As we continue quarantine in our sacred spaces and while the streets have slowed, the parks and public spaces have closed, I can’t help but think of the built environment of Chicago and how there’s such a rich history in building types, layout, city-planning and home styles.
In every city, there’s usually an event that influences the style of real property which has a profound impact on construction and building within the city. In our city, this was The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 spanning three days in early October, destroying 18,000 edifices, killing roughly 300 people and displacing more than 100,000 residents from their homes. The fire was rumored to start in a barn just southwest of the city, and rapidly spread east and north due to a combination of dry, hot and windy conditions; additionally the primary building material during that time was wood, creating a condition ripe for the area’s catastrophic event. This crisis would change the city-planning strategy and building code to create a stronger and more resilient built environment that would certainly thwart a future fire of this magnitude.
After the fire smoldered and extinguished, primarily by rainfall and breaks in the built environment, the damage was found to span over 2,000 acres causing $222M in damage then, or $4.7B in today’s dollars. As Chicago recovered from this devastating fire, donations came in from all around the country, while a focused look on Chicago’s building codes created a better standard for fire protection. Prominent architects were drawn to the city to help
William Holabird, also a New York-born architect, was part of the Chicago School, a group of architects and engineers who promoted the commercial style; this modern technology pushed innovative skyscraper design. Holabird and designer William Le Baron Jenney worked together as members of the Chicago School to express this design of building. Jenney would design the Home Insurance Building erected in 1885, while Holabird implemented the steel skeleton superstructure. This building, although demolished in 1931, is argued by many real estate enthusiasts and scholars to be the world’s first skyscraper.
Finally, Louis Sullivan, an architect that hailed from Boston, created not only residential designs, but also was a major pioneer of the commercial style of architecture. Famed Chicago designer, Frank Lloyd Wright also was Sullivan’s understudy and spent 6 years as his apprentice. Wright would go on to make a name for himself and design structures that still have lasting impact today.
The American Four Square home is also a style frequented in Chicago’s urban landscape that is a nod to the Craftsman and Prairie School design style. The Prairie School design was focused on the horizontal nature of America’s native prairie scene, while the craftsman style honors the arts and crafts movement which began in 1880 and continued through the 1920s.
The Greystone was a style of home that gained popularity in the 1890s; Bedford limestone was readily available in the area and was a great option for those who wanted a home that touted more opulence and grandeur during the rebuild that followed The Great Chicago Fire. Built primarily in a Neoclassical or Romanesque style, these homes were large in square footage and appealed not only to the wealthy who utilized these structures as single family homes, but also other classes that utilized the homes to include two, three or even four families per structure.
Continue to enjoy being home and let’s appreciate Chicago’s built environment for what it is: a city of buildings, land and homes of varied sizes, styles, interpretations and influences. Take a look at your own home and ponder how one can honor the style and focus that was intended during Chicago’s building boom. Enjoy home, builders!