Water Tower Place
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Water Tower Place is a large urban, mixed-use development comprising a 758,000 s.f. shopping mall and 74 story skyscraper in Chicago, Illinois. The complex is located at 845 North Michigan Avenue, along the Magnificent Mile. It is named after the nearby Chicago Water Tower.
Orignially concieved in the late 1960's by the Mafco Company, (the former shopping center development division of Marshall Field & Co.), it was eventually built in 1975 by Urban Retail Properties, a company led by Philip Morris Klutznick and his son Thomas J. Klutznick, the project received a J.C. Nichols Prize from the Urban Land Institute in 1986.
The tower section is a 74-story 859 foot (262 m) reinforced concrete slab, faced with gray marble, and is the eighth tallest building in Chicago and the twenty-sixth tallest in the United States. When built, it was the tallest reinforced concrete building in the world. It contains an award winning Ritz-Carlton hotel, luxury condominiums, office space and sits atop a block long base containing a highly successful, atrium-style retail mall that fronts on the Magnificent Mile.
The eight level mall has over 100 shops, including department stores Lord & Taylor (due to close in 2007) and Macy's (formerly a branch of the renowned Marshall Field's), a live theatre, and several restaurants, arranged around a stunning chrome-and-glass atrium with glass elevators. It was the one of the first vertical malls in the world, although along North Michigan Avenue it has been joined by Westfield North Bridge, 900 North Michigan, and Chicago Place, all of which incorporate many features introduced by Water Tower Place. The building's design successfully addresses the challenge of providing separate entries and vertical circulation for, what amounts to a regional mall-scaled retail center, two department stores, the theater, offices, hotel, and residences.
Water Tower Place's opening substantially changed the economic dynamics of the Magnificent Mile; by bringing middle-class shops to what had been a street dominated by luxury retailers, tony hotels and expensive apartments. It irreversibly shifted downtown Chicago's retail center of gravity north from State Street to North Michigan Avenue. Thirty years after its construction, its residences and hotel remain among Chicago's most prized addresses, and the mall remains nearly fully leased, drawing large enough crowds that many retailers operate outlets both inside the mall and just outside it.
In 2001, a stylish program of refurbishments was begun including enclosing the exterior arcade along Michigan and a loading dock in the middle of the block for additional retail space. Also included were updates to the famous escalators and fountains leading into the mall from North Michigan Avenue lobby, as well as enhancements to the sidewalk areas, the mall's exterior facades and department store entrances. Some of the changes included the addition of extensive exterior glass walls and display areas for the department stores, the addition of some small specialty retail space in the renovated lobby area and the addition of huge exterior rounded, corner glass bay windows and lighted 'fins' on the North Michigan Avenue and side street exterior walls of the mall. These last additions broke up the 'boxy' nature of the original architecture and added some dimension and scale to the expansive, but monolithic marble walls. The interior fountain between the escalators leading from the North Michigan Avenue lobby were also updated with a tiered 'pop jet' fountain with cascading waterfalls and balls of water, controlled by computer-based choreography.
The building's most famous full-time resident is Oprah Winfrey [1]. Having bought a $6 million dollar home on November 28, 2006, Oprah says she is planning to eventually sell her residence in Water Tower Place. Chicago Sun Times.
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[edit] Education
Residents of Water Tower Place are zoned to schools in the Chicago Public Schools.
[edit] See also
- List of skyscrapers
- List of tallest buildings in Chicago
- List of tallest buildings in the United States
- World's tallest structures
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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