Old Chicago Main Post Office Twin Towers

Old Chicago Main Post Office Twin Towers

Original rendition of the Old Chicago Main Post Office Redevelopment, including the Twin Towers.
General information
Status Never built
Type Residential, Commercial, Hotel
Location Chicago, Illinois, United States
Construction started -
Estimated completion -
Opening -
Height
Roof 2,000 ft (610 m)
Technical details
Floor count 120
Design and construction
Architect Joseph Antunovich
Developer Bill Davies

The Old Chicago Main Post Office Twin Towers was a proposed (and approved) mixed use supertall skyscraper planned as part of the canceled Old Chicago Main Post Office Redevelopment project in the Chicago Loop community area. The 120-story twin towers are a building with twin peaks planned to reach a height of 2,000 feet (609.6 m). If built according to plan, the building would have been the tallest in the United States.

Details

In 2009, British real estate developer Bill Davies bought Chicago's Old Main Post Office for $24 million and in March 2011, he bought an adjacent property for $14 million.[1] On July 21, 2011, Davies announced his plans for the Twin Towers within the Old Chicago Main Post Office Redevelopment.[2][3] Davies' plans were filed by his company, International Property Developers.[4] A previous 2,000-foot (610 m) building plan for the Chicago Spire stalled during the Great Recession.[4] The plan was approved on July 18, 2013.[5]

Joseph Antunovich was the architect.[5] If built as planned, the 2,000-foot (610 m) building, which was intended as the second of three phases of the overall project,[4] would have been the tallest in North America.[6] The building was also intended to support revenue-generating communications antennas[2] and to host commercial, hotel and residential facilities.[3]

According to the New York Times, critics of the project noted potential problems with the proposed towers' proximity to the extant Sears Tower. For example, the heights of the residential accommodations in the planned building would have placed residents within the radiation impact zone from the antennas atop the Sears Tower. Also, there was a claim that the air convection surrounding the two buildings would create a vacuum.[7]

In October 2014, Davies' joint venture for redevelopment with Sterling Bay Cos. was dissolved.[8] In December 2014, Davies canceled the project and put the post office building up for sale.[9][2]

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.