"An ambitious history that’s less the usual roundup of Loop landmarks than an architecture junkie’s dense wandering intriguingly away from downtown." --<i>Chicago Tribune</i>

"A magisterial account of our city's high-rise foundations." --<i>Newcity</i>

"An impressive and important book that ranks with other works providing the deepest insights into what makes Chicago, Chicago. . . . <i>Chicago Skyscrapers, 1934-1986</i> is one of those rare books about significant architectural structures that looks beyond design controversies, elegant descriptions, and engineering details and examines the forces behind their creation." --<i>Third Coast Review</i>

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“A worthy successor to the pathbreaking work of Carl Condit, this deeply researched volume explores the architectural design, structure and equipment of tall buildings in Chicago from the 1930s into the 1980s in their full and complex relationship to changing economic, social, and political realities in the city.”--Robert Bruegmann, author of <i>Art Deco Chicago: Designing Modern America</i>

Winner of The Pattis Family Foundation Chicago Book Award, by The Pattis Family Foundation and the Newberry Library

From skyline-defining icons to wonders of the world, the second period of the Chicago skyscraper transformed the way Chicagoans lived and worked. Thomas Leslie’s comprehensive look at the modern skyscraper era views the skyscraper idea, and the buildings themselves, within the broad expanse of city history. As construction emerged from the Great Depression, structural, mechanical, and cladding innovations evolved while continuing to influence designs. But the truly radical changes concerned the motivations that drove construction. While profit remained key in the Loop, developers elsewhere in Chicago worked with a Daley political regime that saw tall buildings as tools for a wholesale recasting of the city’s appearance, demography, and economy. Focusing on both the wider cityscape and specific buildings, Leslie reveals skyscrapers to be the physical results of negotiations between motivating and mechanical causes.

Illustrated with more than 140 photographs, Chicago Skyscrapers, 1934–1986 tells the fascinating stories of the people, ideas, negotiations, decision-making, compromises, and strategies that changed the history of architecture and one of its showcase cities.

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Preface

Acknowledgments

Chapter 1. The Second Skyscraper City

Chapter 2. Technical Developments in the 1930s-1940s

Chapter 3. Demographics and Housing

Chapter 4. Prudential, Inland Steel, and the Rebirth of the Loop

Chapter 5. Daley’s City: Commercial Construction, 1955-1972

Chapter 6. High Rise Housing in the 1960s

Chapter 7. Skyscraper Urbanism

Chapter 8. Tubes and the High-Rise as Structural Art

Chapter 9. After Sears

Coda: Mies, Morality, and the Myth of the “Second Chicago School”

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780252044953
Publisert
2023-06-20
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Illinois Press
Vekt
1334 gr
Høyde
279 mm
Bredde
216 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, P, 01, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
354

Forfatter

Biographical note

Thomas Leslie is an architect, educator, and author. His books include Beauty's Rigor: Patterns of Production in the Work of Pier Luigi Nervi and Chicago Skyscrapers, 1871–1934.