Millennium Park
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- For other uses, see Millennium Park (disambiguation).
Millennium Park is a prominent new civic center of the City of Chicago in Illinois and an important landmark of the city's lakefront. A redeveloped section of Grant Park, the 24.5 acre (101,000 m²) landmark is bounded by Michigan Avenue, East Randolph Street, Columbus Drive and East Monroe Drive. It was Mayor of Chicago Richard M. Daley's ambitious idea to realize that which was originally designed as part of Daniel Burnham's Plan of Chicago, a plan for the future of Chicago created in 1909.
Planning began in October 1997, construction began in October 1998 and it was finally completed in July 2004. Millennium Park was opened in a ceremony on July 16, 2004 as part of a three-day celebration that included an inaugural concert by the Grant Park Orchestra and Chorus. 300,000 people took part in the grand opening festivities.
Since then, Millennium Park has become the one of the most fashionable residential addresses in the city with rumors that the Mayor is planning to move there. More recently, 60602 was named by Forbes as the hottest zipcode in the country with upscale buildings such as The Heritage at Millennium Park (130 N. Garland) leading the way for other buildings such at Waterview Tower, The Legacy and Momo. The median sale price for residential real estate was $710,000 in 2005 according to Forbes.
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[edit] Features
Millennium Park is a portion of the larger Grant Park, the "front lawn" of downtown Chicago and one of the larger public parks in metropolitan Chicago and is a showcase for postmodern architecture. It features the McCormick Tribune Ice Skating Rink, Peristyle at Wrigley Square, Joan W. and Irving B. Harris Theater for Music and Dance, AT&T Plaza, Lurie Garden, Chase Promenade and Trees in Millennium Park. There are three major artistic highlights: Cloud Gate, Crown Fountain and the Jay Pritzker Pavilion. Millennium Park is often considered the largest roof garden in the world, having been constructed on top of a railroad yard and large parking garages. Of its total 24.5 acres of land, Millennium Park contains 524,358 square feet of permeable area (12.04 acres).
[edit] Pritzker Pavilion
The principal signature of Millennium Plaza is the Jay Pritzker Pavilion, a band shell designed by world-renowned architect Frank Gehry with 4,000 fixed seats plus additional lawn seating for 7,000. A Pritzker Architecture Prize honoree and National Medal of Arts winner, Gehry designed such landmarks as the Guggenheim Museum at Bilbao, Der Neue Zollhof in Düsseldorf and the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles. Characteristic of Gehry, the Pritzker Pavilion consists of massive panels of stainless steel resembling the graceful blooming of a flower or the unfurling sails of a massive ship.
The Pritzker Pavilion is the home of the Grant Park Music Festival, the nation's only remaining free, municipally-supported, outdoor, classical music series. The Festival is presented by the Chicago Park District and the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs. (Source: www.grantparkmusicfestival.com) Winding eastward from Pritzker Pavilion is the only bridge in the world designed by Frank Gehry. The 925 foot pedestrian bridge, made of the same steel as the bandshell with a hardwood deck, winds like a fluttering ribbon across nearby Columbus Drive, from the bandshell to a section of Grant Park along the lakefront.
[edit] Cloud Gate
AT&T Plaza is home to Cloud Gate, a 3-story, 110-ton steel sculpture that has been dubbed by residents as "The Bean". The sculpture is the work of world-renowned artist Anish Kapoor and is the first of his public art in the United States. The piece was privately funded and the total cost was $23 million -- up from the original estimate of $6 million.
Cloud Gate is a highly-polished reflective steel sculpture that is meant to resemble a drop of mercury hovering at the point of landing on a plaza of the park. When Millennium Park opened in 2004, the grid of welds around each metal panel were still visible. But in early 2005 workers polished out the seams. The curved, mirror-like surface of the sculpture provides striking reflections of visitors, the city, and the sky; since its installation, it has probably become the most popular sculpture in the city.
[edit] Crown Fountain
Crown Fountain, designed by Catalan conceptual artist Jaume Plensa, is the first of its kind in the world. Transparent glass block bricks are used to build two 50-foot towers standing in the midst of a black granite plaza submerged under an eighth of an inch layer of water. Behind the glass bricks are high-tech LED video screens that when illuminated, scrolls through videos of the faces of nearly a thousand individual Chicagoans and showcases the vast diversity of the city while a stream of water cascades over the images. Playing on the theme of historical fountains based around gargoyles with water coming through the opened mouth of the creature, each video includes specific moments where the person opens his or her mouth and specialized nozzles spray water into the center of the pond. People are invited to walk on the water-covered granite plaza, creating the illusion of walking on water.
[edit] Lurie Garden
Lurie Garden, designed by Gustafson Guthrie Nichol with Dutch plantsman Piet Oudolf, brings a new, public botanical garden to downtown Chicago. The garden is sited between a new bandshell by Gehry Partners and an addition to the Chicago Art Institute by the Renzo Piano Building Workshop. The entire garden is constructed over the roof deck of the Millennium Parking Garage.
When it matures a giant, "muscular" hedge will enclose the interior garden from the north and west. From the Art Institute, the “big shoulders” of the Shoulder Hedge appear to support the gleaming “headdress” of Gehry’s Bandshell to the north.
Within the Shoulder Hedge, the garden has two interior “Plates” that are planted with perennials and trees. The plates seem to be “punched up” from the surface of the plaza like a muscular torso. The two plates, called the Dark Plate and Light Plate, strongly contrast with each other. The Dark Plate, referencing the moist, mysterious past of the site, offers an experience of dream-like immersion in a volume of robust perennial compositions. The Light Plate, referencing Chicago’s modern and artistic control of nature, provides an exhilarating experience of surveying a bright and clean, controlled landscape.
[edit] Budget
The project was known for its notorious delays (it was originally intended to open in 2000 instead of 2004) and tripled costs. Some Chicagoans began to refer to the project deridingly as "next-millennium" park.
During development and construction of the park, many structures were added, redesigned or modified. These changes often resulted in budget increases. For example, the band shell's proposed budget was $10.8 million. When the elaborate, cantilevered Gehry design required extra piling be driven into the bedrock to support the added weight, the cost of the band shell eventually spiraled to $60.3 million. The total cost of the park, as itemized in the following table, amounted to almost $500 million.
Project | Proposed Cost | Final Cost | % of Proposed |
Garage | $87.5 million | $105.6 million | 121% |
Metra superstructure | $43.0 million | $60.6 million | 141% |
Band shell | $10.8 million | $60.3 million | 558% |
Music and Dance Theater | $20.0 million | $60.0 million | 300% |
Park finishes/landscaping | N/A | $42.9 million | |
Design and management costs | N/A | $39.5 million | |
Endowment | $10.0 million | $25.0 million | 250% |
Crown Fountain | $15.0 million | $17.0 million | 113% |
BP Pedestrian Bridge | $8.0 million | $14.5 million | 181% |
Lurie Garden | $4.0-8.0 million | $13.2 million | 330%-165% |
Cloud Gate sculpture | $6.0 million | $23.0 million | 383% |
Exelon Pavilions | N/A | $7.0 million | |
Peristyle/Wrigley Square | $5.0 million | $5.0 million | 100% |
Chase Promenade | $6.0 million | $4.0 million | 67% |
McCormick Tribune ice rink | $5.0 million | $3.2 million | 64% |
Misc. (fencing, terraces, graphics) | N/A | $1.6 million |
[edit] Criticism and controversy
The Millennium Park project has been the subject of some criticism since its inception. In addition to concerns about the cost overrun, individuals and organizations have complained that the money spent on the park might have gone to other worthy causes, specifically citing ongoing issues with poverty in Chicago and problems within the city's schools.
Although the park's design and architectural elements have won wide praise, some criticism of the aesthetics of the park has been noted. Other criticism has revolved around the larger issue of corruption and political favortism in the city; for example a July 2004 New York Times article [1] reported that an inflated contract for park cleanup had gone to a company that made large contributions to Mayor Daley's election campaign. Concerns have also been raised over the use of mixed taxpayer and corporate funding and associated naming rights for sections of the park. While a large monument in the northwest corner of the park honors the many private and corporate donors who contributed to its construction, entire squares and plazas within the park are named for their corporate underwriters, with the sponsors' names prominently indicated with stone markers (Boeing Gallery, Exelon Pavilion, AT&T Plaza, Wrigley Square); some critics have deemed this to be inappropriate for a public space. The park curfew and obvious presence of security guards is also cited in some quarters as working against the idea of a public park.
A controversy arose when the park enforced a requirement for professional photographers to obtain a paid permit to photograph the artwork in the park for commercial purposes. In doing so, the city cited the copyrights of the artists who created the works (particularly the popular Cloud Gate sculpture), which give the artists sole right to profit from their work. However, enforcement of the permit requirement was inconsistent and sometimes heavy-handed, resulting in some non-commercial photographers and tourists being accosted while taking pictures of the sculpture, and leading to a public perception that they are banned from taking pictures of the park they helped pay for (as noted above, though, copyright applies to images taken, not for personal use, but only for commercial purposes).
[edit] See also
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