The Chicago School of Architecture: Building the Modern City, 1880–1910
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The Chicago School of Architecture - Rolf Achilles
INTRODUCTION
IN ITS FIRST SEVENTYYEARS , Chicago was the fastest growing city the world had ever seen, with its population burgeoning from some three hundred people to 1.5 million between 1833 and 1900. Grappling with this unprecedented expansion, the city built to its horizons and its sky with machine-made iron and steel, bricks, terra-cotta, glass, cement, and all other materials demanded by a permanent boomtown that was contemporary by its own definition. Though only ten, eleven, and twelve stories high, the first steel-framed structures were taller than anything yet built. They seemed to go on forever, scraping the sky.
After the construction surge was over and some of the earliest buildings had already given way to new structures, historians had time to reflect on the recent past, calling what had happened the Commercial Style or Chicago School. Symbolizing civic unity and pride, the public’s aspirations of upward mobility, these buildings were awe-inspiring. Their architects were among the first in the world to implement the new British and French technologies of steel-frame construction in commercial buildings. They have easily discernible unifying characteristics: a steel-frame with terra-cotta, brick or masonry cladding; a curtain wall of unlimited ornamentation pierced for large plate-glass windows; and an inner, private court for light and air, elevators, and more decoration.
As the nation’s buildings began to multiply dramatically and grow ever bolder in their construction and use of materials, Barr Ferree spoke to the American Institute of Architects in 1893, telling them current American architecture is not a matter of art, but of business. A building must pay or there will be no investor ready with the money to meet its cost.
Not all were in agreement with this bold statement that buildings were strictly commercial ventures with little or no social responsibilities. Three years later Louis Sullivan penned his now famous lyrical essay in which he poetically argues that a tall building should be more than just functional, that it should be as beautiful as a tree, as stately as an ancient column, and most of all that its form should ever follow
its function.
A typical Chicago curtain wall designed by Louis Sullivan in 1900 for Schlesinger & Mayer, since 1904 known as the Carson Pirie Scott department store.
All agreed that tall buildings were built from the inside out, that elevators were the internal determinant, but it was the outside—the building skin—that everyone saw. And it was the skin that made all the difference.
Knowing full well that tall buildings were built around elevators, Sullivan pleaded for art and natural beauty in tall structures to uplift the minds of those seeing them, while Ferree saw no ideal, just a straightforward approach to architecture that boldly reflected the cultural milieu of Chicago, a chaotic Midwestern cosmopolis that was proud, western and nationalistic while exalting such nebulous ideals as American
and democracy.
All that and much more was accomplished by the First Chicago School of Architecture. Today, Ferree is forgotten, his message taken to heart. Sullivan is now acclaimed as the developer of a Chicago style that became European Modernism and then returned to Chicago as the Second Chicago School led by German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Variants of the style are still very much active today across the world.
The building of Burnham & Root’s Fisher Building set a construction speed record.
A steel-frame structure as it might have looked in the 1890s.
Today noted for its innovative foundation, the Washington Block, built in 1873–4, is one of the earliest post-Great Fire buildings remaining in the Loop.
AFTER THE GREAT FIRE—FIREPROOFING
BUILT ON SAND AND MUD , Chicago developed from a messy mélange of humans and animals into a grid system