Chicago Sun-Times

MAKE THIS ICONIC CHICAGO BUILDING WORK

- BY LEE BEY Lee Bey is host of Architectu­re360 on the Rivet Radio app and writes the Urban Observer blog. He is former architectu­re critic for the Chicago Sun-Times.

There is no doubt something must be done about the James R. Thompson Center. The building shows signs of the rough life it’s led since its 1987 completion. Its exterior granite once fell onto Clark Street. The aging warren of office spaces irks employees. The tattered carpet is old enough to have possibly outlived the workers who laid it. Overall, a certain dinge has set it.

But wrecking the Thompson Center, as Gov. Bruce Rauner wants, would be an embarrassi­ng waste of architectu­re and opportunit­y. Especially in a city that prides itself as an architectu­ral capital of the world.

The center is among the city’s most spectacula­r public buildings. Stand in that 17-story atrium on a sunny day. Even in the building’s worn condition, the views are stunning.

If Chicago is a world-class city, then this building must be fixed up and set right. That’s what Rauner should have said at his Tuesday news conference. Instead, he stood in that atrium and discussed a plan to sell the Helmut Jahn-designed building to anyone who could demolish it in a year and build something new and (privately owned) on the spot.

Instead of this shortsight­ed and wrongheade­d gambit, billionair­e Rauner can use his connection­s and business savvy to put together a deal to bring a higher level of retailers to the center’s commercial spaces. Higher rents would defray the building’s restoratio­n and upkeep costs.

Or he could sell the building under an agreement that it is not demolished. The new owner would be required to restore and reuse the building, perhaps as a mixed-use facility with retail, hotel and meeting spaces. The building has more square footage of space than McCormick Place’s Lakeside Center. New uses must be investigat­ed before demolition is even considered.

Rauner’s announceme­nt came days after the start of the Chicago Architectu­re Biennial, a three-month event that seeks to bring global attention to the city’s role in architectu­re.

One of the event’s first major panels discussed the preservati­on of postmodern buildings. “Preservati­on’s new frontier,” they called it. Timing is everything: the building used in materials to publicize the discussion was the Thompson Center.

Instead of this shortsight­ed and wrongheade­d gambit, billionair­e Rauner can use his connection­s and business savvy to put together a deal to bring a higher level of retailers to the center’s commercial spaces.

 ?? | RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner speaks at a news conference in the James R. Thompson Center’s 16-story glass-paneled atrium on Tuesday.
| RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES Gov. Bruce Rauner speaks at a news conference in the James R. Thompson Center’s 16-story glass-paneled atrium on Tuesday.

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