By 21st century standards, it would seem like a
moot point that buildings in high density downtowns would attempt to have at
least some street level engagement, meaning that the ground floor offers
something for passers-by to look at beyond a mere blank wall. Usually this translates to a large
window for a display that correlates to the activity inside, and since most
people in big cities do not want their private lives to be a stage, residential
uses on downtown ground floors are not typically very desirable. However, most businesses—particularly
retail—find it not only desirable but advantageous that pedestrians and
motorists can easily peer into their establishments: the only thing better than
a good window is an equally conspicuous door nearby. Thus, many buildings that may otherwise house residences,
offices, or even covered parking on the upper levels will still have a
gregarious ground floor that establishes a dialogue with the street. Sometimes the “foot” of the building is
the most heavily ornamented, while all the other floors between the foundation
and the cornice are a bit more austere or conventional.
A survey of any older downtown district confirms this
phenomenon, such as the photo below from Roanoke, Virginia:
This perfectly conventional building from, most likely, the
latter half of the 19th century was ubiquitous across American
cities up until around 1960. The
dichotomy of large, retail-oriented windows on the ground floor and smaller,
more private fenestration on each upper level was a standard building typology
of that time.
But it all changed concurrent with the decentralization of
American cities after World War II.
Automobile ownership was already advancing rapidly beforehand, with the
brief exception of the first few years of the Depression (and after 1933,
vehicles per capita in the US resumed climbing, despite the persisting economic
malaise). After the surrender of Japan, American
soldiers returned home to take advantage of the GI Bill and moved with their
sweethearts to a brand-new house in what was probably farmland before they left
to fight the Axis Powers. Then,
together, they commenced in an unprecedented babymaking celebration. A surge in the economy, the population,
the rate of homeownership, and private automobiles culminated in the emergence
of a new way of life in which downtowns were increasingly less critical for
daily routines. By the time the
overwhelming majority of households owned vehicles in the 1950s, old downtowns
were not only passé, the physical form was downright inconvenient. Floorspace in these old buildings
wasn’t large enough for the logistical improvements that allowed for
supermarkets. Living above or in
close proximity to work was unnecessary thanks to cars. Small yards in the homes close to
downtown put people unappealingly close to their neighbors. Downtown streets could not begin to
accommodate the level of parking available in a typical shopping mall, out around
the cheaper land near all the new housing.
In the 1950s and 60s, urban retail didn’t just evolve in its
physical form; the old typology almost completely collapsed. The most outdated old buildings fell
vacant and into disrepair; city leaders often demolished them to offer better
parking opportunities in an attempt to bolster downtowns’ accessibility. New structures often needed so much
parking that it had to be stacked on the first few stories, below the office
uses. And since downtown parking
demand outpaced the need for these surviving urban structures to offer goods
and services, the newest generation of buildings turned away from the streets,
reducing or eliminating visible displays or entrances. Quite a few downtown buildings in the
mid 20th century oriented themselves toward a parking garage, built
to one side, connected to another block by a skyway, or perhaps
underground. Meanwhile the street
and sidewalk merely hosted service vehicle access or fire escapes, but no
primary entrance.
For many readers of this blog, a description of the
cataclysmic shift in urban design over fifty years is unwarranted, but even for
the unacquainted, it doesn’t take much to get the idea across. I could provide dozens examples of
civic buildings, office towers, parking garages, or even shopping centers that
features flout this disregard for city streets and sidewalks, but a particular
structure comes to mind for its critical place within its city’s landscape.
Lake Point Tower in Chicago, viewed from the lake in the
center of the above photo, is among the city’s most iconic buildings: at the
time of its development, the 70-story structure was the tallest residential
tower in the world. To this day,
it remains the only Chicago highrise that sits to the east of Lake Shore Drive,
on a promontory that also includes the city’s famed tourist attraction, Navy
Pier, visible in the lower right corner.
It bears a more than passing resemblance to the Spartan elegance
associated with Chicago’s favorite (adopted) architect son, Ludwig Mies van der
Rohe, whose Second Chicago School of thought during his tenure at the Illinois
Institute of Technology exerted a profound influence on the cityscape during middle
of the 20th Century.
The similarities between Lake Point Tower and the work of Mies should
come as no surprise; its architects were among his students. Different vantage points reinforce the
distinctive status of this edifice in relation to the waterfront and
neighboring highrises.
The structure borrows heavily from Mies’ Bauhaus movement origins,
which deliberately sought to avoid engagement with the landscape or local
vernacular in an attempt (at least to some degree) to transcend it; thus it
earned the uncomfortable nickname “International Style”. Though the style fell out of favor in
the last quarter of the 20th century for exuding more than a whiff
of elitism, the disassociation with place and regional culture certainly gives
Lake Point Tower a majesty that underlies the luxury of the residential units
inside. And if it seems regal now,
one can only imagine what it looked like when first constructed 45 years
ago. In 1968, it felt even more
like an island: Chicago’s central business district was declining, as was the
case across the country. While the
city’s above-average public transit system precluded the need for as many
parking lots and garages as most Midwestern cities, much of the central city
struggled to retain offices and shops, let alone residences. Lake Point Tower was a risky
enterprise—a relative orphan in the Streeterville neighborhood, capitalizing on
remarkable multi-directional views of both the Loop and the skyline. After the residential boom that began
in Streeterville and other parts of Chicago’s CBD in the 1980s, Lake Point
Tower stopped seeming so lonely. But
the evidence remains powerful of the time period in which it was
conceived. While it often looks
fantastic from the water or zipping by on Lake Shore Drive to its west, the
other, more pedestrian scaled access roads paint a different picture:
Nothing but a big blank wall across most of the Illinois
Street frontage, with the exception of a tiny convenience-type retail opening
at the green awning. The Grand
Avenue frontage on the north side of the tower is much the same way: virtually
no engagement with the street.
Pedestrians have virtually nothing to look at as they walk by, which
might not be such a concern if it were a particularly sleepy or attractionless
part of town. But it isn’t. Throngs gather at Navy Pier just a
block to the east, particularly when the weather is nice.
Thus, the designers of Lake Point Tower missed out on a
critical opportunity to divert the attention of passers-by. Pedestrians in the area, many of which
are tourists, would easily have patronized shops and restaurants along Illinois
Street or Grand Avenue, so it perfectly embodies a failure to capitalize on the
commercial possibilities afforded by this premier urban location.
In the tower’s defense, it is a product of its time. The architects did not take the designs
of pre-war commercial buildings to heart, because in 1968, they were by and
large irrelevant. Lake Point Tower
was an investment risk when central cities across the nation hemorrhaged jobs,
burned-out swathes reminded everyone of escalating social unrest, and both
petty and crime increasingly dominated the news headlines. Downtown Chicago had plenty of
highrises in 1968, but it could not boast a great number of residential high-rises. Many people living downtown back then
were looking for ways out. Thus,
this tower responded to the social climate by turning inward. It still offers the luxuries its target
demographic would expect—a pool, park, playground, shops and restaurants—but
they first (and sometimes exclusively) serve the residents under the shared
roof. Dwellers of this tower could
function for days without leaving the building’s grounds; an elevator would be
all they need. The gourmet restaurants might attract outsiders in order to
break even, but they cannot rely on display windows for promotion, and the
outside world that chooses to patronize them will probably get there by car.
Lake Point Tower is hardly unworthy of its pivotal role
along the Chicago lakefront, as well as its many firsts. But from an urban design standpoint,
its imperfections create what almost amounts to blight on the streetscape. It may still be luxurious, but it did
not place among the top 10 priciest condo buildings last year, and as Streeterville and Near North
neighborhoods have invited dozens of other luxury high-rise condo, apartment
and hotel developments in the ensuing decades since 1968, most subsequent
towers have consciously engaged with the street and sidewalk, as evidenced by
the photo below:
Developers have nothing to gain by pasting a blank wall
across the ground floor of their buildings, and these days, most new
construction recognizes this, even in downtowns with less of an active street life
than Chicago. Many cities remain
too decentralized to warrant a store-lined first floor on every downtown
street—after all, the suburbs remain the retail hub for most of metropolitan
America, despite some recentralizing activity in the last twenty years. However, most architects, developers,
and city planners know better than allow blank walls to permeate new
construction; a superficial window display with public art or an advertisement
still offers a vast improvement.
Lake Point Tower will probably remain a Chicago icon for decades to
come, but its admirers will reserve their kindest words when describing it—and
viewing it—from a distance.
Walked by for the first time yesterday. The building isolates Navy Pier from the rest of the city. Really frustrating
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