This week, the biggest fire Chicago has had in years left a massive warehouse in Chicago's old Central Manufacturing District a gutted shell, its facades encased in ice. The building is currently in the process of being demolished, even as smaller fires keep rekindling in the ruins.
[See: Aftermath - Some Say the World Will End in Ice.]
click images for larger view |
The massive warehouse at 37th and Ashland was originally home of the Pullman Couch Company, still another piece of the far-flung industrial empire spawned by George Pullman's Sleeping Car Company empire.
The original building, south of the now central entrance, was constructed in 1911 by district architect R.S. Lindstrom. In 1913, another floor was added.
Photograph: University of Minnesota, Media Archive |
Over the years, almost all the buildings CMD went through a succession of tenants. Some, like the warehouse at 38th and Ashland, were largely abandoned.
Reports indicated that the fire also jumped over to the 1912 building at 3801 South Ashland, but that the fire there was quickly extinguished.
Including the later and massive cold storage warehouses along Pershing, this is an area waiting for its rebirth.
(if it doesn't burn down first.)
Chicago Fire Department photograph |
Chicago Fire Department photograph |
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