With all this construction going on in the Downtown area in and around the river. Just imagine what Chicago will look like 10 years from now. Hope the old Spire site get a proposed building on top of it soon. Being that Chicago is sort of land locked by lake Michigan really the only choice developers have is to build up. For us folks that like architecture and build design in high rises and super tall buildings. Let's see where the next 10 years takes us with all these new buildings going up.
With all this construction going on in the Downtown area in and around the river. Just imagine what Chicago will look like 10 years from now. Hope the old Spire site get a proposed building on top of it soon. Being that Chicago is sort of land locked by lake Michigan really the only choice developers have is to build up. For us folks that like architecture and build design in high rises and super tall buildings. Let's see where the next 10 years takes us with all these new buildings going up.
Quite a bit, to be fair. If you drew a circle centered on the Loop 50km in radius, 40% of it would be undevelopable - mainly due to Lake Michigan.
In fact, Chicago has the 23rd highest percentage of undevelopable land among MSAs in the US with populations above 500k. This is not much less than Seattle (43.6%) and is more than Boston (33.9%).
Quite a bit, to be fair. If you drew a circle centered on the Loop 50km in radius, 40% of it would be undevelopable - mainly due to Lake Michigan.
In fact, Chicago has the 23rd highest percentage of undevelopable land among MSAs in the US with populations above 500k. This is not much less than Seattle (43.6%) and is more than Boston (33.9%).
"(especially of a country) almost or entirely surrounded by land; having no coastline or seaport."
Indianapolis, Oklahoma City, Denver are landlocked. Chicago is not landlocked.
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1. 9 DeKalb Ave - Brooklyn, NYC - SHoP Architects - Photo
2. American Radiator Building - New York City - Hood, Godley, and Fouilhoux - Photo
3. One Chicago Square - Chicago - HPA and Goettsch Partners - Photo
4. Chicago Board of Trade - Chicago - Holabird & Root - Photo
5. Cathedral of Learning - Pittsburgh - Charles Klauder - Photo
People in 30 years will look at old photos of Chicago from 2018 and wonder why the skyline looked so sparse
Here's the skyline in 1990, almost 30 years ago:
Edit: Blank unless I find a legit 1990's pic.
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1. 9 DeKalb Ave - Brooklyn, NYC - SHoP Architects - Photo
2. American Radiator Building - New York City - Hood, Godley, and Fouilhoux - Photo
3. One Chicago Square - Chicago - HPA and Goettsch Partners - Photo
4. Chicago Board of Trade - Chicago - Holabird & Root - Photo
5. Cathedral of Learning - Pittsburgh - Charles Klauder - Photo
In the first image, park tower (2000) is clearly visible, so it's at least post-2000.
In the second one, 3 First National (1981) is clearly visible, but One Mag Mile (1983) is absent, so it's in that gap (1981-1983).
Ouch. The internet lied to me!
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1. 9 DeKalb Ave - Brooklyn, NYC - SHoP Architects - Photo
2. American Radiator Building - New York City - Hood, Godley, and Fouilhoux - Photo
3. One Chicago Square - Chicago - HPA and Goettsch Partners - Photo
4. Chicago Board of Trade - Chicago - Holabird & Root - Photo
5. Cathedral of Learning - Pittsburgh - Charles Klauder - Photo
Thanks for stepping in on it. I legit couldn't find a farther away skyline shot in 1990 though so we could compare overall density. I spent a good 30 minutes looking and came up empty handed.
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1. 9 DeKalb Ave - Brooklyn, NYC - SHoP Architects - Photo
2. American Radiator Building - New York City - Hood, Godley, and Fouilhoux - Photo
3. One Chicago Square - Chicago - HPA and Goettsch Partners - Photo
4. Chicago Board of Trade - Chicago - Holabird & Root - Photo
5. Cathedral of Learning - Pittsburgh - Charles Klauder - Photo
The best feature of this development is the fact that it will finally block the River North Beige Patch from the NW. This two tower project will turn all the mid 2000's crap in River North into background noise.
^ The advantage of that middle pic is that you also have some cars there to help you age the picture
And in the last one, you have hairstyles.
__________________ There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there always has been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge." - Isaac Asimov
The best feature of this development is the fact that it will finally block the River North Beige Patch from the NW. This two tower project will turn all the mid 2000's crap in River North into background noise.
I hadn't even thought of that, the monotony of beige being broken up will do wonders aesthetically speaking. You've got me even more excited for this project now