Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Unsung architectu­ral ‘jewel on the prairie’ poised to shine again

- LEE BEY lbey@suntimes.com | @LEEBEY Lee Bey is the Chicago Sun-Times architectu­re critic and a member of the Sun-Times editorial board.

Asteel-and-glass building on Bronzevill­e’s northern edge is among Chicago’s finer modernist structures, yet it has gone relatively unnoticed and uncelebrat­ed since its constructi­on 60 years ago.

But that could change over the next year or so.

The long-vacant, two-story former Lake Meadows profession­al building at 31st Street and Rhodes Avenue is set to come alive again in early 2023 as office space for the Howard Brown health organizati­on.

Work has already begun, with the building stripped down to its steel bones as part of the transforma­tion.

F. Christophe­r Lee, president of architectu­re firm Johnson & Lee, Ltd., who is overseeing the renovation effort, said the finished building will look as good as new.

“It’s a jewel on the prairie,” Lee said.

Part of the city’s first urban renewal project

Designed by architectu­re firm SOM and completed in 1959, the two-story, 26,000-square-foot building originally was office space for telephone company Illinois Bell.

Soon after, the building was converted to profession­al offices largely serving Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center — now demolished — located across 31st Street.

Crisp, buttoned-down and razor-sharp, the glassy white building cut a fine figure as it anchored the northern end of Lake Meadows, a 70-acre mixed-use developmen­t bounded by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, the Metra Electric railroad tracks, 31st and 35th streets.

Built in 1954 by local real estate titan Draper & Kramer and designed by SOM, the Lake Meadows complex was also the city’s first urban renewal project.

But it came with a cost. The developmen­t wiped away a dense and predominan­tly Black neighborho­od comprised of late 19th and early 20th century buildings and replaced it with racially integrated, middle-class steel-and-glass residentia­l towers sitting on vast green spaces with few through-streets.

Along with neighborin­g Prairie Shores, South Commons, the postwar Michael Reese Hospital campus, and the expansion of the Illinois Institute of Technology, Lake Meadows was one of several mid-century projects that clear-cut existing Black neighborho­ods and erected new residentia­l towers or expanded institutio­ns in their places.

Still, Lake Meadows itself received a fair amount of attention for its architectu­re and urban plan. But the landmark-worthy profession­al building — as good as it is, and despite its world-famous architects — has gone comparativ­ely unheralded over the years.

“It wasn’t thoroughly documented at the time, likely given the scale of the developmen­t around it,” SOM spokespers­on Finn McLeod said. “But it did win an [American Institute of Architects] award in 1960.”

Also, quality architectu­re on the South Side tends to go unseen and unsung by the city. And the profession­al building’s case is further complicate­d by being located away from Lake Meadows’ center and on a relatively empty stretch of East 31st Street leading to DuSable Lake Shore Drive.

“But it sits there so elegantly,” Lee said. “The building reminds me of [the title of ] a book by Leo Marx: ‘The Machine in the Garden.’ ”

‘A living asset’

Draper & Kramer still owns Lake Meadows, including the profession­al building now under renovation.

“We love the building,” said Gordon Ziegenhage­n, Draper & Kramer’s senior vice president.

“We’re big fans of mid-century architectu­re, and we really certainly heard voices from around town saying you should tear this building down,” he said. “And we have really resisted that and found a way to make this a living asset into the future.”

A Howard Brown spokespers­on didn’t return a request for comment. Ziegenhage­n said the organizati­on planned to use the building to house administra­tive and training facilities.

“They wanted to be in Bronzevill­e,” he said.

When reconstruc­tion is completed, the building will have a new glass exterior, roof and mechanical systems. Chicago architect Ernest Wong’s Site Design Group — creators of Chinatown’s Ping Tom Park — will design a new landscape scheme for the building.

The work also allows Draper & Kramer to correct the blunder it made a few years back when it changed the building’s color from

white — the same shade used at Mies van der Rohe’s famed Farnsworth House in Plano — to a drab, dark gray.

“It will be white again,” Lee said. The building’s rebirth is a good sign for efforts to preserve the wealth of unsung modernist architectu­re in Chicago’s neighborho­ods — not to mention being a potential much-needed boost to the South Side’s health care landscape.

And the building will likely have more company joining it along 31st Street in the years to come, with the $4 billion, mixed-use Bronzevill­e Lakefront complex planned for the former Michael Reese Hospital site.

The project’s $600 million first phase is expected to bring senior housing, a park and a 500,000-square-foot retail facility with community space right across 31st Street from the Lake Meadows building.

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 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES; LEE BEY ?? ABOVE: The architectu­rally important former Lake Meadows profession­al building is undergoing an extensive renovation. BELOW: The same building in 2008.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES; LEE BEY ABOVE: The architectu­rally important former Lake Meadows profession­al building is undergoing an extensive renovation. BELOW: The same building in 2008.
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