. That's how I always heard it, until a performance, a few years ago, by Seiji Ozawa conducting the Saito Kinen orchestra, a good, maybe not great performance, until those final pages, when something extraordinary happened.

At some point, I began to hear what was in the hall between those diminishing phrases, not as silence, but as something palpable, like the way a perfume keeps the presence of a woman in a room she has just left.

As the music ended, you could feel the audience, as one, holding its breath, not stirring, not moving, not doing anything that would break the stillness that somehow allowed to us share a profound presence, beyond words or sound, that the normal commerce of our lives kept us from sensing. 2,600 people. No one wanted to let it go. Then, after a time, someone started to applaud, and, in an instant, it vanished. Except, indelibly, in our memories.

So long, Studs, it's been good to know ya . . .

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Last Wright - FLW in Mason City documentary debuts Saturday

Just a few years ago, the city fathers of Mason City, Iowa, were thinking of trying to sell it on E-Bay, but this past March a $9 million state grant is making it more likely that Frank Lloyd Wright's 1910 Park Inn, his last surviving hotel, will finally be restored to its original glory. It's part of a $34 million plan that will also see the restoration of the adjacent City National Bank, designed by Wright at the same time. The two buildings were featured in the 1910 Wasmuth Portfolio that established Wright's reputation throughout Europe. After the hotel closed in 1972, the building went into a long decline, but in the new plan, it will be restored to its original purpose and become, the city hopes, a major tourist draw.

A new documentary on the hotel, The Last Wright, will have its debut this Saturday, November 1st, at 3:00 P.M., at the Gene Siskel Film Center, 164 North State. The filmmakers, Iowan Garry McGee and New Yorker Lucille Carra, worked on the project for over three years, and are scheduled to be in attendance. "Through rare archival footage, and a look at stunning Wright masterpieces, this film offers a provocative, ironic tapestry of an American century, tracing the life, death and rebirth of a Midwest downtown through the prism of The Park Inn."

The 60-minute documentary will be paired with This American Gothic which depicts Eldon, Iowa's efforts at reviving their town through a Gothic House Visitor Center "in honor of the local structure that inspired Grant Wood's iconic [painting] American Gothic."

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Chris Abel on Foster in China, Friday Lecture at IIT

In a really late addition to the October calendar (boo!), we've just learned that Aussie-Cornhusker Chris Abel, visiting professor at the University of Nebraska will be lecturing Friday, the 31st, at 1:00 P.M., on the work of Norman Foster in China, where the architect's nearly $4 billion Terminal 3 at Beijing Airport (pictured here), twice the size of Pentagon, opened earlier this year. The lecture will take place in the Lower Core of Mies van der Rohe's Crown Hall, 3360 South State Street.

Ding, Dong, the Scaffolds Gone!

It's not just the leaves that are being shed now that we're in late October. On some high-profile sites, including Block 37, new buildings are at long last emerging from their scaffolding cocoons.

The scaffolds that darkened the sidewalks around the Hotel Wit construction site at State and Lake, made only partially less ugly by the quotations from Daniel Burnham and Albert Einstein, finally came down this week.
And the scaffolding with the high, reed thin red metallic verticals that upstaged the huge round columns of Trump Tower's grand entrance, thin white roof that obscured the giant metal trellis, and massive wood frontispiece proclaiming - lest there had been any confusion - "Trump" in giant letters, also underwent deconstruction this week.

Slowly, as projects like these come to completion, with the tanking economy making new iterations, at least for the time being, increasingly unlikely, Chicago's sidewalks are thankfully emerging from their scaffold caverns and possession shifted from construction crews back to the people.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Chicago Streetscene: Millennium Park Maples Aflame

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Spirit of the Bee Hive/Chicago Style: Ornament Removed from Building attributed to Adler and Sullivan - No Louis Harmed in Process


An architectural mystery story.

The ornament on the 1884 building is gone. Where did it go, who did it, what was it like, and what's the history behind the structure on Chicago's State Street that bore the hand of the great architect Louis Sullivan? Read all about it - and see all the pictures - here.

Friday, October 24, 2008

The night Frank Lloyd Wright Spent in Hennepin County Jail

Reader and blogger Aaron M. Renn reminds us that we forgot to mark the 82nd anniversary of the arrest of Frank Lloyd Wright at the kitchen door of his cottage at Wildhurst, Lake Minnetonka, where he was in illicit domicile with "Montenegrin dancer" Olga Milanoff, who would become the third - and final - Mrs. FLW after he married her less than two years later.

Wright, who was writing - and apparently generating material for - his autobiography at the time, had been charged with infidelity by Mrs. FLW #2. and "alienation of affections" by Mme Milanoff's aggrieved husband. You can read a splendidly dramatic and evocative front-page account of the incident by Minneapolis Tribune reporter Ben Weltner here.

If you missed commemorating the actual October 21st anniversary date this past Tuesday, I'm sure FLW wouldn't mind if you chose to belatedly mark the occasion with the traditional drinking game of thumbing through 1950's magazine profiles and downing a shot each time "Frank Lloyd Wright" and "world's greatest architect" occur within 12 words of each other.
(Minneapolis Times photo courtesy Minneapolis Public Library)

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Tonight - One Night Only - A Rare Chance to Journey to Shanghai on Film at CAF

In old Hollywood, just the name Shanghai carried a mystique of the exotic and erotic, of the hidden and mysterious. Just think of Marlene Dietrich in von Sternberg's Shanghai Express, or an Orson Welles film noir, set in San Francisco, gaining another layer of meaning just through the naming of blond (another inversion) Rita Hayworth's Lady from Shanghai. Nor are Chinese filmmakers immune to the attraction of the city's mingling of China and Europe, underworld and high society, as in Zhang Yimou's 1995 film Shanghai Triad, with Baotian Li as a mob boss equal to Eddie G., and his main squeeze Gong Li (ummmmmm, Gong Li).

Of course, there's lot more to Shanghai - celluloid and otherwise - than my own rather warped take on it, and you'll get, I'm sure, a much more balanced and nuanced take this evening, October 22nd from 5:30 to 7:00 in the John Buck lecture hall at the Chicago Architecture Foundation, 224 South Michigan, when WBEZ film critic Jonathan Miller takes you on a journey to Shanghai on Film, with "selected clips from classic and contemporary films . . . [to] explore how Shanghai has been depicted, what its image has meant and how it is presently changing." (I'm also betting Jonathan's got a far more inclusive, germane and compelling selection of films than those I've chosen here.) It's part of the program scheduled in conjunction with CAF's great new Shanghai Transforming exhibition, which you'll also be able to check out on the walls of the John Buck auditorium.

Tickets are $15.00, $10.00 for CAF members, $5.00 for students. Bring your own popcorn.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Louis Sullivan Cedar Rapids Bank: on Fatal Side of Proposed Levee?

photographs: Einar Einarsson Kvaran, Wikipedia
Paulina Saliga of the Society of Architectural Historians has brought to our attention an on-line petition drive against an ambitious anti-flood plans by Cedar Rapids, Iowa that could be putting in peril the future of the Louis Sullivan designed Peoples Savings Bank from 1911, which stands less than a block from the riverfront. The building, which had undergone a major restoration under the direction of Wilbert Hasbrouck in 1991, sustained major damage to its main floor and basement, including a reported destruction of original construction drawings, in the disastrous flooding of this past June.

Earlier this month, plans were unveiled for a new Cedar Rapids flood protection system that would see the construction of a huge new levee downtown requiring the moving, or - more likely in a city that has no real idea of how its going to compensate owners whose properties would be seized - the demolition of the Peoples Savings Bank, currently a Wells Fargo branch, which at last report remains closed.

The initial estimate for the cost of the overall flood control proposal is $1 billion, or nearly $8,000 for every one of Cedar Rapids' 126.000+ residents. You can read the text of a petition against the proposal, which would impact 500 homes and businesses and leave historical landmarks like the Sullivan bank unprotected, and add your own name here.

And in way of things I found while looking up other things, here's a wonderful appreciation of Louis Sullivan by Sarah Vowell, in a video recorded at the Metropolitan Museum's reconstruction of a staircase from the Chicago Stock Exchange Building.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Uncle Sam: State Street Slumlord?

I know times are tough, but this is ridiculous. Who would have thought the Federal government would be channeling the spirit of Lou Wolf to become the blightmasters of State Street?

Read the sad story of the GSA's neglect of Holabird and Roche's once proud 1916 Century Building, 202 S. State Street - and see all the pictures - here.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Santiago Calatrava to Chicago Spire Developer: "You owe me MONEY!"

Somehow, the similarity between Santiago Calatrava and Bert Gordon has never struck me before, but Crain's Chicago Business is reporting this afternoon that the Spanish architect has gone on strike. Claiming he hasn't been getting paid, he's stopping working on the Chicago Spire, and placed a $11.3 lien against Garrett Kelleher's Shelbourne Development, with Perkins+Will filing another lien for $4.85 million. Read the full story here.


And read Calatrava, in happier times, explaining his 2,000-foot-high spiraling tower here.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Deconstructing 55 East Monroe

What can you about Mid-Continental Plaza, 55 East Monroe? That it takes up a full half city block, and has enough granite in its lobby and concourses to capsize an oil tanker? That its squat, closely spaced mullions rise the building's full 583 foot height without a single setback, giving the structure the appearance of a gigantic radiator or a maximum security prison, minus the charm?

One of the great glories of Chicago architecture, Shaw & Associates 1972 design definitely isn't, but, seeking to cash in on the renewed popularity of the east Loop with the advent of Millennium Park, the top 15 stories of the building are now being transformed into the "Park Monroe", ultimately projected to include almost 350 condo units.

As documented in these photographs by our intrepid photo correspondent Bob Johnson, Goettsch Partners is in the process of opening up the Mid-Continental's monolithic facade.

At first the only visible sign of the work was a cyclopean square of plywood at top center.
Now we're seeing Goettsch's dematerialization of the skin of the upper stories, stripping away the thick mullions which are wider then the structure beneath, which exists only behind every second column. A glass curtain wall, inset with terraces, is being put in their place.
Lightening up the facade is especially important as the apartments, themselves, tend to be narrow shotguns stretching deep into the half-block wide interior.
The final result will be a kind of stacked wedding cake, one where the edges of all the layers are flush. The Park Monroe will almost look like a separate building, perched atop an opaque, heavy -metal plinth.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Diane Keaton: Architecture Critic

(image: Ambassador Hotel, 2004, Wikipedia commons)
Seeing the beautiful Robert Harris restoration of the first two Godfather films over the past two weeks reminded me of Diane Keaton's skills, then only beginning to be apparent, as an actress. A Monday article in the L.A. Times on the destruction of the Ambassador Hotel reveals that Keaton is also not only a dedicated architectural preservationist, but a cogent writer, as well. Keaton details the rich history of the hotel, her efforts with other activists to save it, including coming up with plans for alternate use, and the recalcitrance of the Board of Education bureaucracy, which has, a la Chicago's Block 37, obstinately engineered a demolition only to leave a vacant lot. Read Keaton's fine article here.

Chicago nightscene: Barnacles

Monday, October 13, 2008

And to think I saw it all on State Street!

On Friday, greasy pilings flame bright at the side of the bridge . . .On Saturday, an exquisite giantess with a face two stories high peers out sadly from behind the thread-like bars of her newly unveiled prison of beauty . . .
And on Sunday, sweating, straining bodies, in an unending rainbow stream of day-glo color ritual run past the dead red fish, concrete cobs, and sacrifice house of the succulent flesh . . .
. . . while off to the side, on IBM Plaza, the youngest runner paces the race he creates out of his own imagination . . .