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Essential
Architecture- Chicago
Loop South
Auditorium Building |
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architect
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Adler & Sullivan |
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location
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430 S. Michigan Ave.
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date
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1886-90 |
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style
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Romanesque Revival |
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construction
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Stone clad |
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type
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Combining
Hotel and
Office Building with a
splendid Theatre
designed for an opera company |
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Ganz Hall capitol and Auditorium Hotel - detail of the grand stairs. |
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Auditorium building interior from the balcony |
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The extraordinary engineering talent of Dankmar Adler and the
architectural genius of Louis H. Sullivan created this building to
reflect the cultural maturity of Chicago. Combining hotel and office
space with a splendid theater designed for an opera company, the
Auditorium was a turning point in Sullivan's career and a milestone in
the development of modern architecture.
Sullivan's genius for architectural ornamentation is displayed in
the building's interior, where most of the public rooms are lavishly
finished. The grandest interior space is the theater itself, with four
broad elliptical arches spanning the width of the theater and decorated
by plaster reliefs covered with gold leaf |
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Auditorium Building, Chicago
The Auditorium Building was designed by Dankmar Adler and Louis
Sullivan (1886–90).The Auditorium Building in Chicago, Illinois is one
of the best-known designs of Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan. The
building is located at 430 South Michigan Avenue (the northwest corner
of Michigan Avenue and Congress Parkway). It originally housed a large
opera house, a hotel, and numerous offices.
The Auditorium Theatre, a National Historic Landmark, is part of
the Auditorium Building. Today the Auditorium Building is the home of
Roosevelt University.
Origin and purpose
Ferdinand Peck, a Chicago businessman, incorporated the Chicago
Auditorium Association in December 1886 to develop what he wanted to be
the world's largest, grandest, most expensive theater that would rival
such institutions as the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. He
was said to have wanted to make high culture accessible to the working
classes of Chicago.
The building was to include an office block and a first class
hotel. Peck persuaded many Chicago business tycoons to go on board with
him, including Marshall Field, Edson Keith, Martin Ryerson, and George
Pullman. The association hired the renowned architectural firm of
Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan to design the building. At the time, a
young Frank Lloyd Wright was employed at the firm as draftsman.
Design
Adler and Sullivan designed a tall structure with load-bearing
outer walls, and based the exterior appearance partly on the design of
H.H. Richardson's Marshall Field Warehouse, another Chicago landmark.
The Auditorium is a heavy, impressive structure externally, and was more
striking in its day when buildings of its scale were less common. When
completed, it was the tallest building in the city.
One of the most innovative features of the building was its
massive raft foundation, designed by Adler in conjunction with engineer
Paul Mueller. The soil beneath the Auditorium consists of soft blue clay
to a depth of over 100 feet, which made conventional foundations
impossible. Adler and Mueller designed a floating mat of crisscrossed
railroad ties, topped with a double layer of steel rails embedded in
concrete, the whole assemblage coated with pitch.
The resulting raft allowed the weight of the massive outer walls
to be distributed over a large area. However, the weight of the masonry
outer walls in relation to the relatively lightweight interior deformed
the raft over the course of a century, and today portions of the
building have settled as much as 29 inches. This deflection is clearly
visible in the theater lobby, where the mosaic floor takes on a distinct
slope as it nears the outer walls. This settlement is not because of
poor engineering but the fact the design was changed during
construction. The original plan had the exterior covered in lightweight
terra-cotta, but this was changed to stone after the foundations were
under construction. Most of the settlement occurred within a decade
after construction, and at one time there was a plan to shorten the
interior supports to level the floors but this was never carried out.
In the center of the building was a 4,300 seat auditorium,
originally intended primarily for production of Grand Opera. In keeping
with Peck's democratic ideals, the auditorium was designed so that all
seats would have good views and acoustics. The original plans had no box
seats at all, and when these were added to the plans they did not get
the prime locations.
Housed in the building around this central space were 136 offices
and a 400-room hotel, whose purpose was to generate much of the revenue
to support the opera. While the Auditorium Building was not intended as
a commercial building, Peck wanted it to be self-sufficient. Revenue
from the offices and hotel was meant to allow ticket prices to remain
reasonable. In reality, both the hotel and office block became
unprofitable within a few years.
History
On October 5, 1887, President Grover Cleveland laid the
cornerstone for the Auditorium Building. The 1888 Republican National
Convention was held in a partially finished building where Benjamin
Harrison was nominated as a presidential candidate. On December 9, 1889
President Benjamin Harrison dedicated the building and Adler and
Sullivan opened their offices on the 16th and 17th floors of the
Auditorium tower.
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra debuted on October 16, 1891 and
made its home in the Auditorium Theatre until moving to Orchestra Hall
in 1904. Theodore Roosevelt gave his famous Bull Moose speech in 1912 at
the Auditorium and was nominated for President of the United States by
the independent National Progressive Party.
The opera company renting the accommodation moved to the Civic
Opera House in 1929, and the Auditorium Theatre closed during the Great
Depression. In 1941 it was taken over by the city of Chicago to be used
as a World War II servicemen's center. By 1946, Roosevelt University
moved into the Auditorium Building, but the theater was not restored to
its former splendor.
On October 31, 1967 the Auditorium Theatre reopened and through
1975, the Auditorium served as Chicago's premier rock venue with
performances by Jimi Hendrix, The Who, The Grateful Dead, and many
others. It was declared a National Historic Landmark by the U.S.
Department of the Interior in 1975.
In 2001, a major restoration of the Auditorium Theatre was begun
to return the theater to its original colors and finishes.
Auditorium Building commentary
Auditorium Hotel - dining hall from the South."The Auditorium was
built for a syndicate of businessmen to house a large civic opera house;
to provide an economic base it was decided to wrap the auditorium with a
hotel and office block. Hence Adler & Sullivan had to plan a complex
multiple-use building. Fronting on Michigan Avenue, overlooking the
lake, was the hotel (now Roosevelt University) while the offices were
placed to the west on Wabash Avenue. The entrance to the auditorium is
on the south side beneath the tall blocky seventeen-story tower. The
rest of the building is a uniform ten stories, organized in the same way
as Richardson's Marshall Field Wholesale Store. The interior
embellishment, however, is wholly Sullivan's, and some of the details,
because of their continuous curvilinear foliate motifs, are among the
nearest equivalents to European Art Nouveau architecture."
—Leland M. Roth. A Concise History of American Architecture. p.
179-80.
Some interior details were probably drawn by Frank Lloyd Wright,
who started in Sullivan's office as a draftsman in 1887.
— Sir Banister Fletcher. A History of Architecture. p. 1241.
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links
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With special thanks to the City of
Chicago website,
www.egov.cityofchicago.org , for much of the info on this page.
Photos copyright City of Chicago. |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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