Tampilkan postingan dengan label John Buck. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label John Buck. Tampilkan semua postingan

Selasa, 26 November 2013

Great Architecture is Fleeting, Ugly Garages Forever

click images for larger view
Even as Curbed Chicago is showing the scaffolding going up around the concrete cloverleafs of Bertrand Goldberg's Prentice Hospital,  a 500-car urban cockroach of a parking garage at Randolph and Wells is getting a reprieve.
We had written back in May about the new 23-story tower by Lothan Van Hook DeStefano Architecture that was set to replace the raw-boned garage.
151 North Franklin, John Ronan Architects
Last week, however, Ryan Ori of Crain's Chicago Business reported that the garage was sold out from under the tower's developer, J. Paul Beitler.  Competing developer John Buck has purchased air rights above the garage to stop any construction from blocking the views from Buck's proposed new 36-story 151 North Franklin, just next door.  151 North Franklin tenants and the apartment dwellers of Randolph Tower, just across the L tracks, will now be able to amuse themselves observing each other's behavior patterns without obstruction.  According to Crain's, Buck still needs city approval and an anchor tenant to get his 825,000 square-foot project off the drawing board, but that hasn't stopped him from creating a 151 North Franklin website which includes this video walkthrough . . .

151 North Franklin from REA on Vimeo.

The design, which would be the first skyscraper by John Ronan Architects,  includes this deep dish lobby space . . .
151 North Franklin, John Ronan Architects
The tower will replace a nondescript Walgreen's on the corner of Randolph and Franklin that was previously home to the legendary �Max the Hat's� Zimmerman's Liquors, in it's time proclaimed to be the largest wine and spirits store in the world.
In addition to its own plaza . . .
151 will share the park across the street separating it from Buck's 155 North Wacker tower to the west.  The project will be presented to the community at a public meeting next Monday.

According to Crain's, Beitler is scouting another location for his tower.  The garage's new owner, InterPark Holdings - which �parks over 20 million cars annually� - is expected to undertake some renovations at the nearly high-century old garage.  Let's hope its intrinsic charm survives.

Rabu, 07 Agustus 2013

Visting North Bridge? Who's that great looking Babe (or . . . goat) you're Having Coffee With?

Virgo - click images for larger view
In 1997, Thielbar and Fugard's 1929 Art Deco McGraw-Hill Building on Michigan Avenue was made an official Chicago landmark.  In 1999 it was demolished, after an acrimonious battle with developer John Buck, who also engineered the destruction of Mies van der Rohe's Arts Club Building for his marzipan 600 North Michigan.  Tribune architect Blair Kamin was a forceful advocate for the McGraw-Hill's preservation, while the paper's editorial board aggressively greased the skids for its destruction.  Sound familiar?
Aries
Over 4,000 limestone panels of the McGraw-Hill's facade were stripped away, the building demolished, and the panels then re-attached to the steel frame of the new hotel structure that was erected in its place. Restored on the Michigan Avenue facade were the striking reliefs, drawing on classical mythology and the zodiac, that were the work of 20-year-old, Chicago-born artist Gwen Lux.
After the facadectomy, a number of panels were left over, including four of the reliefs.  Last October, the Permit Review Committee of the Commission on Chicago Landmarks unanimously approved �relocation of four Gwen Lux panels displayed in Grand Avenue Atrium to the Rush Street enclosed bridge.�  (I'm beginning to think I'm the least observant person in the world - I used to eat lunch at the Shops of North Bridge mall a couple times a week and I can't remember ever noticing these very large panels in that atrium.)
Capricorn
So now, you can grab a table next Nordstrom's, check email and sip coffee while getting intimate with one of Lux's elegant Zodiac-inspired artworks.  These six-foot-high panels may never have meant to been seen this close-up, but Lux's reliefs add a touch of class that lifts this light-filled space out of its generic drabness.  Before it was an anywhere; now it's a destination: �Meet me at the Aquarius Lounge�.
Aquarius

Read More:

Relief(s) i Summer - Eugene and Gwen Lux's McGraw Hill panels





Minggu, 21 April 2013

Activated Virgin

click images for larger view
For a time, rumors circulated that it had all fallen through, the plan to convert the Art Deco Old Dearborn Bank Building at Wabash and Lake into a hotel.  It was all the way back in 2011 when Richard Branson had announced that the 27-story property would become a 250 room flagship in his Virgin Hotel chain, a $89.7 million project aided by $6.5 in property tax breaks from the building's designation as a national landmark.  Then - nothing.  Even after street scaffolding sealed off the building at beginning of this year, one hospitality website described the status as �crickets, not construction.�

Then, late last month, beams started to poke out from the windows six floors below the roof . . .
. . . and now, the entire top has blossomed into scaffolding, shrouded in red like a raw spring blossom . . .
photograph: Bob Johnson
As seen in photographs from our indefatigable correspondent Bob Johnson, crews of workman can now be seen on moveable platforms clinging to the facades, stripping away brick from the corners . . .
photograph: Bob Johnson
According to the Landmark Commission's usual superb report, Old Dearborn is one of only two office buildings - the other being the Paramount Building in New York City - designed by the architectural firm of Rapp and Rapp, best known for ornate movie palaces like the Chicago and the Oriental.

The Old Dearborn Bank followed novelist Raymond Motley's famous line, �Live fast, die young, and have a good-looking corpse.�  The bank was founded in 1919 by the founder of Kraft cheese, boomed during the Roaring 20's, bought the lot at Wabash and Lake in 1925, spent $1.5 million on the new building, opened it in 1928, and was liquidated four years later.  The bank space became retail, while the office floors continued to cater to medical professionals and small businesses.

Flash forward to 2001, when an investor group paid $$9.5 million for the 186,000-square-foot building, and over the next decade let multiple deals worth as much as $22 million slip through their fingers.  Two separate hotel companies were interested at different times, and a third investor proposed converting the building to student housing.  In 2009, Old Dearborn, a/k/a/ 203 North Wabash went into foreclosure, and in 2010 the loan - and the property - was taken over Urban Street Group LLC.  By that time, as a result of the declining economy and non-renewal of leases to clear out tenants to make way for the anticipated residential conversion, occupancy had fallen to 38%.  Urban Street announced its attention to convert Old Dearborn to apartments, but just a year later, it sold the building to Virgin.

A super-slim 48 by 140 feet, Old Dearborn is today actually better suited to a hotel than to office tenants requiring larger floorplates.  The steel frame is expressed in piers of handsome brick that rise without horizontal interruption, emphasizing verticality in classic Chicago skyscraper style.
The facades are as restrained as a bank - until the animals get loose.  They're all over the place - massive strange birds, lions, griffins, human grotesques, dragons and . . . squirrels.  Lots of squirrels.
(As AIA/Chicago's Laurie Peterson has pointed out to me, squirrels - always burying their assets for later access - are a well-known symbol for banks.  They also figure prominently on such buildings as Halsey, McCormack and Helmer's Williamsburg Savings Bank Tower in Brooklyn.  Since the end of World War II a squirrel has featured prominently -if with increasing abstraction - in the logo of France's second largest bank, Groupe Caisse d'�pargne.)

You can admire Old Dearborn's clean lines, but, ultimately, it's the over-the-top ornament that is the building's glory.
. . . did we mention ducks? . . .
The cast bronze spandrel panels appear to be in good shape . . .
. . . but no small number of the terra cotta spandrel panels were apparently damaged, and are now being removed . . .
The Landmarks Commission Permit Review specifications from April of 2012 dictate that replacement masonry �match the size, color, profile, finish and texture of the historic masonry . . . The terra cotta base of the building shall be cleaned with the gentlest means possible.�  There is no reference to preserving the original coffered ceiling, complete with still more plaster animals.  Described in the designation report as �severely damaged�, it was  hidden from view by a  drop ceiling long ago.
Lobby Stair, from the Landmarks Commission Designation Report
When Virgin announced it was getting into the hotel business via a new website back in 2010, its stated ambition was to acquire half a billion dollars in properties over the following three years. Chicago was somehow missing from the published list of �major urban markets� targeted for hotels serving travelers in the �creative class,� yet its opening, now scheduled for the first quarter of 2014,  will be the new hotel chain's first. A second property in California remains an unconfirmed rumor.

Richard Branson was in Chicago this past January, touring the building and hitting the major sights - Rahm, the Pritzkers - while raising $800,000 for Branson's Virgin Unite foundation.  In a blog post, Branson wrote about talking to Emanuel on the importance of green energy.  There's also been discussion about making the hotel a high-tech mecca, but so far, few details. The original announcement in 2011 named John Buck as co-developer, but I could find nothing more than the original press release on Buck's website.
There's none of the usual promotional signage at the site with renderings and credits.  Who's doing the preservation work on the terra cotta?  Booth/Hansen has issued press releases announcing they are the architects for the project, but there doesn't appear to be any other mention of the project on their website.  Branson directed readers to watch Twitter under the #virginrumors hashtag for updates, but the latest Tweet, from February 1st, directs readers to a �Sneak Peak� post on the Hotels of the Rich and Famous website that's mistakenly illustrated with photos from the lobby of a completely different property, the Jewelers Building on Wacker.

There's an Apple-like aura of mystery about what's actually going on with at 203 North.  For a project scheduled to come on line in less than a year, a promotional campaign - no matter how spare and controlled - is past due.  If you've got any good info, please pass it on.  We're just hoping Branson lights up the angry birds along the roof line.  All those great, weird animal ornaments are ready-made branding devices.