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Selasa, 16 Juli 2013

The first of Chicago's Four New Boathouses strikes a Civic Balance at Ping Tom Park

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It's a major initiative of the Emanuel administration - making the river Chicago's �second shoreline�.  The latest fruit of that effort hit the �ripe� moment on June 9th, with the Sunday afternoon dedication of the new boathouse at Ping Tom Park, designed by Johnson and Lee Architects.

It's part of the long-term transformation that began with the the eminent domain acquisition by the Chicago Park District of a 12-acre riverfront site south of 18th street that had held a Chicago and Western Indiana rail yard.  Under the direction of Ernest Wong's Site Design Group the site became Ping Tom Memorial Park, named after the Chicago businessman and developer who hired Harry Weese to design the nearby Chinatown Square shopping center.
The Armour Square neighborhood has been Chicago's Chinatown ever since the first business moved there in 1911 from a two-block stretch of South Clark Street in the Loop.  The community's only two parks were demolished in the 1960's to make way for the construction of Dan Ryan expressway, and so it remained until Ping Tom, with it's traditionally-styled pagoda pavilion and quartet of twenty-feet-high columns opened in October of 1999.
A few years later, north of 18th street, the Park District combined five newly acquired acres with six more already owned to form Ping Tom Phase 2, united through an under-the-bridge passage with the original portion of the park to the south.

TIF money was used to build a retaining wall and natural features along the riverbank, and Phase 2 opened in 2011, the same year new mayor Rahm Emanuel announced the construction of four new boathouses along the river, including one at Ping Tom, part of an initiative to transform the park's status from neighborhood to regional.
The new Ping Tom boathouse is much less ambitious than the 20,000 square-foot Clark Park boathouse, designed by Studio/Gang, being constructed along the Chicago River north of Belmont, heading towards an August 3rd dedication.  I'm still not quite sure why the Johnson and Lee boathouse didn't wind up on the much narrower site at Clark Park, and the larger Studio/Gang facility, which is to be home to rowing clubs and regattas, situated on the far wider river at Ping Tom.  I'm sure they had their reasons.
Johnson and Lee may not have Studio/Gang's cachet - or daring - but their Ping Tom boathouse is an attractive, colorful work.  There are three basic parts.  The storage pavilion for kayaks and canoes, open and airy, is contained within metal screens painted the requisite red.
The service portion of building joined to it, housing restrooms and office space, is dark and solid.  Uniting both sections is a tall free-standing canopy, painted a neutral, mediating white, facing out to a walkway that descends to the river and a floating dock.
Less attractive is the $13 million, 28,0000-square-foot field house,.  It won't be finished until later this year, but judging from its current appearance, it looks to be just as anonymous as its Prototype-A design designation would suggest.
The field house was originally slated to be placed along the 18th Street bridge, but when buried track from the former railyard and concrete remnants of a roundhouse were discovered 5 to 12 feet underground, along with a lot of unwanted groundwater, the site was moved to a placement along the St. Charles Airway rail line.  The upside is that this resulted in several million dollars in savings, making possible an indoor pool that Park District Director of Planning Gia Biaggi told the Chicago Journal was the first built by the CPD in her more than 12 years with the agency.

The distinctive character of Ping Tom Park derives from the confluence of three strong facets of Chicago.  First of course, as an extension of the city's increasingly vibrant Chinese-American community.  Then the geography of the river.  And lastly, the one most likely to be overlooked, or even seen as an impediment - the park's immersion within Chicago's historic industrial presence.
Beyond the occasional train chugging along to the east, Ping Tom sits between two historic bridges.  To the north, there's the 1919 (relocated) St. Charles Air Line bascule bridge.  To the south, another great landmarks (they're both official): the 1914 Canal Street (now Amtrak) bridge, with its spectacular twin 195-foot-high towers and the tiny, bridge-tender house perched atop the central span.  (Control facilities were moved to a side structure long ago, but the grunge-dollhouse endures.)
Between St. Charles and Amtrak, the bridgehouse of the 1967 18th Street bridge, city-designed, strikes a handsome, more contemporary note.
18th Street Bridge House, Schoenhofen Brewery in background to right
Along the bank of the river opposite Ping Tom, there's the massive, 1910 10-story former Carson Pirie Scott warehouse, complete with graffiti at the water line, and further north, the old Continental Paper warehouse.
The first roadway west of the river?  Lumber Street, of course.
The new boathouse was dedicated with a mini extravaganza, with traditional Chinese dancers, communal fishing, and the Chicago Symphony brass section floating down the river (in a boat) with Music Director Riccardo Muti, who came ashore to conduct a performance - complete with repeat -  of the Josephine Lee's Chicago Children's Choir singing Verdi's Va Pensiero.  Between the obligatory press statement and heading out to meet Muti's boat, Mayor Rahm Emanuel could be found listening to the Civic Orchestra's brass players, looking a relaxed and happy man.
And well he should.  It's a very positive sign to see the big marque projects most often crammed into the center of the city moving out into Chicago's working class neighborhoods.
It's all a matter of balances.  Between a comfortable neighborhood park, and a buzzing but more impersonal regional one.  Between the city as it was - and is - and the city as it's becoming.  Between revitalization and gentrification. Right now, Ping Tom Park and its handsome new boathouse is at the sweet spot. 

Read More:

Studio/Gang's Clark Park Boathouse: A Century of Transformation flowing down Chicago's River

Minggu, 09 Juni 2013

Preview: Shall We Gather at the Ping Tom Boathouse, with Rahm and Riccardo

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 Sunday saw a combination celebration at Ernest Wong's wonderful Ping Tom Park along the south branch of the Chicago River, with the dedication of a handsome new boathouse by Johnson and Lee, and the culmination of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's Rivers series of events with the fabled brass section floating down the river (on a boat) and Music Director Riccardo Muti conducting the Chicago Childrens Choir in a performance of Verdi's Va Pensiero (twice).  A happy Mayor Emanuel was also on hand.  We're working on the story - with a lot more photos and some video - but for now, here's a placeholder preview.

Rabu, 05 Juni 2013

Marshall Brown's Center of the World Friday; Rolling Down the River with the CSO on Sunday

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This Friday, June 7th, from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m., there will be a public reception at the Western Exhibitions Scott Speh Gallery, 845 West Washington for Marshall Brown: Center of the World, Chicago.  The work of the founder of the urban design and architecture studio Marshall Brown Projects, Center of the World constructs . . .
. . . three scenarios � one political, one economic, one cultural � for the future of the Chicago Circle. The heart of legendary architect Daniel Burnham�s 1909 Plan of Chicago was the Civic Center, located on the city�s cardinal axis, Congress Parkway. Burnham�s Civic Center was never built. Instead of his monument to democracy, we have the Circle Interchange � third worst traffic interchange in America, responsible for the loss of 25 million driving hours per year. Marshall Brown�s show at Western Exhibitions, his first at the gallery, Center of the World, Chicago will feature models, photomontage, and a trio of original videograms that project histories of Chicago�s future as the center of the world.
The show will be up until July 20th.  The Western Exhibitions Gallery is open Wednesdays through Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Sunday: Shall We Gather at the River? (With orchestra and chorus)
A number of threads of our most recent writings converge this Sunday, June 9th, when musicians of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra board Chicago's Leading Lady (the ship) at Michigan Avenue and float down the Chicago River (Handel anyone?) to Chinatown's Ping Tom Park, where Johnson and Lee's new boathouse is scheduled to be dedicated.  Here's what the boathouse looked while under construction early in May . .  .
It's one of four Mayor Rahm Emanuel is building throughout Chicago, including the Clark Park boathouse by Studio/Gang that we wrote about earlier this week, with the firm also designing another boathouse on the south branch near Ashland.  Johnson and Lee is designing the other two boathouses - one at River Park, and the one at Ping Tom, which DNAinfo.Chicago is reporting to be 2,485 square feet, a fraction of the size of the boathouse at Clark Park, which is designed for larger rowing team vessels.  (There's also a new field house going up at Ping Tom designed by Booth/Hanson)

When the CSO players reach Ping Tom, they will be joined by no less than CSO Music Director Riccardo Muti, who is scheduled to lead the Chicago Children's Choir in Verdi's Va pensiero, part of a sequence of performances that begins at 3:00 p.m. with music from artists including Corky Siegel, Eddy Clearwater, the Civic Orchestra Brass, and the Mucca Pazza marching rock band. 
It's the concluding event in the CSO's River Festival, featuring nearly a dozen programs incorporating musical compositions referencing rivers and water, including a number of local premieres and new works commissioned from Mason Bates and Orbert Davis.
According to Friends of the Chicago River, Chicago Water Taxi, whose new service to Goose Island we just wrote about yesterday, will we ramping up service on Sunday for its Ping Tom Park route with arrivals scheduled every 15 minutes.