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  #361  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2018, 3:52 PM
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Glad Union Station is being left alone. I wouldn't be opposed to an addition on the station itself, but it would need to be something that's done well. Not the crap we've been seeing so far.

As for the tower... wow is it uninspiring. Hopefully there are refinements to the design coming. And when I say refinements, I mean a damn near total redesign please, lol.

I'm surprised they aren't shooting for a taller tower. Its located immediately adjacent to the busiest commuter rail station outside of New York City, and a few blocks from a half dozen transit lines as well.

Looks like they won't be building over the Union Station Transit Center either, as was the plan in earlier designs.
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  #362  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2018, 4:29 PM
chicubs111 chicubs111 is offline
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Originally Posted by the urban politician View Post
It’s Amazon!!!

Ok, probably not. I agree, I doubt SF would make that change so quickly.

But here’s a question: how accurate have Sneed’s rumors been? Because if they’ve already landed an anchor for this office tower, then the tower and the Union Station rehab is a go....and naturally it would once again be dancing bananas time...
exactly my thoughts on the rumor by sneed...guess just wait and see how this all plays out just seems like for such a short snippet of a particular large story since it involves thousands of jobs and nobody else has picked it up yet?..
     
     
  #363  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2018, 6:55 PM
RedCorsair87 RedCorsair87 is offline
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Which major banks don't have an office in Chicago at this time? Might be a good place to research.
     
     
  #364  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2018, 11:26 PM
Clarkkent2420 Clarkkent2420 is offline
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Y’all tripping

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Last edited by Clarkkent2420; Sep 14, 2018 at 10:19 PM.
     
     
  #365  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 6:14 AM
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Originally Posted by Clarkkent2420 View Post
That’s obv not a real rendering - someone must’ve leaked half finished work ahead of that public meeting. Based on Sneed’s article it smells like mayor’s office. Looks more like one north wacker than anything mentioned so far. Park looks nice though.
I hope it's not the real rendering, but I wouldn't put it past them to do this after what they pulled before with the original proposal. I could live with this though, especially in comparison to the original design
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  #366  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 2:48 PM
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  #367  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 4:12 PM
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I'll admit, that is a really good looking building, and that is exactly what the leaked photo looks like. I guess i'm just gonna go back to biting my tongue until we see the official images haha
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  #368  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 4:58 PM
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Several thousand jobs new to the city...I like the sound of that. Obviously I hope it's Amazon or Google, but several thousand new jobs if it's a good company that pays well is awesome regardless.
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  #369  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 5:03 PM
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I hope that tower in the rendering is a placeholder. I mean know that Architects have to reuse some things but damn let's get some new ideas Goettsch.
     
     
  #370  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 6:02 PM
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  #371  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 7:25 PM
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Originally Posted by Clarkkent2420 View Post
This is a recycled debate - in this city, the architect doesn’t pick the building, the developer does. In chicago, where the cost vs rent differential isn’t large enough to allow for hyper aggressive design, the result is a lot of really efficient rectilinear towers.
I wasn't suggesting that the design should be "hyper aggressive" design or that it shouldn't be rectilinear. I was simply suggesting that Goettsch try out some new material instead of doing their Nth variation on the One North Wacker design.
     
     
  #372  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 9:34 PM
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  #373  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2018, 11:29 PM
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The new building looks alright, certainly nothing grand. Goettsch does good work, but I wish more of our newer office towers were designed by someone else (maybe just not Ronan). The big/better news is that it looks like the rooftop addition to Union Station is gone, and that alone is worth celebrating. The possibility of an anchor tenant also being finalized is pretty exciting. Overall, it looks like this new plan is headed in the right direction.
     
     
  #374  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2018, 3:57 AM
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Ugh this whole scheme sucks. Even if the tower is a placeholder. More plaza space is not needed in this location when there is literally a continuous chain of plazas along the river. I would much prefer a significant retail podium at the base, maybe akin to WFC/Brookfield Place in NY, or closer to home, what Blackstone is planning for the base of Sears/Willis Tower. This would have the added bonus of swallowing up the bus station, which is elegant in isolation but really a very suburban design that doesn't belong right on top of the region's biggest transit hub.

Also, I still think Union Station needs a vertical expansion. The proportions of the building, as designed by Daniel Burnham, are clunky AF because they were always intended to be Phase I of a larger development. We shouldn't let the grand plan remain unfinished because we got used to the incomplete look. In their haste to avoid the atrocious design pitched by Goettsch, the city overreacted and basically told O'Donnell to shit-can any plans to expand the station headhouse, which IMO is a big mistake, the proper architect could design a very handsomely detailed precast or even limestone addition. Adrian Smith already figured out a creative way to panelize real limestone into precast units at low cost for NBC Tower.
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Last edited by ardecila; Sep 4, 2018 at 4:18 AM.
     
     
  #375  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2018, 11:57 AM
pilsenarch pilsenarch is online now
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^Agree with ardecila on all of the above except the design precedent for the tower addition should be more Hearst and less NBC...
     
     
  #376  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2018, 1:29 PM
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Yes, Union Station was designed as pedestal and should have something placed on top.
But that SCB design is so incredibly hideous I'm cool keeping it topless for now...
     
     
  #377  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2018, 3:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ardecila View Post
The proportions of the building, as designed by Daniel Burnham, are clunky AF
Now, let's not get carried away. Daniel Burnham had been dead nearly a decade when the railroads stopped construction and went back in with new caissons so they could add some office floors on top. The designer of the Union Station we know was Peirce Anderson, using a parti developed by Thomas Rodd of the Pennsylvania RR. After Anderson's 1924 death, Alfred Shaw took over.

Nor should Burnham's signature mean much to us regarding architecture. He was a great rainmaker, was very good at persuading clients to create quasipublic spaces, and was a gifted planner (of floor layouts, of sites, of cities). But Burnham always kept much more talented people (Charles Atwood, Peter Weber, Anderson, Ernest Graham, Edward Bennett) around to handle actual building design.

Here's the last design Burnham would have been aware of:



For those interested, I highly recommend the new book Chicago Union Station, by Fred Ash.
     
     
  #378  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2018, 7:53 PM
SamInTheLoop SamInTheLoop is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spyguy View Post
The new building looks alright, certainly nothing grand. Goettsch does good work, but I wish more of our newer office towers were designed by someone else (maybe just not Ronan). The big/better news is that it looks like the rooftop addition to Union Station is gone, and that alone is worth celebrating. The possibility of an anchor tenant also being finalized is pretty exciting. Overall, it looks like this new plan is headed in the right direction.
Definitely. Goettsch is solid, but let’s mix it up with new/different design talent for Loop office towers. The reason they’ve been so busy on this front really comes down to Riverside Development’s (O’Donnell’s) impressive string of success landing anchor tenants....
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  #379  
Old Posted Sep 4, 2018, 7:56 PM
SamInTheLoop SamInTheLoop is offline
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Anchor

Much more likely to be an existing large traditional industry tenant relocation....

My best guess is BMO Harris....just a guess though.....could be either of a couple others....
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  #380  
Old Posted Sep 5, 2018, 4:56 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Downtown View Post
Now, let's not get carried away. Daniel Burnham had been dead nearly a decade when the railroads stopped construction and went back in with new caissons so they could add some office floors on top. The designer of the Union Station we know was Peirce Anderson, using a parti developed by Thomas Rodd of the Pennsylvania RR. After Anderson's 1924 death, Alfred Shaw took over.
Yes, I vaguely remember you mentioning this before. But this just reinforces my point that the unfinished state of Union Station is not some genius architectural masterwork by a civic icon. Fans of good architecture should be advocating for something to be built on top of the headhouse, ideally something in line with the boxy proportions of the original tower scheme. It would echo many historic Loop buildings in a familiar way (Conway Building, Insurance Exchange, Builders Building, etc). Even Lucien Lagrange was prepared to give us a stripped-down version of this design back in the 1980s before that proposal fell through.

Quote:
Nor should Burnham's signature mean much to us regarding architecture. He was a great rainmaker, was very good at persuading clients to create quasipublic spaces, and was a gifted planner (of floor layouts, of sites, of cities). But Burnham always kept much more talented people (Charles Atwood, Peter Weber, Anderson, Ernest Graham, Edward Bennett) around to handle actual building design.
This subtle distinction won't mean much to the lay observer of architecture. Most people know Burnham (along with Sullivan) as the genius architect from Devil in the White City.
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