Contest seeks ideas for saving Thompson Center
For anyone who passionately thinks Chicago’s James R. Thompson Center should be saved, here’s your chance: a competition for the best ideas to preserve it.
It’s the 2021 Chicago Prize, offered by the Chicago Architecture Center, which promotes the city’s design, and the Chicago Architectural Club.
The contest calls for serious proposals for reusing the building at 100 W. Randolph St. It has been the home of state government in Chicago since 1985, but years of neglect have taken a toll. State officials are determined to sell the building to a developer, which could mean its demolition.
For many, preserving the building in the heart of the Loop gained urgency with the death in May of its creator, Helmut Jahn. A Chicago-based architect of world renown, Jahn died in a crash while riding his bicycle.
The building is a connection to six CTA L lines, which state officials want maintained in any renovation or new construction.
Contest materials say it is open to anyone, but it is intended for professionals or students of architecture or related disciplines. Submissions are due July 19, and winners will be announced in August, the architecture club said.
The first-prize winner will get $1,500. Second and third prizes earn $1,000 and $500, respectively. The Chicago Architecture Center, 111 E. Wacker Drive, plans an exhibit to showcase the entries this fall.
Entrants must register and pay a fee. The registration deadline is July 2. Further information is available at chicagoarchitecturalclub.org/2021-CHICAGO-PRIZE-JAMES-RTHOMPSON-CENTER.