“Dark, strong, powerful, maybe even a little threatening-like a
muscle-bound, Prohibition era gangster clad in a tuxedo-the John Hancock Center
says ‘Chicago ’…”
(101).
The Book
Why Architecture Matters: Lessons from Chicago is
a collection of Blair Kamin’s architecture columns from the Chicago Tribune, between 1992 and 2000.
The columns cover building proposals and changes, Chicago architects, sports stadiums, the
suburbs, skyscrapers, and the lakefront. The reader can tell that Kamin is
protective of the Chicago
style and the influence it has and continues to have.
Two of the
columns focus specifically on the John
Hancock Center
and the Sears (now Willis) Tower, the “bookends” of the Chicago skyline. Kamin introduces the reader
to facts about each skyscraper and the impact they have on the city. The column
on the John Hancock Center is a well-written architectural description and
details the impact it has on the other buildings and neighborhood. The column
on the Sears Tower provides facts about the tower,
including the two decades it spent as the world’s tallest building.
According
to Kamin, “The best [skyscrapers]…transcend everything and become civic art”
(112). The main civic art of Chicago
is its skyline and the sense of wonder it can impart. Kamin’s columns provide a
detailed story of the past, present, and future of Chicago architecture. Reading the book 14
years after it was published allows the reader to visual the changes described.
It is a word tour that allows the reader to travel throughout Chicago history and visualize the impact of
the city that invented the skyscraper.
The Place
The view from the ground can only be matched by the view from the top. Both the
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