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Yet it's perfect fusion of minimalist Chicago-style engineering, of geometry, light and form . . .
. . . makes it one the city's most distinctive landmarks, a visual marker visible from the beaches to the north . . .
. . . and the windows of all the towers with a view of the pier . . .
By night, it's Chicago second sun. By day, it's a giant, kinetic wireframe for a star that switches off each break of dawn, a flattened disk with a coin-like edge. It's an architecture of pure desire, with no other function than to thrill, entrance and awe. It's the thing that flares out the emotion, entombed but latent, in all the more sensible constructions of the utilitarian city.
Just as there many ways to view the city below while ascending in one of the wheel's open passenger cars, there are many ways to see the Ferris Wheel, from far and near, through the tropical forest of the Pier's Winter garden . . .
Reflected like a sunburst in the shiny new elevator structure . . .
In slow reveal from below . . .
. . . and in Full-up eye-poke mode. . .
The Navy Pier Ferris Wheel was part of a 1990's $200 million rehab that transformed the 3,300 foot-long, 1914 Charles Sumner Frost's designed Municipal Pier #2 . . .
Image courtesy the Chuckman Collection |
. . . may have even have been bettered in the constructed reality. . .
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