CHICAGO l Apparel Mart | 845 FT / 258 M | 75 FLOORS | 1928 | NEVER BUILT
June 17, 1928.
The Chicago Apparel Mart was to be the world's tallest building, seventy feet higher than the Woolworth Building in NYC. http://img240.imageshack.us/img240/646/stallestli7.jpg The plans included a towering hotel and two convention halls. It was to be on the south bank of the Chicago river (West Wacker Drive). I got the information from the back of the illustration (below) http://img240.imageshack.us/img240/2084/stallestzx6.jpg |
That would have been a beauty, but even if it had the status of world's tallest building it would have been very very brief, assuming they even finished it in time.
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This would have been a beaut. Such a shame. Any idea of the exact spot on Wacker, such as an equivalent address according to today's numbering system? I am very curious to know what is in that spot today.
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Jibba
I wondered the same thing. I don't know the answer. |
Another depression loss, would have been beautiful and the construction would of helped create jobs in a way similar to the Gloden Gate, Hoover Dam and ESB
EDIT: In fact now that I think of it it does have some similarities to the ESB |
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It was quite the interesting plan; it included an automated garage with 1200 spaces, two auditoriums, three private clubs, an open-air swimming pool on the roof, and a railroad station in the basement with a direct connection to Illinois Central trains. It would have contained 4.65 million square feet of space, more than the Merchandise Mart or the Sears Tower, and even today, it would be the 10th-biggest building in the world by volume. http://img148.imageshack.us/img148/8...relmartqd6.jpg |
Thanks, ardecila. This image clears up any confusion I had. It's extra sad now: that Hyatt is unworthy of that spot equally or more so than this grand structure would have been worthy of it. It possibly would have drawn some of the attention away from that nexus of architectural grandeur where Michigan avenue crosses the Main Branch (Tribune, Wrigley, Jewelers, et al), but I am probably just saying that to make myself feel better.
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Great information aredila.....thanks for the clarification. :)
I always thought the massive proposal of the 1920s for Lakeshore East faced east as opposed to facing north. |
You would not believe how long I have waited to see an actual image of this long lost proposal. I cannot thank you enough. :notacrook:
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The Apparel Mart was the first (and last) actual proposal for this district under the Holabird & Roche plan. After it was canceled around 1930, there were two buildings built (One Prudential Plaza in 1955 and Outer Drive East in 1963) and then more inactivity before the massive construction of Illinois Center in 1970, and then slow but steady progress ever since. http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/7...birdlselu8.jpg |
^^^
hmmm....very interesting aerial. |
This is the east facing proposal I had stuck in my head.
http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/4299/11asaarcv1.jpg Eliel Saarinen, proposal for the reorganization of the Chicago lakefront, 1923 (he's basically using his famous 2nd place Tribune Tower proposal) |
A tip about the roads seen in that rendering - they look akin to a modern high-speed freeway, but I believe they were planned to be extensions of existing city streets - in this case, Lake Street and North Water Street. The pedestrian traffic, of course, would be separated out into a campus-type setting one story up.
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^^That's outrageous! I've never seen that proposal before...
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Here's another general masterplan for the Lakeshore East/ Illinois Center area: Terminal Park
http://img392.imageshack.us/img392/5...east001fw3.jpg Didn't realize we already had a thread for this. |
Reminds me of the old Met Life Building proposal.
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^^^Met Life proposal was one of my favorites
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What a huge building, would've been iconic if built.
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