Home Insurance Building
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The Home Insurance Building was a skyscraper that stood in Chicago from 1885 to its demolition in 1931. Originally ten stories and Template:Convert tall, it was designed by William Le Baron Jenney in 1884 and completed the next year. Two floors were added in 1891, bringing its now finished height to Template:Convert. It was the first tall building to be supported both inside and outside by a fireproof structural steel frame, though it also included reinforced concrete. It is considered the world's first skyscraper.
HistoryEdit
The building was designed in 1884 by Jenney for the Home Insurance Company.<ref name="history">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Construction began on May 1, 1884.<ref name="Wired">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Because of the building's unique architecture and weight-bearing frame, it is considered the world's first skyscraper.<ref name="Verbivore"/> It had 10 stories and rose to a height of Template:Convert; two additional floors were added in 1891, bringing the total to 12 floors, an unprecedented height at the time.<ref name="archinfo">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The building weighed one-third as much as a masonry building and city officials were so concerned they halted construction while they investigated its safety.
Demolition and replacementEdit
In April 1929 the building was reported as having a 90 percent occupancy rate, compared to an occupancy rate of the surrounding financial district estimated at 96 percent or more.<ref name="Occupancy">Template:Cite news</ref> In September 1929 plans were made by Marshall Field's to construct a large office building spanning Adams, Clark, and LaSalle Streets.<ref name="New Field">Template:Cite news</ref> This building would be constructed and opened in parts, the first part occupying the western part of the lot and the site of the Home Insurance Building.<ref name="New Field"/>
At least six buildings were demolished to make way for the Field Building, including the Home Insurance Building.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> In 1932, owners placed a plaque in the southwest section of the lobby reading:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
This section of the Field Building is erected on the site of the Home Insurance Building, which structure, designed and built in eighteen hundred and eighty four by the late William Le Baron Jenney, was the first high building to utilize as the basic principle of its design the method known as skeleton construction and, being a primal influence in the acceptance of this principle, was the true father of the skyscraper, 1932.
Status as first skyscraperEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The Home Insurance Building in Chicago is often considered the world's first skyscraper due to both its design and height;<ref name="Verbivore"/> the building was supported using an iron frame skeleton.<ref name="Kamin">Template:Cite news</ref> It was one of the earliest buildings to use an iron frame skeleton and the tallest to ever do so at the time, rising to ten stories; with an additional two stories added.Template:Sfn It was the first multistory building in the United States to largely use iron in its exterior to support the masonry since Badger had constructed similar grain elevators between 1860 and 1862.Template:Sfn The status of the Home Insurance Building as the first skyscraper had been accorded by the time of its centennial in 1985.Template:Sfn
The Chicago press at the time of its construction did not refer to it as the first skyscraper in Chicago.Template:Sfn An 1884 list of buildings considered skyscrapers in Chicago listed three buildings in the city whose final heights would be taller than the Home Insurance Building's, although the Home Insurance Building was completed in 1885, a year after the list.Template:Sfn Iron framing of multistory buildings had originated in England in the late 18th century and was able to replace exterior load-bearing walls by 1844, but social movements and legal regulations hindered their use at that time.Template:Sfn An example is the Ditherington Flax Mill in England, built in 1797, but it was only five stories tall.<ref name="kennedy">Template:Cite news</ref> The Broad Street Station in Philadelphia, a six-story building designed by Wilson Brothers & Company built in 1881, had a structural steel frame and was one of the first buildings in America to use masonry not as structure, but as curtain wall. But at only six stories, it was not considered the world's first skyscraper.<ref>George E. Thomas, "Broad Street Station," in James F. O'Gorman et al., Drawing Toward Building: Philadelphia Architectural Graphics, 1732–1986 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986), pp. 140–42.</ref> Chicago and New York each had some lower height structures using iron framing, but they were not fireproof.Template:Sfn Later buildings in Chicago were able to solve these problems by supporting the external masonry entirely on the iron frame, which later became the standard worldwide.Template:Sfn Peter B. Wright had constructed such a column in Chicago in 1874.Template:Sfn Leroy Buffington of Minneapolis developed a system of using wrought iron to frame buildings.Template:Sfn However, the design of the Home Insurance Building, supporting the external masonry entirely on the iron frame, was used more by architects worldwide. Buffington later patented his wrought iron to frame design in 1888, but the Chicago school of architecture had already begun.<ref name="Peterson">Template:Cite news</ref> Other tall structures completed before the external masonry to iron frame style included the 1882 Montauk Building, also in Chicago,<ref name="Montauk">Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> and the 1870 Equitable Life Building in New York.<ref name="Peterson"/> There were also a few other buildings in New York and Chicago of similar height with different architectural designs.<ref name="Peterson"/>
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
CitationsEdit
BooksEdit
Other referencesEdit
- 1885 First Skyscraper, Chicago Public Library ({{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }})
- Theodore Turak, William Le Baron Jenney: A Pioneer in Modern Architecture, Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press, 1986
- Carl Condit, The Chicago School of Architecture, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1964
External linksEdit
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