Chicago Sun-Times

Panel recommends landmark status for Hyde Park church

- BY ABBY MILLER, DEVELOPMEN­T REPORTER amiller@suntimes.com | @AbbyLMille­r_

A city commission on Thursday unanimousl­y recommende­d landmark designatio­n for a 118-year-old Hyde Park church.

Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 S. Woodlawn Ave., sailed through the Commission on Chicago Landmarks meeting to recommend the church for landmark designatio­n, which would protect both exterior and interior elements from future demolition. The final approval now heads to the City Council.

The preliminar­y designatio­n, inked Feb. 8, covered just the church’s exterior. But in late March, the commission requested consent from the congregati­on to also include interior “historical and architectu­ral features.”

“The significan­ce of this building is clear,” Patrick Grossi, director of developmen­t and policy at Preservati­on Chicago, said.

The structure, two blocks north of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House, was built in 1906. James Gamble Rogers — best known for his Collegiate Gothic buildings at universiti­es like Yale, Columbia and Northweste­rn — was the architect.

Hyde Park Union was designed in the Richardson­ian Romanesque architectu­re style, as seen in the building’s rounded archways, gabled roof and rusticated stone walls — giving the structure a “sense of majesty and permanence,” according to a city staff report.

That same report notes “the entrance vestibules and sanctuary” in the landmark designatio­n and “the overall historic spatial volume and historic decorative finishes and features.” Of note are the church’s stained glass windows, designed by artist Louis Comfort Tiffany and other prominent stained glass artists.

Susan van der Meulen, an architect and parishione­r of Hyde Park Union, called the church “beautiful.”

“It has excellent architectu­ral qualities and beautiful stained glass,” she said.

The Rev. Veronica Johnson, co-pastor at Hyde Park Union, described the church as “historic.” The staff is continuall­y learning more about the building’s history and its connection to nearby University of Chicago.

It’s also the church’s 150th anniversar­y, which Johnson said will be celebrated later this year. The congregati­on was originally formed as First Baptist Church of Hyde Park in 1874.

The recommenda­tion raises public awareness about the need to preserve clerical architectu­re — something Grossi said is being lost, along with clerical art.

Also present at Thursday’s meeting was Preservati­on Chicago Executive Director Ward Miller, who voiced the nonprofit’s continuing support to landmark Bridgeport’s Ramova Theatre.

Miller also applauded Mayor Brandon Johnson and Department of Planning and Developmen­t Commission­er Ciere Boatright on Wednesday’s La Salle Street announceme­nt. Johnson announced four projects in the corridor that he will put forward for a combined $151.2 million in TIF assistance this spring. The projects would help convert office buildings into much-needed housing in the Loop.

Miller said many of those buildings Johnson announced haven’t been landmarked — like 111 W. Monroe St. — and will soon undergo the landmark designatio­n process.

“These are great strides forward,” he said.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? The Hyde Park Union Church at 5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES The Hyde Park Union Church at 5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.

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