With the prices charged by Michigan Avenue hotels these days you might be better off just buying a hotel!
Well, here's your chance -- Crain's Chicago Business reports that The Conrad Chicago is for sale. Not only do you get a modern hotel, you get an historic building, and what may be the world's largest jigsaw puzzle.
The Crain's article comes with a picture showing the modern back end, but I'd rather show you the historic front end. This is the facade of the old McGraw-Hill Building. When the billion-dollar mall was built at this location, the McGraw-Hill building was cut into pieces, labeled, and stored in a warehouse. Then they were reassembled into the facade that we see today.
The other interesting part of this story isn't in the architecture, but in the financing. Crain's says that in spite of the economy, the company that currently owns the hotel doesn't actually need to sell it. The company has plenty of money. But it's trying to do a stock buy-back, and needs some extra cash to accomplish it.
Unless there's an immediate threat to the company, it sounds like bad timing to me.
Monday, January 19, 2009
Quickie: New shops at Navy Pier
According to Crain's Chicago Business , new retail we'll see at Navy Pier next season includes Garrett's Popcorn, Buffalo Wild Wings Grill & Bar (probably similar to BW3 [Buffalo Wild Wings and Weck]), DogEworks, and another souvenir shop.
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Quickie: Blue Water Evaporates
The same location that saw the death of Wolfgang Puck's Spago outlet has claimed another restaurant. Crian's reports that Blue Water Grill is no more. The eatery at 512 North Dearborn received generally good reviews, but its parent company decided to streamline operations by closing shop.
Quickie: Hot Monkey Love Yields Red-Headed Stepchild
It's true. Just check out the article and photo in the Chicago Journal .
The baby in question is a langur monkey at the Lincoln Park zoo. It's being called "Pumpkin" because that's a nice, safe gender-neutral name to go with until its keepers can figure out if it likes Barbies or G.I. Joe's. It's also kind of the color of a pumpkin. And pumpkin is a term of affection for young-uns.
The baby in question is a langur monkey at the Lincoln Park zoo. It's being called "Pumpkin" because that's a nice, safe gender-neutral name to go with until its keepers can figure out if it likes Barbies or G.I. Joe's. It's also kind of the color of a pumpkin. And pumpkin is a term of affection for young-uns.
Friday, January 16, 2009
Miracle on Chicago Avenue: Update 2
Well, just hours after our last update, Crain's Chicago Business published an article filling in the blanks for us .
Looks like the cost of the project is $9,000,000 and will be five stories tall. And in spite of the hopeful fencing, demolition isn't imminent.
Looks like the cost of the project is $9,000,000 and will be five stories tall. And in spite of the hopeful fencing, demolition isn't imminent.
Miracle on Chicago Avenue: Update
Well, that didn't take long. Word on the street (literally -- I ran into someone on the street with the answer) is that the demolition of the Dunkin' Donuts, Tony's, the vacant storefront, and the sidewalk newsstand on Chicago Avenue is a Loyola project. Considering that explosive growth of that institution's physical plant, I guess we shouldn't be surprised.
The existing building has the address of 24 East Chicago Avenue, and was built in 1989.
I'm told that it's going to be ground-floor retail, topped by offices, and five stories of classrooms. There will be a walkway connecting to the Loyola University Law Center at 25 East Pearson Street.
As for the stores that are soon-to-be-demolished -- they're welcome to return when the new building is finished in 2010, if they want to pay many thousands of dollars in higher rent to be in the new building. The Dunkin' Donuts franchisee is expected to decline.
This is just the latest in Loyola Universtiy's rapid expansion of its Water Tower campus. It also recently purchased the 1890 Chicago-State Building and the surface lot next to it for $40 million. While that building is scuzzy, too, hopefully it can be rehabilitated instead of demolished.
The existing building has the address of 24 East Chicago Avenue, and was built in 1989.
I'm told that it's going to be ground-floor retail, topped by offices, and five stories of classrooms. There will be a walkway connecting to the Loyola University Law Center at 25 East Pearson Street.
As for the stores that are soon-to-be-demolished -- they're welcome to return when the new building is finished in 2010, if they want to pay many thousands of dollars in higher rent to be in the new building. The Dunkin' Donuts franchisee is expected to decline.
This is just the latest in Loyola Universtiy's rapid expansion of its Water Tower campus. It also recently purchased the 1890 Chicago-State Building and the surface lot next to it for $40 million. While that building is scuzzy, too, hopefully it can be rehabilitated instead of demolished.
Miracle on Chicago Avenue
One of the Streeterville/Gold Coast's scuzzier blocks is getting some sort of clean up.
While hustling to the Red Line stop at Chicago and State in -17ºF weather, it was hard not to notice the big construction fence that has been put up next to McDonald's and the big "DEMOLITION" sign hanging on it.
For those not familiar with the location, it's on the north side of Chicago avenue wedged between the 24/7 McDonald's on the State Street corner, and a Loyola University building on Wabash Avenue. Three businesses are ringed by the demolition barrier -- a Dunkin' Donuts (that I've used more than once at 3:00am); Tony's Place, a random hot dog joint; and an empty storefront.
The block is just nasty. There are always groups of unpleasant-looking people standing around in front of McDonald's, and scattered throughout are various panhandlers, junkies, and grifters. The city streetlights are ineffective, so at night it's flat-out scary for a lot of people.
I'm not sure what all those groups of people are doing there. I've eaten at that McDonald's a brazillion times, and sometimes sit looking out the window observing them. They just seem to stand there. They're not waiting for a bus or a train. I'm not sure what they're waiting for. Maybe they're drug dealers, but usually there aren't so many on one corner.
Whatever the case, the removal of these three seedy storefronts is a hopeful sign. I've made a few calls to see what the plans are for the area, and I'll post updates when I find out.
If you know what's going in that space, post it in the comments.
While hustling to the Red Line stop at Chicago and State in -17ºF weather, it was hard not to notice the big construction fence that has been put up next to McDonald's and the big "DEMOLITION" sign hanging on it.
For those not familiar with the location, it's on the north side of Chicago avenue wedged between the 24/7 McDonald's on the State Street corner, and a Loyola University building on Wabash Avenue. Three businesses are ringed by the demolition barrier -- a Dunkin' Donuts (that I've used more than once at 3:00am); Tony's Place, a random hot dog joint; and an empty storefront.
The block is just nasty. There are always groups of unpleasant-looking people standing around in front of McDonald's, and scattered throughout are various panhandlers, junkies, and grifters. The city streetlights are ineffective, so at night it's flat-out scary for a lot of people.
I'm not sure what all those groups of people are doing there. I've eaten at that McDonald's a brazillion times, and sometimes sit looking out the window observing them. They just seem to stand there. They're not waiting for a bus or a train. I'm not sure what they're waiting for. Maybe they're drug dealers, but usually there aren't so many on one corner.
Whatever the case, the removal of these three seedy storefronts is a hopeful sign. I've made a few calls to see what the plans are for the area, and I'll post updates when I find out.
If you know what's going in that space, post it in the comments.
Status Update: Elysian Stands Proud and Tall
It's tapering off! It's tapering off! That means there's reason to believe that The Elysian Chicago is going to top out soon. When construction started we knew it was going to reach 700 feet, but didn't envision how it would absolutely tower over everything else in the neighborhood.
Not that it's a bad thing -- the podium surrounding the roundabout driveway and the setbacks keep the building from giving off claustrophobic vibes.
There were a lot of people in the neighborhood who were against this project, but I think it's coming along quite nicely, and I have high hopes that it will contribute more to Chicago than just its skyline.
Now about that ground floor retail....
Not that it's a bad thing -- the podium surrounding the roundabout driveway and the setbacks keep the building from giving off claustrophobic vibes.
There were a lot of people in the neighborhood who were against this project, but I think it's coming along quite nicely, and I have high hopes that it will contribute more to Chicago than just its skyline.
Now about that ground floor retail....
Labels:
Elysian,
Gold Coast,
new construction,
Rush Street,
Walton Street
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Gaylord Finally Opens
It's been one of the longest restaurant sagas we've seen in a while. A year ago the Gaylord Indian restaurant moved to Walton Street from Clark Street, but only opened two weeks ago.
Gaylord got very good reviews at its old location, and something in the back of my mind tells me that the Chicago Tribune's Phil Vettel called it the best Indian food in Chicago; but I might be imagining that.
Either way, it picked up a subterranean space vacated by some random fashion boutique in early 2007 and put up a sign pledging to open in April of that year. Well, that date came and went with no sign of construction. Then at the very end of June a sign went up stating the place would open in June. Nope. Finally, right around the New Year, Gaylord opened its doors to an adoring public. Or not.
The sad fact is that of the half dozen or so times we've walked by the place has been empty. Just a bartender and maybe a maître'd waiting for someone... anyone... with a hankerin' for Indian food to come on down.
I don't like Indian food very much at all, and I've tried it everywhere from fancy American restaurants to London takeaways to open air restaurants in the Little India section of Singapore. I've given it a shot, but it's not my cup of tea.
If you like Indian food, then do a good deed today and stop by Gaylord. The last thing the Walton Street area needs is another vacant storefront. And if the food is as good as it was at the old location, then you're in for a treat.
Gaylord got very good reviews at its old location, and something in the back of my mind tells me that the Chicago Tribune's Phil Vettel called it the best Indian food in Chicago; but I might be imagining that.
Either way, it picked up a subterranean space vacated by some random fashion boutique in early 2007 and put up a sign pledging to open in April of that year. Well, that date came and went with no sign of construction. Then at the very end of June a sign went up stating the place would open in June. Nope. Finally, right around the New Year, Gaylord opened its doors to an adoring public. Or not.
The sad fact is that of the half dozen or so times we've walked by the place has been empty. Just a bartender and maybe a maître'd waiting for someone... anyone... with a hankerin' for Indian food to come on down.
I don't like Indian food very much at all, and I've tried it everywhere from fancy American restaurants to London takeaways to open air restaurants in the Little India section of Singapore. I've given it a shot, but it's not my cup of tea.
If you like Indian food, then do a good deed today and stop by Gaylord. The last thing the Walton Street area needs is another vacant storefront. And if the food is as good as it was at the old location, then you're in for a treat.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Another Boutique Fleeing the Gold Coast
In the last few years a number of Near North and Gold Coast boutiques have fled the heart of the city to seek their fortunes in Old Town, Bucktown, Wicker Park, and elsewhere. The latest one pulling up stakes is Battaglia Footwear.
The Walton Street shop was a nice fit for the area, but is seeking greener pastures to the north. It's a shame because it got rave reviews on Yelp and elsewhere. More of a shame is that it's another vacant storefront at a time when landlords should be making deals to retain tenants and a bunch of other retail space is about to become available nearby.
It would probably help if I told you where it's going, but the photo I took of the announcement on the door didn't come out. Sorry.
The Walton Street shop was a nice fit for the area, but is seeking greener pastures to the north. It's a shame because it got rave reviews on Yelp and elsewhere. More of a shame is that it's another vacant storefront at a time when landlords should be making deals to retain tenants and a bunch of other retail space is about to become available nearby.
It would probably help if I told you where it's going, but the photo I took of the announcement on the door didn't come out. Sorry.
Labels:
Battaglia Footwear,
Gold Coast,
Retail,
Walton Street
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Chicago's Newest Crown
What's this I spied late in the evening of January 5, 2008? Why it looks like the beginnings of the promised illuminated crown at the top of 300 North LaSalle .
The drawings made public by Hines before construction began showed the top of the building all lit up and floodlights shooting into the sky. Of course, architectural renderings have as much to do with reality as Arby's has to do with fine dining. But let's hope that there's more to come here -- perhaps some panels to diffuse the light, because in spite of what the camera shows in the photograph above, the top of 300 looks less like a triumphant crown and more like a bunch of people accidentally left the lights on.
The drawings made public by Hines before construction began showed the top of the building all lit up and floodlights shooting into the sky. Of course, architectural renderings have as much to do with reality as Arby's has to do with fine dining. But let's hope that there's more to come here -- perhaps some panels to diffuse the light, because in spite of what the camera shows in the photograph above, the top of 300 looks less like a triumphant crown and more like a bunch of people accidentally left the lights on.
Here's the drawing Hines sent over before construction began.
You be the judge.
Monday, January 12, 2009
What's Going On At the Corncob Towers?
If you happen to live in an area served by the tiny Skyline newspaper ("News of Lincoln Park, Old Town, River North and Gold Coast"), try to pick up a free copy before the next edition comes out Thursday.
The front page story is about the wackiness going on at Marina City. We've heard in the past that the people running the residential portion of the building were imposing illogical, illegal, and draconian rules on folks, but this is the first article in print we've seen.
Skyline's article (online here ) details some of the unusual goings on in the building. Apparently, if you want to record what's going on at the HOA meeting (which is your right under state law), you have to sign an agreement giving the HOA ownership of your recording. Don't want to give up your rights? Then pay a $10,000 "fine" to the association.
More troubling is that the HOA is asserting something its calling "common law copyright" over all photographs of Marina City. First, let's be clear -- there is no such thing as "common law copyright." The notion of "common law copyright" was struck down by U.S. Supreme Court court in its first copyright case back in 1834 (online here ). Moreover, you can't copyright a building. You can trademark it. But even if you do, you cannot restrict other people from taking pictures of it. That's federal law. Allow us to quote United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 120.
This is a battle that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland lost in 1988. It sued to stop a photographer from selling posters of the museum. The museum lost that case. The Sixth Circuit court reaffirmed that photographers have a right to photograph buildings and sell those buildings. You can read the federal court's ruling here .
One resident has already been fined $1,000 for crossing the HOA's line, and his landlord was dinged another $1,000 for violating the HOA's fictional copyright. Maybe when the ice melts, Marina City will set up a toll booth in the river and collect money from all the tourists going by with cameras on the tour boats. That should go over well with the city.
The real tragedy about all this is that it's been going on for so long. We heard the rumblings about two years ago, which means it's been going on far longer than that. There's nothing in the Chicago Tribune's deep archives about the Marina City antics. Hopefully it or the Sun-Times will look into this as well.
Not surprisingly, no one from the HOA would talk to the Skyline newspaper. Even the HOA lawyer wouldn't talk, and get this... he referred questions back to his client! As a former journalist, I can tell you that may be an unprecedented move. Maybe the Chicago Journal's lawyers (Skyline is owned by the Chicago Journal) can put Marina City in its place when it tries to collect money for the picture of the building on the front page of the newspaper.
The front page story is about the wackiness going on at Marina City. We've heard in the past that the people running the residential portion of the building were imposing illogical, illegal, and draconian rules on folks, but this is the first article in print we've seen.
Skyline's article (online here ) details some of the unusual goings on in the building. Apparently, if you want to record what's going on at the HOA meeting (which is your right under state law), you have to sign an agreement giving the HOA ownership of your recording. Don't want to give up your rights? Then pay a $10,000 "fine" to the association.
More troubling is that the HOA is asserting something its calling "common law copyright" over all photographs of Marina City. First, let's be clear -- there is no such thing as "common law copyright." The notion of "common law copyright" was struck down by U.S. Supreme Court court in its first copyright case back in 1834 (online here ). Moreover, you can't copyright a building. You can trademark it. But even if you do, you cannot restrict other people from taking pictures of it. That's federal law. Allow us to quote United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 120.
Scope of exclusive rights in architectural works
(a) Pictorial Representations Permitted. - The copyright in an architectural work that has been constructed does not include the right to prevent the making, distributing, or public display of pictures, paintings, photographs, or other pictorial representations of the work, if the building in which the work is embodied is located in or ordinarily visible from a public place.
This is a battle that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland lost in 1988. It sued to stop a photographer from selling posters of the museum. The museum lost that case. The Sixth Circuit court reaffirmed that photographers have a right to photograph buildings and sell those buildings. You can read the federal court's ruling here .
One resident has already been fined $1,000 for crossing the HOA's line, and his landlord was dinged another $1,000 for violating the HOA's fictional copyright. Maybe when the ice melts, Marina City will set up a toll booth in the river and collect money from all the tourists going by with cameras on the tour boats. That should go over well with the city.
The real tragedy about all this is that it's been going on for so long. We heard the rumblings about two years ago, which means it's been going on far longer than that. There's nothing in the Chicago Tribune's deep archives about the Marina City antics. Hopefully it or the Sun-Times will look into this as well.
Not surprisingly, no one from the HOA would talk to the Skyline newspaper. Even the HOA lawyer wouldn't talk, and get this... he referred questions back to his client! As a former journalist, I can tell you that may be an unprecedented move. Maybe the Chicago Journal's lawyers (Skyline is owned by the Chicago Journal) can put Marina City in its place when it tries to collect money for the picture of the building on the front page of the newspaper.
Sound off about Chicago 2016
If you have an opinion about Chicago getting the 2016 Olympic Games, then Wednesday is your chance to share it.
There will be a public meeting at 6:45pm at the Peggy Notebart Nature Museum in Lincoln Park. People both for an against the Olympics coming to Chicago are expected to speak.
There will be a public meeting at 6:45pm at the Peggy Notebart Nature Museum in Lincoln Park. People both for an against the Olympics coming to Chicago are expected to speak.
Ben-Agains
Last year the Bennigan's restaurant chain collapsed, leaving two very high profile vacancies in Chicago's Loop. One, directly across from the Art Institute must have been a gold mine, especially on rainy days, as tourists sought shelter from the elements and vagrants. The other was front and center on the ground floor, Michigan Avenue face of the Illinois Center. Now it appears there is some life at both locations.
First, down by the Art Institute, we're happy to report that the Bennigan's has actually reopened for business. It's been open since at least November and appears to be doing OK. Not as good as it used to, but what restaurant is doing its old traffic these days anyway?
The Illinois Center location isn't open, but at least we don't have to look at a vacant bar anymore. The windows have been covered up with advertising for some movie coming out in the spring. One of the large windows has been transformed into a video screen. It's not ideal, but it's certainly better than nothing, especially considering the amount of vacant storefronts within 1,000 yards of that location.
What we'd like to see: WFLD Television take over the Bennigan's space and finally get the streetfront news studio it's been craving for years. Parking the microwave truck on South Water Street and doing live shots from the plaza of 230 North Michigan really isn't the same thing. It would also leave WGN Television as the only commercial station in town whose news operation isn't open to public viewing.
First, down by the Art Institute, we're happy to report that the Bennigan's has actually reopened for business. It's been open since at least November and appears to be doing OK. Not as good as it used to, but what restaurant is doing its old traffic these days anyway?
The Illinois Center location isn't open, but at least we don't have to look at a vacant bar anymore. The windows have been covered up with advertising for some movie coming out in the spring. One of the large windows has been transformed into a video screen. It's not ideal, but it's certainly better than nothing, especially considering the amount of vacant storefronts within 1,000 yards of that location.
What we'd like to see: WFLD Television take over the Bennigan's space and finally get the streetfront news studio it's been craving for years. Parking the microwave truck on South Water Street and doing live shots from the plaza of 230 North Michigan really isn't the same thing. It would also leave WGN Television as the only commercial station in town whose news operation isn't open to public viewing.
Friday, January 9, 2009
Is The CTA On Board With State Street Illuminations?
Maybe it was too much beer at Old Saint Pat's , but I swear while riding the 151 up State Street tonight I saw dancing panels of light on the CTA's State/Lake station. They illuminated the truss substructure in white and then displayed apparently random blocks of green and red on the elevated station's main façade.
The bus turned before I could get a picture, so maybe I imagined it. If I didn't, it will be a great and imaginative addition to the neon corridor anchored by WLS Television , the Chicago Theater , and most recently the Joffrey Tower .
My advice: Have the colors illuminating the platform change based on which train is in the station: Green, Brown (might be hard), Purple, Orange, Pink, or Red (happens more often than you'd think).
The bus turned before I could get a picture, so maybe I imagined it. If I didn't, it will be a great and imaginative addition to the neon corridor anchored by WLS Television , the Chicago Theater , and most recently the Joffrey Tower .
My advice: Have the colors illuminating the platform change based on which train is in the station: Green, Brown (might be hard), Purple, Orange, Pink, or Red (happens more often than you'd think).
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Status Update: Barney's New Store Puts Its Best Face Forward
There's little sign of an economic slow down at the corner of Rush and Oak Streets these days. Barney's New York is rushing forward with its planned opening of its new store across the street from the existing store. Last week the massive "Spring!" banner went up over what is a very interesting glass-enclosed stairwell. The top floor of the corner has been cut-out for what we hope is an outdoor dining option for the top story restaurant (called "Fred's"). The scaffolding is gone, and we hope this will do great things for the neighborhood. But we, like many others, are left scratching our collective heads and wondering what will become of the old Barney's store. It's too big for boutiques, and too small for a big name. Cut it up? Tear it down? What do you think would work there?
Labels:
Barney's New York,
construction,
Oak Street,
Openings,
Rush Street
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Where Northwestern Started
Northwestern University spends a lot of time, money, and effort preserving its old buildings, and none is older than the one known as "Old College."
This apartment complex in Evanston (The John Evans Building, 1600 Hinman Avenue) is actually the location of what was the first Northwestern University building. It looked a lot like the Addams Family house and was built in 1855 for just under $6,000.
Over the years the building was moved twice and served a number of purposes before being torn down in the 1970. Wikimopedia has a brief write-up about it, if you're the sort of person who trusts Wikimopedia.
Over the years the building was moved twice and served a number of purposes before being torn down in the 1970. Wikimopedia has a brief write-up about it, if you're the sort of person who trusts Wikimopedia.
Stick A Spire On It -- It's Done
After years of waiting, the spire is finally on the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago. While the spire still needs a few tweaks before it can be called "done," we're not about to wait to take pictures.
But that's the problem -- the spire went up on an ugly, cloudy day. Since then it's been snowing on and off and the top of the building has been mostly hidden in the clouds.
That's why we were lucky to get the snap above. Taken about 5am a couple of days ago, the clouds lifted and sunlight filtered in from Michigan to illuminate Chicago's new trophy. Hopefully the spire will be illuminated at night so we can take some great night time shots.
But that's the problem -- the spire went up on an ugly, cloudy day. Since then it's been snowing on and off and the top of the building has been mostly hidden in the clouds.
That's why we were lucky to get the snap above. Taken about 5am a couple of days ago, the clouds lifted and sunlight filtered in from Michigan to illuminate Chicago's new trophy. Hopefully the spire will be illuminated at night so we can take some great night time shots.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Where the Beach Used To Be
Years ago, Michigan Avenue was merely Pine Street. Before that, it was a beach and the waters of the Lake Michigan would lap against the shore right about where Water Tower Place is now.
Back then Holy Name Cathedral (735 North State Street) was just a chapel in Our Lady of the Lake [Michigan] University. The college has since moved out to the 'burbs.
A lot has changed along the Lake Michigan shoreline, but there are still hints if you know where to look.
In Lincoln Park there is a long berm that looks like it serves no purpose other than to keep the snow from blowing in from the lake. But it's actually an ancient sand dune that helps mark the edge of what was once the Lake Michigan shoreline.
If you're intrepid enough, you'll find a marker in Lincoln Park showing you exactly where the water used to be. It reads,
"Abandoned Shoreline of Lake Michigan
This ridge is an ancient beach of sand bar of Lake Michigan whose waters reached this point 8,000 years ago when the lake level was 20 feet higher than now. Clark Street runs north top this ridge. The park ponds lie between such old beaches, abandoned by the shrinking lake.
The outer boundary of Diversey Harbor and the boat slip running south of it to North Avenue are man-made land.
The Chicago Park District"
Labels:
history,
Lake Michigan,
Lincoln Park,
mother nature
South Loop Surface Lot Lives to Park Another Day
It's not easy being a surface parking lot in Chicago. People think you're ugly. They drive all over you. They let their dogs wee on you. They wish you were replaced by nice gleaming towers of glass, steel, and stone. Well, one surface lot is going to hold on a little longer, thanks to the flaccid economy.
The apartment complex proposed for the southwest corner of Clark and Polk isn't going to happen. At least not any time soon, according to Crain's Chicago Business Chicago Real Estate Daily. It quotes the developer as saying that groundbreaking has been pushed back until at least May, 2010 -- maybe further, depending on what happens with the economy.
The same article notes that the property immediately to the south will have the opposite future, but for the same reasons.
Because of the bad economy, no one wants to buy the property at 1000 South Clark that's been on the market for months. Now the owner is going to develop part of it into low-end retail to at least recoup some money while waiting out the recession.
It remains to be seen exactly what kinds of stores would end up along Clark Street. The article states, "D2 aims to attract lower-priced retailers that need bigger spaces and want to be next to a Target." That sounds an awful lot like "dollar store" to our uneducated ears. Let's hope the developer's desperation doesn't turn what was once a promising location into something less than desirable.
The apartment complex proposed for the southwest corner of Clark and Polk isn't going to happen. At least not any time soon, according to Crain's Chicago Business Chicago Real Estate Daily. It quotes the developer as saying that groundbreaking has been pushed back until at least May, 2010 -- maybe further, depending on what happens with the economy.
The same article notes that the property immediately to the south will have the opposite future, but for the same reasons.
Because of the bad economy, no one wants to buy the property at 1000 South Clark that's been on the market for months. Now the owner is going to develop part of it into low-end retail to at least recoup some money while waiting out the recession.
It remains to be seen exactly what kinds of stores would end up along Clark Street. The article states, "D2 aims to attract lower-priced retailers that need bigger spaces and want to be next to a Target." That sounds an awful lot like "dollar store" to our uneducated ears. Let's hope the developer's desperation doesn't turn what was once a promising location into something less than desirable.
Monday, January 5, 2009
Chicagolands' Most Literate Alley
My wife calls me an "alley cat." I've explored pretty much every alley in the Loop, South Loop, and Near North Side. I don't know why I do it, it's just something I do.
Recently I came across one of the best alleys in the area. More than just dumpsters and cobbles, it actually has its own book store.
The book store goes by the name of Bookman's Alley. Officially, it's at 1712 Sherman Avenue, but in reality, it's down the neighboring alley that leads to Benson Avenue.
Bookman's Alley book store is located at the intersection of yet another alley, which leads to Clark Street. Across this second alley is -- even more books!
The book store is old fashioned, well decorated, and very cozy. Bookstores like this are few and far between. The only other ones I've run into were in Galveston, Texas; New York; and London.
If you find yourself in Evanston, it's worth stopping in, not just for its eccentricity, but also to pick up a good read.
Recently I came across one of the best alleys in the area. More than just dumpsters and cobbles, it actually has its own book store.
Bookman's Alley book store is located at the intersection of yet another alley, which leads to Clark Street. Across this second alley is -- even more books!
The book store is old fashioned, well decorated, and very cozy. Bookstores like this are few and far between. The only other ones I've run into were in Galveston, Texas; New York; and London.
If you find yourself in Evanston, it's worth stopping in, not just for its eccentricity, but also to pick up a good read.
Slice of Life: Mad About Snow
People in Chicago know that the city is cold and gets a fair amount of snow, but still they complain about it. But at least most people don't have to stay outside when it snows. And chances are you're not made of stone, either.
But these two fellows are both made of stone and made to stay out all night in the snow. They're embedded in a decidedly homemade-looking brick wall in front of 831 North Dearborn Street. Maybe they're famous writers. Maybe they were rescued from a building being torn down. We don't know the story behind them, but we'd wager they have some stories to tell.
But these two fellows are both made of stone and made to stay out all night in the snow. They're embedded in a decidedly homemade-looking brick wall in front of 831 North Dearborn Street. Maybe they're famous writers. Maybe they were rescued from a building being torn down. We don't know the story behind them, but we'd wager they have some stories to tell.
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Trump Gets His Spire On
After months of delays and one false start, the spire is finally being installed on top of the Trump International Hotel and Tower downtown.
The last few weekends have been rainy, windy, snowy, or a combination of all three making installation impossible for construction crews. There was also a scheduling conflict with the pilot who flies the sky crane. Apparently there are only a few people in the country crazy skilled enough to pilot such a beast.
Here you can see the helicopter lowering the first additional piece of the spire onto the stub that's been waiting at the top of the 92-story building for the last three months. You can also see the Sears Tower looking on, disapprovingly at the shenanigans that Trump is employing to get his 1,362-foot height. Trump Tower is allowed to count the spire as part of its height, while neither the Sears Tower nor the John Hancock Center are allowed to count their roof-mounted antennae. The Trump Tower is really only 1,170 feet to the top of its mechanical penthouse. The decorative spire accounts for nearly 200 feet of claimed height. It was one thing when the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur flew through this loophole. It's quite another thing when a neighbor pulls the same stunt.
As this is being written, the second piece of the spire has been fastened in place and the helicopter has gone off to get another piece. Once all the parts are installed they will be covered with a white fiberglass sheath. The Trump organization hasn't released any details about whether the spire will be lit (not "lighted," thankyouverymuch). One would assume that the spire will be illuminated cheaply with flood lights like Sears and Hancock. But maybe... just maybe... the fiberglass is thin enough that the rig could be illuminated from within. It would be a more dramatic glowing element in the night sky, rather than another crazy needle.
At least the wait won't be too long to find out what happens. The Tribune reports that once the spire is in place it will only take a couple of weeks to install the fiberglass and declare this puppy done.
The last few weekends have been rainy, windy, snowy, or a combination of all three making installation impossible for construction crews. There was also a scheduling conflict with the pilot who flies the sky crane. Apparently there are only a few people in the country crazy skilled enough to pilot such a beast.
Here you can see the helicopter lowering the first additional piece of the spire onto the stub that's been waiting at the top of the 92-story building for the last three months. You can also see the Sears Tower looking on, disapprovingly at the shenanigans that Trump is employing to get his 1,362-foot height. Trump Tower is allowed to count the spire as part of its height, while neither the Sears Tower nor the John Hancock Center are allowed to count their roof-mounted antennae. The Trump Tower is really only 1,170 feet to the top of its mechanical penthouse. The decorative spire accounts for nearly 200 feet of claimed height. It was one thing when the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur flew through this loophole. It's quite another thing when a neighbor pulls the same stunt.
As this is being written, the second piece of the spire has been fastened in place and the helicopter has gone off to get another piece. Once all the parts are installed they will be covered with a white fiberglass sheath. The Trump organization hasn't released any details about whether the spire will be lit (not "lighted," thankyouverymuch). One would assume that the spire will be illuminated cheaply with flood lights like Sears and Hancock. But maybe... just maybe... the fiberglass is thin enough that the rig could be illuminated from within. It would be a more dramatic glowing element in the night sky, rather than another crazy needle.
At least the wait won't be too long to find out what happens. The Tribune reports that once the spire is in place it will only take a couple of weeks to install the fiberglass and declare this puppy done.
Friday, January 2, 2009
Slice of Life: A Lesson in Chicago Physics
Welcome to Chicago Physics 101. In this class there is only one thing to learn:
When it's taxi versus CTA bus, the bus wins. Always.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
A Noisy New Year on North Michigan Avenue
Between the fireworks at Navy Pier and the ignorant blaring of taxi horns, there was another loud way to ring in the new year at the upper end of Michigan Avenue.
A small fire broke out at the Elysées Condominiums. Based on the number of fire trucks responding, it looked like the apocalypse had arrived, but it turned out to be a couch that caught fire on the 36th floor. Still, good for the CFD for sending more units rather than fewer to something that could have easily turned into something far worse. According to the Tribune, the only person who needed medical attention was a woman who walked down all 36 floors to escape the flames.
I don't blame her for needing medical attention. I walked down 25 floors of the Century Tower when every elevator failed on my first day of work at a new job. I could have used an oxygen mask, too.
Unfortunately, the B-team (probably the C-team, actually) has to work at the Tribune on New Year's Eve while the brightest stars spend time with family and friends. That means the city's newspaper of record identified the 56-story Elysées Condominiums as the 100-story John Hancock Center. But it's not like I've never made a mistake in front of millions of people before, either.
A small fire broke out at the Elysées Condominiums. Based on the number of fire trucks responding, it looked like the apocalypse had arrived, but it turned out to be a couch that caught fire on the 36th floor. Still, good for the CFD for sending more units rather than fewer to something that could have easily turned into something far worse. According to the Tribune, the only person who needed medical attention was a woman who walked down all 36 floors to escape the flames.
I don't blame her for needing medical attention. I walked down 25 floors of the Century Tower when every elevator failed on my first day of work at a new job. I could have used an oxygen mask, too.
Unfortunately, the B-team (probably the C-team, actually) has to work at the Tribune on New Year's Eve while the brightest stars spend time with family and friends. That means the city's newspaper of record identified the 56-story Elysées Condominiums as the 100-story John Hancock Center. But it's not like I've never made a mistake in front of millions of people before, either.
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Slice of Life: The Pigeon Warming Center
Every winter there is a migration of television microwave trucks from the garages of channels 2, 5, 7, 9, and 32 to the City of Chicago's official warming center at 10 South Kedzie. But what about the city's pigeons? Where do they go when the weather outside turns frightful?
The answer is Daley Plaza. Unnoticed by most of the millions of people who wander through the plaza during the city's frigid season, pigeons huddle around the gas-fed eternal flame. It's a war memorial that our feathered friends use as a means of survival.
The answer is Daley Plaza. Unnoticed by most of the millions of people who wander through the plaza during the city's frigid season, pigeons huddle around the gas-fed eternal flame. It's a war memorial that our feathered friends use as a means of survival.
Location:
Loop, Chicago, IL, USA
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
A Fisher of Compliments
Chicago is one of those places where it pays to look up. Sure, no one wants to look like a tourist, but at the same time many of the city's architectural delights aren't at eye-level.
Case in point: The Fisher Building. This Chicago School masterpiece is loved by architecture enthusiasts around the world. But unless you live in the building you may not have noticed that it's best face is actually hidden beneath the elevated tracks on Van Buren street. The snowycam photo above simply doesn't do the relief justice. The building's main entrance on Dearborn Street lacks the elaborate ornamentation. Instead, it's saved for the dank, noisy side.
In a way, this makes sense. At the time the Fisher Building was erected (1906) there was probably streetcar tracks running on Van Buren, and not the elevated structure we see today. So the building actually did put its best face forward. It's just that the world revolved away from it.
Case in point: The Fisher Building. This Chicago School masterpiece is loved by architecture enthusiasts around the world. But unless you live in the building you may not have noticed that it's best face is actually hidden beneath the elevated tracks on Van Buren street. The snowycam photo above simply doesn't do the relief justice. The building's main entrance on Dearborn Street lacks the elaborate ornamentation. Instead, it's saved for the dank, noisy side.
In a way, this makes sense. At the time the Fisher Building was erected (1906) there was probably streetcar tracks running on Van Buren, and not the elevated structure we see today. So the building actually did put its best face forward. It's just that the world revolved away from it.
Location:
Loop, Chicago, IL, USA
Monday, December 29, 2008
One Fewer Vacant Spaces at Water Tower Place
Getting around Water Tower Place has been pretty confusing this year. Lord & Taylor's exit brought massive renovations, the American Girl Place, and a big shuffle of many of the stores. Things are starting to settle down now, and if you've browsed around the mall lately, you've noticed that the stores seem to be arranged in zones now.
There's a zone for cougar/soccer mom fashion stores, a zone for watches and jewelry stores, a zone for stores specializing in peddling prostitution wear to 12-year-olds, and even a zone for the occasional dad or boyfriend who gets dragged into the place.
One of the newcomers is a place we haven't heard of before until we saw a sign for it. Aritzia is described by Michigan Avenue magazine as both "fashion forward" and "Canadian." Take that for what it's worth, we'll welcome an import from Canuckistan if it means filling up a vacant space.
Good luck to them.
There's a zone for cougar/soccer mom fashion stores, a zone for watches and jewelry stores, a zone for stores specializing in peddling prostitution wear to 12-year-olds, and even a zone for the occasional dad or boyfriend who gets dragged into the place.
One of the newcomers is a place we haven't heard of before until we saw a sign for it. Aritzia is described by Michigan Avenue magazine as both "fashion forward" and "Canadian." Take that for what it's worth, we'll welcome an import from Canuckistan if it means filling up a vacant space.
Good luck to them.
Labels:
Aritzia,
Michigan Avenue,
Retail,
shopping,
Water Tower Place
New Barney's building to open in January
While we're still in mourning over the loss of Papa Milano's, it's worth noting that its replacement is getting ready to open for business.
The new Barney's New York building bounded by Rush, Oak, State, and Walton streets is complete on the exterior, with the exception of the first-floor facade and sidewalks. But around the corner on the State Street side, things are moving more quickly.
Citibank will relocate its Oak Street branch to the new building in January. The Oak Street bank inside the historic (yet rat-infested) Esquire Theater will close on January 15 and re-open in the Barney's building on the 20th.
Does this mean things will move forward with the redevelopment of the Esquire? Who can say. So far, any development large enough to be economically viable has been shot down. Hopefully some compromise will be reached before the building deteriorates enough that it needs to be torn down.
The new Barney's New York building bounded by Rush, Oak, State, and Walton streets is complete on the exterior, with the exception of the first-floor facade and sidewalks. But around the corner on the State Street side, things are moving more quickly.
Citibank will relocate its Oak Street branch to the new building in January. The Oak Street bank inside the historic (yet rat-infested) Esquire Theater will close on January 15 and re-open in the Barney's building on the 20th.
Does this mean things will move forward with the redevelopment of the Esquire? Who can say. So far, any development large enough to be economically viable has been shot down. Hopefully some compromise will be reached before the building deteriorates enough that it needs to be torn down.
Labels:
Barney's New York,
Citibank,
Gold Coast,
Oak Street,
State Street
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Spire Screwed Again
It just seems like everyone and everything is conspiring against the Chicago Spire . What could be a treasure of modern architecture on the coast of Lake Michigan can't seem to get a break.
The latest hurdle is a big one -- the meltdown of Anglo-Irish Bank. According to the Sun-Times , the bank is about to be nationalized by the Irish government. That will make it tougher for Garrett Kelleher, the visionary who took over the Spire project, to get the money he needs to continue construction.
According to the Times, Kelleher has already withdrawn almost $70 million from the bank to get this far. But the bank attached few strings to his spending. With the bank in the hands of the Irish government, it's unlikely the new people holding the purse strings will be as generous as their predecessors.
At this point, when it comes to the Spire, everything is speculation. It's been like that pretty much since the beginning when Fordham made big plans, but couldn't follow through on them.
For now, all we can do is gaze into the foundation hole and dream of what may... or may not... come.
The latest hurdle is a big one -- the meltdown of Anglo-Irish Bank. According to the Sun-Times , the bank is about to be nationalized by the Irish government. That will make it tougher for Garrett Kelleher, the visionary who took over the Spire project, to get the money he needs to continue construction.
According to the Times, Kelleher has already withdrawn almost $70 million from the bank to get this far. But the bank attached few strings to his spending. With the bank in the hands of the Irish government, it's unlikely the new people holding the purse strings will be as generous as their predecessors.
At this point, when it comes to the Spire, everything is speculation. It's been like that pretty much since the beginning when Fordham made big plans, but couldn't follow through on them.
For now, all we can do is gaze into the foundation hole and dream of what may... or may not... come.
The Third Time is NOT the Charm for Donald Trump
Donald Trump has a permit for this morning to hoist the spire pieces to the top of his Trump International Hotel and Tower . But with fierce winds and heavy rain, it looks like it's just not going to happen. Again.
This is just the latest in a series of tries for The Donald. A couple of weekends ago a sky crane actually flew with a piece of the spire attached to a cable:
But it was not to be. Strong winds scuttled that attempt, too.
Today's permit expires at noon, and the weather is only expected to get worse by then.
He has a permit for tomorrow, Sunday December 28th, 2008, as well. We'll see if mother nature is any kinder to him.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Progress Report:
There's something about walking around Chicago when it's snowing. It just seems right. In winter we like to walk in the snow. In the summer, we like to walk down steamy alleys. What gives?
Back on topic: the latest round of snowycam pictures shows the progress of the Hotel Palomar at 505 North State Street. To us it looks like it's up to about the 17th story, and chugging along toward its goal of 36.
As much as we're fans of density in River North, it's a shame that the old park is gone. Not many people used it, but it was nice to see a patch of green in the area, especially considering the number of surface parking lots just begging for vertical development.
Don't Forget To Do This Before Christmas!
There are lots of free Christmas events around Chicago. Our two favorites both involve trains.
We missed the CTA Santa Train this year because of scheduling conflicts. But we did catch the annual train display in the basement... er... "concourse level" of the John Hancock Center.
If you haven't been, go. It's free and it's an excuse to get out of the house. And all the twinkly lights and nooks and crannies filled with surprises are enough to put just about anyone in the Christmas spirit.
You can also think of it as an architecture excursion -- in miniature. Try to pick out all of the local landmarks and businesses represented.
We missed the CTA Santa Train this year because of scheduling conflicts. But we did catch the annual train display in the basement... er... "concourse level" of the John Hancock Center.
If you haven't been, go. It's free and it's an excuse to get out of the house. And all the twinkly lights and nooks and crannies filled with surprises are enough to put just about anyone in the Christmas spirit.
You can also think of it as an architecture excursion -- in miniature. Try to pick out all of the local landmarks and businesses represented.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
What to do About the Unfinished Bit of Grant Park?
The city of Chicago's great "front lawn" has been a work in progress for over 100 years. From swamp to dumping ground to parade ground to playground, it has long been a great urban space that the city almost... but not quite... figured out how to embrace.
The latest piece of this puzzle being worked on is the southwest corner. We're talking about an are north of Roosevelt Road, and west of Columbus Drive. Mostly what's there now is Illinois Central railroad tracks, a great big lawn, and a sprawling sculpture called Agora.
This area was actually zoned for a residential skyscraper. But the owner, who is also the developer of Central Station, gave the land to the city to complete Grant Park's quadrangle. Now the question is -- what to do with it?
The obvious answer is to deck over the railroad track and build another Disneyfied fantasy park like the one up at Randolph and Michigan Avenue. But that means money. And is it really the best use of that space?
A public meeting was held last week to gather ideas about what the park should -- and shouldn't -- be. Not surprisingly, the crowd was mostly elderly, and mostly interested in seeing the area used as a traditional park. By "traditional" we mean wide lawns with occasional groves of trees. They see it as the only natural use of a park, and the only way to bring nature in the city.
There were dissenters in the crowd, and one of them very astutely pointed out that there is absolutely nothing natural about lawns and manicured groves of trees. In fact, the traditional park landscape is about as far from nature as one can get without actually laying asphalt.
Still, the notion persisted that this corner of Grant Park should be much like the rest of it -- open lawn with the occasional alley of trees.
This is a real shame, because the two firms that are working on the project presented some really imaginative proposals. Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture and EDAW|AECOM are the two finalists chosen to rehab the space. They showed some magnificent examples of public spaces from Paris to Barcelona to Croatia. They talked about ways to use rainwater to power fountains, plants to clean storm water runoff, solar cells to illuminate the walkways, and the power of human feet to generate electricity. It's all very fascinating stuff. The stated goal is to not just make the park energy neutral, but to actually have the park create more energy than it uses, and leave the surrounding air and water cleaner than it was before.
While it's nice to have a park as a showcase, the overwhelming sentiment on all sides is that this shouldn't be another Millennium Park. Millennium Park has done great things for the city, its profile, and its finances. But the new (Insert Corporate Sponsor Name Here) Park at the corner of Michigan and Roosevelt shouldn't be for tourists -- it should be for the locals.
To that end, there was lots of talk about bright, but subtle illumination at night that would draw people from the neighborhood into the park. There was also a call for some kind of activity that would allow this to be a year-round park. Maybe some kind of skating facility that would link to Monroe Harbor. Or a sledding hill. Or maybe a cafe or other property that would draw people in year-round. Also seen as important is seating. One jogger noted that there are virtually no places to sit south of Balbo Drive.
Everyone seemed appreciative of a slide showing the Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris where 5,000 chairs are scattered throughout the park for people to re-arrange and enjoy at a whim. Interestingly, though, the slides showed a very woodsy portion of the park. We've been there, and it's mostly lawns and parade ground, and all those chairs are not very welcoming on a hot Gallic afternoon.
Speaking of Paris, and there was much speaking of Paris that night, there is apparently a park somewhere in the city that have the same problem as Grant Park -- a giant rail line cleaved through the middle. That unnamed park found a solution -- the gravel rail beds have been replaced with a carpet of blooming flowers that change patterns during the summer. Since the trains easily clear the plants, the two manage to coexist in a single space, and what was once an ugly scar has been turned into a floral work of art. It's certainly compelling, especially considering Maggie Daley's fascination with flowers and the great job the city does with landscaping certain areas. The idea was actually proposed by the same woman who designed Millennium Park's Lurie Garden.
Though the park plan is still in its early stages, expect progress to be rapid. The goal is to have a plan ready to present to the International Olympic Committee when it comes to inspect our fair city in April, 2009. Grant Park is a key to Chicago's proposed Olympic experience, and this corner is intended to be a gateway linking the Olympic village and sports venues with the spectator and event zones in Grant Park.
The latest piece of this puzzle being worked on is the southwest corner. We're talking about an are north of Roosevelt Road, and west of Columbus Drive. Mostly what's there now is Illinois Central railroad tracks, a great big lawn, and a sprawling sculpture called Agora.
This area was actually zoned for a residential skyscraper. But the owner, who is also the developer of Central Station, gave the land to the city to complete Grant Park's quadrangle. Now the question is -- what to do with it?
The obvious answer is to deck over the railroad track and build another Disneyfied fantasy park like the one up at Randolph and Michigan Avenue. But that means money. And is it really the best use of that space?
(Jon Orlove of Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture presents his firm's vision of what the park could be)
A public meeting was held last week to gather ideas about what the park should -- and shouldn't -- be. Not surprisingly, the crowd was mostly elderly, and mostly interested in seeing the area used as a traditional park. By "traditional" we mean wide lawns with occasional groves of trees. They see it as the only natural use of a park, and the only way to bring nature in the city.
There were dissenters in the crowd, and one of them very astutely pointed out that there is absolutely nothing natural about lawns and manicured groves of trees. In fact, the traditional park landscape is about as far from nature as one can get without actually laying asphalt.
Still, the notion persisted that this corner of Grant Park should be much like the rest of it -- open lawn with the occasional alley of trees.
This is a real shame, because the two firms that are working on the project presented some really imaginative proposals. Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture and EDAW|AECOM are the two finalists chosen to rehab the space. They showed some magnificent examples of public spaces from Paris to Barcelona to Croatia. They talked about ways to use rainwater to power fountains, plants to clean storm water runoff, solar cells to illuminate the walkways, and the power of human feet to generate electricity. It's all very fascinating stuff. The stated goal is to not just make the park energy neutral, but to actually have the park create more energy than it uses, and leave the surrounding air and water cleaner than it was before.
While it's nice to have a park as a showcase, the overwhelming sentiment on all sides is that this shouldn't be another Millennium Park. Millennium Park has done great things for the city, its profile, and its finances. But the new (Insert Corporate Sponsor Name Here) Park at the corner of Michigan and Roosevelt shouldn't be for tourists -- it should be for the locals.
To that end, there was lots of talk about bright, but subtle illumination at night that would draw people from the neighborhood into the park. There was also a call for some kind of activity that would allow this to be a year-round park. Maybe some kind of skating facility that would link to Monroe Harbor. Or a sledding hill. Or maybe a cafe or other property that would draw people in year-round. Also seen as important is seating. One jogger noted that there are virtually no places to sit south of Balbo Drive.
Everyone seemed appreciative of a slide showing the Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris where 5,000 chairs are scattered throughout the park for people to re-arrange and enjoy at a whim. Interestingly, though, the slides showed a very woodsy portion of the park. We've been there, and it's mostly lawns and parade ground, and all those chairs are not very welcoming on a hot Gallic afternoon.
Speaking of Paris, and there was much speaking of Paris that night, there is apparently a park somewhere in the city that have the same problem as Grant Park -- a giant rail line cleaved through the middle. That unnamed park found a solution -- the gravel rail beds have been replaced with a carpet of blooming flowers that change patterns during the summer. Since the trains easily clear the plants, the two manage to coexist in a single space, and what was once an ugly scar has been turned into a floral work of art. It's certainly compelling, especially considering Maggie Daley's fascination with flowers and the great job the city does with landscaping certain areas. The idea was actually proposed by the same woman who designed Millennium Park's Lurie Garden.
Though the park plan is still in its early stages, expect progress to be rapid. The goal is to have a plan ready to present to the International Olympic Committee when it comes to inspect our fair city in April, 2009. Grant Park is a key to Chicago's proposed Olympic experience, and this corner is intended to be a gateway linking the Olympic village and sports venues with the spectator and event zones in Grant Park.
Progress Report: Mark 300 North LaSalle "Done"
It's been a long time coming, but it's finally time to mark 300 North LaSalle "done." At least on the outside.
As evidenced by the construction lights visible across the city at night, the entire building won't be completed until some time in 2009. But with the removal of the exterior elevator and the installation of the final glass panes on the northwest side. The snowy-day picture above doesn't do it justice. We can't wait for the first warm blue-sky day so we can go out and take a batch of stunning photographs of this one.
From a distance, it does a good job of working with its neighbors. But because so many of its immediate neighbors are small it stands out, without overwhelming the area.
So kudos to Hines and Pickard Chilton Associates on a building well done.
As evidenced by the construction lights visible across the city at night, the entire building won't be completed until some time in 2009. But with the removal of the exterior elevator and the installation of the final glass panes on the northwest side. The snowy-day picture above doesn't do it justice. We can't wait for the first warm blue-sky day so we can go out and take a batch of stunning photographs of this one.
From a distance, it does a good job of working with its neighbors. But because so many of its immediate neighbors are small it stands out, without overwhelming the area.
So kudos to Hines and Pickard Chilton Associates on a building well done.
Location:
River North, Chicago, IL, USA
Sunday, December 7, 2008
One Hines Done, Another Hines May Not Happen
If you've scanned the Chicago skyline lately, you've probably noticed that the Hines tower at 300 North LaSalle is pretty close to done. Just about. Almost. But another Hines project a few blocks away at 414 West Lake is in jeopardy.
For months we though that the big shiny tower that Hines was planning to build along the Amtrak tracks next to the Riverbend Condominiums was cancelled. Now we learn from Crain's Chicago Business that it's not dead, it's just pining for the fjords.
The article says that Hines is having a hard time getting banks to lend it the half-billion dollars is needs to make the 52-story project a reality, even though it already has two anchor tenants lined up.
Of course, in these tough economic times banks are reluctant to lend money to anyone, so it's not necessarily Hines' fault. But it does illustrate why America is falling farther and farther behind in the skyscraper race. In pretty much every country in Asia and the Middle East, if you have a big company and want to build a skyscraper, you go out and build it, paying for it up front and reaping the rewards on the back end.
In America and Europe, companies borrow money to build skyscrapers, build them with someone else's money, then hope to make enough money on the back end to pay off the debt plus interest. So in essence, the developer (Hines, or whomever) hasn't built a skyscraper -- the bank has. But the developer takes the credit.
It's that kind of deeply engrained house of cards mentality that caused the current economic crisis. There's a mantra in American real estate which states, "Never build with your money, you build with someone else's." Such a thought shows that these companies have no pride in what they're doing, or faith that their projects will work since they just shift the risk onto the bank. It would be unthinkable to do such a thing in other cultures that value personal responsibility.
If your company doesn't have the money to build a skyscraper, then it's not all that big a company, is it? All those brochures with pictures of shiny buildings -- they all belong to someone else, don't they? So, what's the point of having your company at all? Why not just deal with the banks? Well, that's the way it seems to be going once again.
In the 40's and 50's and 60's, it was banks and insurance companies that built skyscrapers (the John Hancock Center , for example). Then it went to developers. Now the banks are getting back into the game -- cutting out the middle man.
That's why in ten years the ten tallest buildings in the world are not going to be in America. But real estate people will keep telling themselves that it's better to build with someone else's money.
How's that working out for you, Hines?
For months we though that the big shiny tower that Hines was planning to build along the Amtrak tracks next to the Riverbend Condominiums was cancelled. Now we learn from Crain's Chicago Business that it's not dead, it's just pining for the fjords.
The article says that Hines is having a hard time getting banks to lend it the half-billion dollars is needs to make the 52-story project a reality, even though it already has two anchor tenants lined up.
Of course, in these tough economic times banks are reluctant to lend money to anyone, so it's not necessarily Hines' fault. But it does illustrate why America is falling farther and farther behind in the skyscraper race. In pretty much every country in Asia and the Middle East, if you have a big company and want to build a skyscraper, you go out and build it, paying for it up front and reaping the rewards on the back end.
In America and Europe, companies borrow money to build skyscrapers, build them with someone else's money, then hope to make enough money on the back end to pay off the debt plus interest. So in essence, the developer (Hines, or whomever) hasn't built a skyscraper -- the bank has. But the developer takes the credit.
It's that kind of deeply engrained house of cards mentality that caused the current economic crisis. There's a mantra in American real estate which states, "Never build with your money, you build with someone else's." Such a thought shows that these companies have no pride in what they're doing, or faith that their projects will work since they just shift the risk onto the bank. It would be unthinkable to do such a thing in other cultures that value personal responsibility.
If your company doesn't have the money to build a skyscraper, then it's not all that big a company, is it? All those brochures with pictures of shiny buildings -- they all belong to someone else, don't they? So, what's the point of having your company at all? Why not just deal with the banks? Well, that's the way it seems to be going once again.
In the 40's and 50's and 60's, it was banks and insurance companies that built skyscrapers (the John Hancock Center , for example). Then it went to developers. Now the banks are getting back into the game -- cutting out the middle man.
That's why in ten years the ten tallest buildings in the world are not going to be in America. But real estate people will keep telling themselves that it's better to build with someone else's money.
How's that working out for you, Hines?
Labels:
414 West Lake,
Hines,
new construction,
skyscraper,
West Town
Saturday, December 6, 2008
River North gets a new tower, and a new park
In these days when skyscrapers from Denver to Dubai are hitting the skids, it's worth noting when something new actually moves forward.
According to the River North Residents Association, developers have actually managed to get financing to build the Parc Huron. This will be built at 469 West Huron in the booming area known for the Grand Kingsbury, Erie on the Park, and hundreds of new townhomes.
It's been amazing over the last five years to watch the area transform itself from warehouses and vacant lots into a thriving residential neighborhood. With the addition of the 21-story Parc Huron comes four more townhomes, and more importantly a 15,000 square foot semi-public park. After the fiasco with the Park at Lakeshore East we're skeptical about any of these quasi-public parks, but at the same time any greenspace in the Loop or Near North Side is welcome.
According to the River North Residents Association, developers have actually managed to get financing to build the Parc Huron. This will be built at 469 West Huron in the booming area known for the Grand Kingsbury, Erie on the Park, and hundreds of new townhomes.
It's been amazing over the last five years to watch the area transform itself from warehouses and vacant lots into a thriving residential neighborhood. With the addition of the 21-story Parc Huron comes four more townhomes, and more importantly a 15,000 square foot semi-public park. After the fiasco with the Park at Lakeshore East we're skeptical about any of these quasi-public parks, but at the same time any greenspace in the Loop or Near North Side is welcome.
Labels:
new construction,
Parc Huron,
River North,
skyscraper
Friday, December 5, 2008
Sure, we're City of the Year -- but for what?
The magazine formerly known as Gentlemen's Quarterly has named Chicago its 2008 "City of the Year." Sure, anyone from the hot dog vendors at Sox Park to the ballcap-and-sweatshirt crowd in Lakeview could have told you that. But GQ's reasons are intriguing because they're both insider, and wildly superficial.
The article focuses immediately on politics, and of course the city's mostly benevolent dictator, Richard M. Daley. It then moves on to perpetual insider, and now Obama-maker David Axelrod, the Rove of the moment. But then it derails by picking Jesse Jackson Junior as a reason Chicago is good. Umm... Excuse us? The article notes that he's come out of his father's shadow, and while that's true the only way he made that happen is to adopt many policies that run in direct opposition to his father's legacy. The elder Jackson wasn't afraid to stand up to the elder Daily. These days when Hizzonor says, "jump" Junior says, "how high?" Jesse Jackson can call up WGN-TV and demand to be on the News at Nine whenever he wants (and he does). If Junior tried to pull that stunt, he'd get laughed at.
Fortunately, the GQ article goes way beyond politics and gives literature as the number three reason the city is so great. Good for GQ. A lot of people don't realize that Chicago's literary heyday is not in its past, but in its future. With the recent death of Studs Terkel a lot of people saw it as the figurative, and literal, nail the coffin of great Chicago writing. But GQ notes that there are many talented writers still slogging through the gritty streets of the city with rumpled suits and a wad of notebook paper. Though, these days they've traded their mac coats for Mac computers. Still, in this age when even Tony Bennett has sold out to the MTV crowd, the pleasures of crisp book have the power to seduce.
And then there's the architecture. While Chicago was the home of the world's first skyscraper (much to the chagrin of New Yorkers) , and has been a trend-setter from art moderne to Meisian International to 90's McScrapers, and now into the wild blue postmodern, all GQ could find to talk about is the Spire.
Ah, yes, The Chicago Spire -- the hopes of a new generation of architecture fans wrapped up in a shining baguette of technology. Don't get me wrong -- we're huge fans of the Spire around here. But GQ's choice of it as a symbol of the city's greatness does Chicago a disservice since anyone who's been following the project knows that it's on hold. Now thousands of people who see it featured in the glossy pages between impossibly-breasted supermodels and impossibly-sculpted shaving ads will do a quick Google and learn that Chicago isn't everything the article promised. That the ancestral land of wild onions has its flaws, too. And that if the article is wrong about the Spire, then what else is it wrong about? Suddenly all that hard work and goodwill is tarnished, and an opportunity to raise the city's domestic profile is wasted.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Hospital for sale!
While a lot has been written about the continuing controversy surrounding the new Children's Hospital in Streeterville, the people at the Chicago Journal haven't forgotten about the old place.
The Journal reports that people living nearby are worried about what will happen when the thriving hospital at the heart of their neighborhood becomes an abandoned hospital in the heart of their neighborhood.
Naturally, there is talk of turning it into a library or a community center or any of the other typical suggestions that come up when vacant space presents itself. But considering the city's financial condition and the condition of the real estate industry, this chunk of real estate is likely to remain abandoned for a long, long time.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
North Side NIMBYs win another one
Looks like another vacant lot will remain vacant instead of homes for people paying taxes and contributing to society. The alert came from Alderman Reilly's office the other day:
Clark & Chestnut Development Update -- Project Has Been Withdrawn
Earlier this year, LG Development filed an application to amend Planned Development #313, requesting approval for a 370-foot, 28-story residential condominium structure to contain 49 units and 83 parking spaces. Over the past several months, Alderman Reilly has hosted a number of neighborhood and condominium meetings to provide his constituents with an open and transparent process and solicit local input while he considered the merits of the proposal.
This week, Alderman Reilly received a letter from the applicant informing him that
they are withdrawing their application to amend Planned Development No. 313. Since the application has been withdrawn, the project is no longer pending the Alderman's approval and the existing Planned Development stands, which allows for the construction of a two-story structure on the site.
Friday, October 17, 2008
North side NIMBYs at it again
Just in time for Halloween, the old ladies of Chicago's Near North Side are at it again.
Back in the 60's and 70's they bought their plush homes in the sky on streets like Delaware, Chestnut, and Clark. Now that a new generation wants a taste of that life, it's all hands on deck for a fight against change.
The latest target of their elderly invective is the proposed residential tower at 111 West Chestnut Street. A recent article in the Chicago Journal outlined the typical bogus grievances about congestion and neighborhood character and oh... a new one -- sewer capacity.
It's the usual crowd of people who already have their high-rise lifestyles trying to keep anyone else from having it; or worse -- marginalizing their view!
It's hard to argue that a building with just 59 residences will have much of an impact on traffic, but the geriatric gentrifiers have dragged that old saw out of the complaint toolshed. They're also claiming that the building's residents will clog the buses and subways, too.
But most of the complaints are about "neighborhood character." The old ladies are afraid that if anyone else is let in things might change. Because, you know, the neighborhood has never changed before. And it's exactly the same today as it was before all those old ladies got their dee-lux apartments in the sky-high-high.
So what are they trying to preserve?
A quick look at 111 West Chestnut's current state reveals... plastic Walgreen's bags. A brick. Sand. Dirt. McDonald's cups. And what maybe an adult diaper.
If that's the neighborhood character they're so desperate to cling to, I say bring on the cranes and bulldozers. We're a movin' on up!
Friday, October 3, 2008
Chicago's chances of landing the 2016 Games
Exactly one year from now we'll know if Chicago will host the 2016 Olympic Games. A lot of work has been poured into the city's Olympic effort in the last few years, but are we any closer to getting the games now than we were when we started?
Transit isn't up to snuff. Though there are signs that things are getting better, it's only because most of the system seems to be under perpetual construction. Forget about the billion dollars spend on the Brown Line which will still be crowded when all those dollars are spent. It's the Blue Line shut downs and bus shuttles that are the real embarrassment and leave a bad taste in visiting mouths.
Hizzonor wants an express train to the airport, just like they have in Hong Kong and most other hubs of civilization. But that would mean DOING something, and this isn't the Chicago of the 1890's. There are no visionaries left. No risk-takers. No leaders. Daley's old man could get it done. The son... not so much.
It's not strange to place such importance on transportation when hosting a major international event like the Olympics. Beijing built two entirely new modern subway lines. Chicago is going to try to make due with the same creaky routes we've had since the middle of the last century. Not because they are good, but because the leadership is bad.
Here's a cultural exercise I actually participated in once:
It'll leave you wondering which city is part of the Third World.
The importance of transportation cannot be underestimated. Crain's recently reported that Tokyo is in the lead for the 2016 games in large part because of its transportation network. Tokyo's competing subway companies move 23,000,000 people each day. That's 20 times more than the CTA. Tokyo can absorb the Olympic Games without blinking. For Chicago it will be a hardship that the city must convince the IOC it wants.
Here's what's coming up:
Transit isn't up to snuff. Though there are signs that things are getting better, it's only because most of the system seems to be under perpetual construction. Forget about the billion dollars spend on the Brown Line which will still be crowded when all those dollars are spent. It's the Blue Line shut downs and bus shuttles that are the real embarrassment and leave a bad taste in visiting mouths.
Hizzonor wants an express train to the airport, just like they have in Hong Kong and most other hubs of civilization. But that would mean DOING something, and this isn't the Chicago of the 1890's. There are no visionaries left. No risk-takers. No leaders. Daley's old man could get it done. The son... not so much.
It's not strange to place such importance on transportation when hosting a major international event like the Olympics. Beijing built two entirely new modern subway lines. Chicago is going to try to make due with the same creaky routes we've had since the middle of the last century. Not because they are good, but because the leadership is bad.
Here's a cultural exercise I actually participated in once:
- Step one: Leave your hotel in Hong Kong and ride the Airport Express train to HKG.
- Step two: Sleep on the flight from HKG to ORD.
- Step three: Ride the Blue Line from ORD to home.
It'll leave you wondering which city is part of the Third World.
The importance of transportation cannot be underestimated. Crain's recently reported that Tokyo is in the lead for the 2016 games in large part because of its transportation network. Tokyo's competing subway companies move 23,000,000 people each day. That's 20 times more than the CTA. Tokyo can absorb the Olympic Games without blinking. For Chicago it will be a hardship that the city must convince the IOC it wants.
Here's what's coming up:
- February 2, 2009: The final filing deadline for the candidate cities.
- April, 2009: The International Olympic Committee visits to inspect Chicago.
- October 2, 2009: The announcement is made in Copenhagen.
April of 2009 will be a magical time to be in Chicago. There will be flowers everywhere, the streets will be smooth and perfect, and the trains will run on time. Mayor Daley will make sure of it. It's the biggest, most important, event the average person will never see. But at least we'll benefit from the crumbs for a while.
At this point there are varying theories about which city is ahead in the contest, but by all estimates Chicago isn't it. The two front-runners at this point at Tokyo and Rio de Janeiro.
Tokyo scores well in all the technical categories. But awarding the games to Asia so soon after the Beijing Olympics seems unlikely.
Rio is on top because the Beijing games demonstrated that a Third World city can host a successful Olympics, and because there has never been an Olympic Games in South America.
Chicago... Well, Chicago is in the middle of America. And these days European bureaucrats hate America. They love the notion of the care-free 1950's Happy Days America, and the one that saves their butts from military problems around the world. But liking America is not politically correct in Europe. And Europe matters because of the 115 people who will decide which city gets the 2016 Olympic Games, the majority are from Europe. There are only three Americans on the committee, and they don't even get to vote.
This may be over before it even started.
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Another parking lot bites the dust (we hope)
If there's one thing that doesn't belong in downtown Chicago it's surface parking lots. They contribute virtually nothing to the economic, social, and visual vitality of the area. And fortunately, there may be one fewer soon.
According to the Fulton River District e-mail bulletin, the parking lot at 108 North Jefferson could soon make way for a multi-use building.
View Larger Map
That's the lot a block behind the Citigroup Center, northwest of the ABN AMRO Technology Center.
As more and more people move into the area, we can hope that fewer and fewer surface parking lots will survive and the area can become a thriving home to thousand of new Chicagoans.
According to the Fulton River District e-mail bulletin, the parking lot at 108 North Jefferson could soon make way for a multi-use building.
View Larger Map
That's the lot a block behind the Citigroup Center, northwest of the ABN AMRO Technology Center.
As more and more people move into the area, we can hope that fewer and fewer surface parking lots will survive and the area can become a thriving home to thousand of new Chicagoans.
Labels:
Fulton River District,
new construction,
parking,
proposals,
West Loop,
West Town
Monday, September 22, 2008
Metra Market Moving Forward
It's been decades since this was first proposed, but finally some dirt is turning with the Metra Market project.
This will take that bricked-up arcade beneath the Metra rail tracks north of the Ogilvie Transportation Center and turn it into a shopping and restaurant plaza. Similar projects have been successful from Paris to Evanston, and with the recent spike in residential density in the West Loop it looks like this might actually happen this time.
The lead tenant is supposed to be a "French Market" (not sure if that's a brand or a description) which will be made up of a couple dozen specialty food vendors (cheeses, breads, etc...) Boutique foods marts have increased in popularity in the last few years in the Loop are with the emergence of Fox & Obel, Pastoral, Lavazza, and others. Hopefully they will do as well or better in the West Loop location. However, what downtown really needs is a proper butcher shop. Abe Froman would blanch at the current state of Chicago's retail meat scene.
This will take that bricked-up arcade beneath the Metra rail tracks north of the Ogilvie Transportation Center and turn it into a shopping and restaurant plaza. Similar projects have been successful from Paris to Evanston, and with the recent spike in residential density in the West Loop it looks like this might actually happen this time.
The lead tenant is supposed to be a "French Market" (not sure if that's a brand or a description) which will be made up of a couple dozen specialty food vendors (cheeses, breads, etc...) Boutique foods marts have increased in popularity in the last few years in the Loop are with the emergence of Fox & Obel, Pastoral, Lavazza, and others. Hopefully they will do as well or better in the West Loop location. However, what downtown really needs is a proper butcher shop. Abe Froman would blanch at the current state of Chicago's retail meat scene.
Labels:
food,
Metra Market,
Ogilvie Transportation Center,
restaurants,
Retail,
West Loop
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Latest Esquire proposal passes latest hurdle
There may finally be some movement at the Esquire Theater on Oak Street. It's been five years since the multiplex shut down, leaving the city's most posh shopping district with a giant vacancy.
This week city council's Plan Commission approved a plan which would replace the theater with three brownstone-scale retail buildings like the others lining Oak Street. The facade has landmark status, so it will be fun to see how the architect manages to blend the old and the new here.
The buildings can be no taller than three stories, or 60 feet each, and no hotels are allowed. That's a big concession to local NIMBY groups who blocked plans for a boutique hotel in this location fearing additional traffic and noise.
The current proposal still requires additional approvals before we see anything happen, but there were men in hard hats touring the inside of the building just yesterday, so things look good.
For those of you worried about what happens to your neighborhood Citibank branch, that's moving into the new Barney's New York building. It will be on the corner of State and Oak where Papa Milano's used to be.
This week city council's Plan Commission approved a plan which would replace the theater with three brownstone-scale retail buildings like the others lining Oak Street. The facade has landmark status, so it will be fun to see how the architect manages to blend the old and the new here.
The buildings can be no taller than three stories, or 60 feet each, and no hotels are allowed. That's a big concession to local NIMBY groups who blocked plans for a boutique hotel in this location fearing additional traffic and noise.
The current proposal still requires additional approvals before we see anything happen, but there were men in hard hats touring the inside of the building just yesterday, so things look good.
For those of you worried about what happens to your neighborhood Citibank branch, that's moving into the new Barney's New York building. It will be on the corner of State and Oak where Papa Milano's used to be.
Labels:
construction,
Esquire Theater,
Oak Street,
redevelopment
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Why is a city on a Great Lake afraid of water?
For the last three days we've been inundated with television news coverage of the flooding happening in Chicagoland. There have been plenty of pictures of people being evacuated from their homes because of rising flood waters. Rescue crews have been mobilized to save these helpless victims from mother nature's fury.
Bullhockey.
What's wrong with these people that they need to be saved from six inches of water? TV news producers, writers, editors, and reporters are trained to show us the most dramatic and important video that comes in that day. So what do we see? People huddled in rubber dinghies being pulled to "safety" by firefighters who are simply sloshing along in ankle-deep water. People bemoaning their misfortune that they have all of nine inches of water in their basements. These people need to suck it up and get on with their lives.
The storm that brought the flooding to Chicagoland was the remains of Hurricane Ike. When Ike crossed from the Gulf of Mexico to Galveston Island it brought 21 FEET of water. And what did the people of Galveston Island do when Coast Guard helicopters came to their rescue?
They said, "No thanks. We're fine. We can take care of ourselves." With water up to the second or third-stories of some homes these people are taking care of themselves.
Meanwhile, the soft-and-doughy Chicagoans are freaking out at mere inches of water that might make the legs of their foosball tables soggy, or require wee water wings for their precious tiny dogs.
Seriously, Chicago: Grow a pair.
Bullhockey.
What's wrong with these people that they need to be saved from six inches of water? TV news producers, writers, editors, and reporters are trained to show us the most dramatic and important video that comes in that day. So what do we see? People huddled in rubber dinghies being pulled to "safety" by firefighters who are simply sloshing along in ankle-deep water. People bemoaning their misfortune that they have all of nine inches of water in their basements. These people need to suck it up and get on with their lives.
The storm that brought the flooding to Chicagoland was the remains of Hurricane Ike. When Ike crossed from the Gulf of Mexico to Galveston Island it brought 21 FEET of water. And what did the people of Galveston Island do when Coast Guard helicopters came to their rescue?
They said, "No thanks. We're fine. We can take care of ourselves." With water up to the second or third-stories of some homes these people are taking care of themselves.
Meanwhile, the soft-and-doughy Chicagoans are freaking out at mere inches of water that might make the legs of their foosball tables soggy, or require wee water wings for their precious tiny dogs.
Seriously, Chicago: Grow a pair.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
The high architectural price of Diesel
Everyone knows gas is expensive. And diesel is more. But the people running the Diesel store on Rush Street should ask for their money back.
After being closed all Spring and most of the Summer for interior and exterior renovations -- this is what it looks like. Exposed screws in the facade, and a paint job that looks like it was done by pigeons with the runs.
Maybe it's supposed to look gritty, or industrial, or urban. But it just doesn't work. It looks dirty, and it certainly doesn't fit in with the surrounding buildings or the squeaky clean Gold Coast.
After being closed all Spring and most of the Summer for interior and exterior renovations -- this is what it looks like. Exposed screws in the facade, and a paint job that looks like it was done by pigeons with the runs.
Maybe it's supposed to look gritty, or industrial, or urban. But it just doesn't work. It looks dirty, and it certainly doesn't fit in with the surrounding buildings or the squeaky clean Gold Coast.
Labels:
fail,
Gold Coast,
renovation,
Rush Street,
shopping
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
The saddest building in Chicago
This has got to be the saddest sight we've seen in Chicago architecture in a long time. The city's mighty flagship cathedral has been undergoing repair work for months, ever since a piece of the ceiling caved into the sanctuary. But this... this is just wrong.
From our perch we've been watching workers on the rooftop scrambling around for weeks and weeks. Now a quick stroll to Whole Foods has us viewing the full horror as we pass by.
Sure on a global, or even a regional scale, Holy Name Cathedral wasn't all that great. But it's the best church in Chicagoland and the focus of the thoughts and prayers of millions of people each day. To see it trussed up like this is just heartbreaking. We can only hope the bandages come off soon.
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
WBBM-TV manages to screw up a landmark
It's been a couple of decades since WBBM-TV ("CBS2" in consultant-speak) made much of an impact on the city of Chicago. It's ratings have been in the crapper for years. Its analog signal is barely visible even just a mile away from the transmitter. And digital? Forget about it.
As a former CBS -> Westinghouse -> CBS employee, I have a soft spot for the Tiffany Network. I looked forward to a new age of Eye greatness starting with the opening of the new CBS2 Broadcast Studios at 22 West Washington. I should have known I would be disappointed.
The Skyline lets us know that CBS has chickened out. Again. Instead of giving us an 80-foot-wide video screen wrapping around its corner of Block 37, WBBM-TV will instead have a video screen that's less than half that wide. And it doesn't wrap. Oh, and it's shorter, too.
I never worked for CBS in Chicago, but I have several friends who have and do. They say it's typical of the way things run there these days -- take a big, important, brilliant plan and beat it into a homogenized, non-offensive, piece of who-gives-a-crap. They say the video screen is emblematic of the state of the news that comes out of there: small, lackluster, full of potential, but ultimately a child of compromise.
The Trib says there were complaints about the screen. It's typical of local television stations to be hyper-sensitive to any little fringe group with an acronym and a word processor, but it's unclear if that's the reason CBS changed its great plans into mediocre plans. Even the architects presented CBS with several dramatic alternatives if a smaller screen must be used. Not surprisingly, these experts were ignored and the station decided to play architect and stick the screen centered above its studio.
Good job, WBBM-TV. Once again you've proven to Chicago that you're a non-factor.
As a former CBS -> Westinghouse -> CBS employee, I have a soft spot for the Tiffany Network. I looked forward to a new age of Eye greatness starting with the opening of the new CBS2 Broadcast Studios at 22 West Washington. I should have known I would be disappointed.
The Skyline lets us know that CBS has chickened out. Again. Instead of giving us an 80-foot-wide video screen wrapping around its corner of Block 37, WBBM-TV will instead have a video screen that's less than half that wide. And it doesn't wrap. Oh, and it's shorter, too.
I never worked for CBS in Chicago, but I have several friends who have and do. They say it's typical of the way things run there these days -- take a big, important, brilliant plan and beat it into a homogenized, non-offensive, piece of who-gives-a-crap. They say the video screen is emblematic of the state of the news that comes out of there: small, lackluster, full of potential, but ultimately a child of compromise.
The Trib says there were complaints about the screen. It's typical of local television stations to be hyper-sensitive to any little fringe group with an acronym and a word processor, but it's unclear if that's the reason CBS changed its great plans into mediocre plans. Even the architects presented CBS with several dramatic alternatives if a smaller screen must be used. Not surprisingly, these experts were ignored and the station decided to play architect and stick the screen centered above its studio.
Good job, WBBM-TV. Once again you've proven to Chicago that you're a non-factor.
Labels:
Block 37,
construction,
television,
The Loop,
WBBM-TV
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Tuesday Trivia: The Civic Opera Building
Q: Which Chicago showplace was shuttered because the Civic Opera Building took away all the best shows?
A: The Auditorium Building on Michigan Avenue
A: The Auditorium Building on Michigan Avenue
Millions of tourists must be right
It's something of a burden to bear. For the thousands of people who live in the New East Side not a day passes without hundreds, sometimes thousands, of tourists wandering their streets asking how to get to the lakefront and Navy Pier.
Long lines of cars snake into, and then back out of, the cul-de-sacs and private driveways of the New East Side as legions of tourists ignore the few tattered signs put up to direct them. Once an articulated CTA bus got stuck back there and it took the better part of 12 hours to get it turned around.
The opening of Millennium Park only made things worse. After all -- it only makes sense that the city's front lawn would connect to the lake and eventually on to Navy Pier. But more than once I have seen a frustrated tourist raise an angry fist to a local when told, "you can't get there from here."
Well, some day maybe they can.
With the impending destruction of Daley Bicentennial Plaza to make way for the new Chicago Children's Museum, there are finally some serious talks about linking the parks and the lakefront in that area. it cost $20 million to do the same thing at 11th Street. How much it will take farther north remains to be seen. But a committee is starting work on it, and maybe there will be some logical relief soon.
Long lines of cars snake into, and then back out of, the cul-de-sacs and private driveways of the New East Side as legions of tourists ignore the few tattered signs put up to direct them. Once an articulated CTA bus got stuck back there and it took the better part of 12 hours to get it turned around.
The opening of Millennium Park only made things worse. After all -- it only makes sense that the city's front lawn would connect to the lake and eventually on to Navy Pier. But more than once I have seen a frustrated tourist raise an angry fist to a local when told, "you can't get there from here."
Well, some day maybe they can.
With the impending destruction of Daley Bicentennial Plaza to make way for the new Chicago Children's Museum, there are finally some serious talks about linking the parks and the lakefront in that area. it cost $20 million to do the same thing at 11th Street. How much it will take farther north remains to be seen. But a committee is starting work on it, and maybe there will be some logical relief soon.
Labels:
lakefront,
Lakeshore East,
Millennium Park,
New East Side,
tourism,
traffic
All cushions accounted for
Last night's storms were among the wildest we've felt since moving to Chicago six years ago. The tornado alert for Lincoln Park and Montrose harbor was bad enough. But when round two blew through a few hours later, our building got hit many dozens of times.
Things could have been worse, though. Take a look at the roof of 777 North Michigan Avenue (you may know it as the Wallgreen's Building at Michigan and Chicago):
Ordinarily the rooftop pool furniture is aligned in neat little rows. But last night's winds pushed all of the chairs, lounges, and cushions into a big pile. Remarkably, it doesn't appear that any of it left the roof, which is good news. Imagine your surprise if you got hit by a chaise lounge falling from a height of 30 stories.
Things could have been worse, though. Take a look at the roof of 777 North Michigan Avenue (you may know it as the Wallgreen's Building at Michigan and Chicago):
Ordinarily the rooftop pool furniture is aligned in neat little rows. But last night's winds pushed all of the chairs, lounges, and cushions into a big pile. Remarkably, it doesn't appear that any of it left the roof, which is good news. Imagine your surprise if you got hit by a chaise lounge falling from a height of 30 stories.
Labels:
777 North Michigan Avenue,
Michigan Avenue,
pool,
weather
Monday, August 4, 2008
A grand entrance to Chicago
A hundred years after the Burnham plan for Chicago was laid out, another piece that plan may become a reality. CDOT is working on a plan to make Congress Parkway in the Loop more grand, and in the process, more pedestrian-friendly.
Right now, Congress between Wells and Michigan Avenue is a big flat slab of tarmac with speeding cars and pedestrians in peril. It is a psychological divider between the pedestrian-friendly Loop and the pedestrian-friendly South Loop. But the street, itself, is something of an adventure to cross.
The CDOT plan is to make the street look more like a city street and less like an expressway. The idea is to snap drivers coming in from the Eisenhower Expressway out of their daze and make them realize that they're in the city now and it's time to slow down.
The ideas call for new planters, new landscaping, more trees, and changes to the pavement to make it more than obvious that there are a dozen pedestrian crossings. Changes in traffic signal timing and a reorganization of turn lanes are also in the works.
The Burnham plan envisioned Congress Parkway as a grand boulevard -- a major entrance corridor to the city. This project will go a long way toward making that a reality. It also includes decorative lighting of the buildings and infrastructure in the area -- a lighting scheme that could be tied into the renovated lighting coming to Buckingham Fountain.
Part of the $20 million needed for the project will come from federal congestion funds. The rest looks like it will have to be ponied up by the city.
Another goal of the project is to draw more restaurants and cafes to the Congress corridor and the residential development that frequently follows them.
Right now, Congress between Wells and Michigan Avenue is a big flat slab of tarmac with speeding cars and pedestrians in peril. It is a psychological divider between the pedestrian-friendly Loop and the pedestrian-friendly South Loop. But the street, itself, is something of an adventure to cross.
The CDOT plan is to make the street look more like a city street and less like an expressway. The idea is to snap drivers coming in from the Eisenhower Expressway out of their daze and make them realize that they're in the city now and it's time to slow down.
The ideas call for new planters, new landscaping, more trees, and changes to the pavement to make it more than obvious that there are a dozen pedestrian crossings. Changes in traffic signal timing and a reorganization of turn lanes are also in the works.
The Burnham plan envisioned Congress Parkway as a grand boulevard -- a major entrance corridor to the city. This project will go a long way toward making that a reality. It also includes decorative lighting of the buildings and infrastructure in the area -- a lighting scheme that could be tied into the renovated lighting coming to Buckingham Fountain.
Part of the $20 million needed for the project will come from federal congestion funds. The rest looks like it will have to be ponied up by the city.
Another goal of the project is to draw more restaurants and cafes to the Congress corridor and the residential development that frequently follows them.
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Live demolition online? Maybe. Maybe not.
The Ruby Tuesday's restaurant chain has taken out a lot of ads in newspapers and on the internet recently strongly implying that it's going to demolish one of its locations and stream the video live on its web site (http://www.rubytuesday.com/) There's a countdown clock on the web site which indicates the demolition is scheduled for this coming Tuesday, August 3. The ad and the press releases out of Tuesday leave out some very important facts, which is why I wrote "implying" at the top of this. I'm not entirely convinced that this isn't some kind of trickery. But I guess we'll find out in a couple of days.
Friday, August 1, 2008
Lollapawinners and Lollapalosers
Today is the day that the 2008 edition of Lollapalooza opens at Grant Park in Chicago. For this long weekend, hundreds of thousands of people will swarm all over Chicago's front lawn enjoying food, music, and all the city has to offer.
Of course, this has the grumpy old ladies and NIMBYs who live along the park's perimeter on edge. They see Lollapalooza as an invasion of their personal space, even though the park is public property and not their personal domain.
So if you've ever wondered what the city gets from Lollapalooza, other than the regular tax money generated by any other concert, we have the answer.
In 2007, Lollapalooza gave $100,000 to Grant Park. that was used to plant 120 new trees, add new and better landscaping at Hutchison Field, a new garden on the south side of the park near Michigan Avenue, and 75 new shade trees. In addition, Lollapalooza gives hundreds of thousands of dollars to smaller community parks around the city that would otherwise be neglected.
This year, in addition to the $100k being given to Grant Park, and the $1 million the festival is donating to renovate Buckingham Fountain, $75,000 is being set aside specifically to repair the grass after the festival.
Seems like quite a lot from one event. By contrast, the Taste of Chicago, a larger, longer event, gives the park exactly $0.
We've heard frightened old ladies who watch too much CBS2News say they're worried about violence at Lollapalooza after the shooting at this year's Taste of Chicago. Comparing the two events is the height of folly.
Of course, this has the grumpy old ladies and NIMBYs who live along the park's perimeter on edge. They see Lollapalooza as an invasion of their personal space, even though the park is public property and not their personal domain.
So if you've ever wondered what the city gets from Lollapalooza, other than the regular tax money generated by any other concert, we have the answer.
In 2007, Lollapalooza gave $100,000 to Grant Park. that was used to plant 120 new trees, add new and better landscaping at Hutchison Field, a new garden on the south side of the park near Michigan Avenue, and 75 new shade trees. In addition, Lollapalooza gives hundreds of thousands of dollars to smaller community parks around the city that would otherwise be neglected.
This year, in addition to the $100k being given to Grant Park, and the $1 million the festival is donating to renovate Buckingham Fountain, $75,000 is being set aside specifically to repair the grass after the festival.
Seems like quite a lot from one event. By contrast, the Taste of Chicago, a larger, longer event, gives the park exactly $0.
We've heard frightened old ladies who watch too much CBS2News say they're worried about violence at Lollapalooza after the shooting at this year's Taste of Chicago. Comparing the two events is the height of folly.
- Lollapalooza lasts three days. Taste lasts for weeks.
- Lollapalooza attracts families. Taste is open to anyone wandering by.
- Lollapalooza visitors have to pay $80-$200 to attend. Tastegoers pay $0.
- Lollapalooza visitors buy tickets online so the festival knows exactly who will be there. Taste is open to anyone wandering by.
- Lollapalooza will have 210,000 people this year. Taste had 1,000,000+ on July 3 alone.
In the past there has been very little crime at Lollapalooza. The only arrests have been for scalping and gate jumping. The same cannot be said Taste.
The bottom line is that there are a lot of people who don't understand Lollapalooza or what it's about. I felt the same way first time it was announced, but after seeing the festival and the people it attracts first-hand, this isn't some meathead concert series. It's a family event that's as much about granola and electric vehicles as it is about getting one's groove on.
A word of advice to the old ladies out there: When you let fear win, you've lost at life.
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