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The Chicago Tribune Tower Competition

The Chicago Tribune Tower Competition

The Chicago Tribune Tower Competition

Skyscraper Design and Cultural Change in the 1920s
Katherine Solomonson, University of Minnesota
June 2001
Unavailable - out of print April 2004
Hardback
9780521590563
Out of Print
Hardback

    The Chicago Tribune Tower competition was one of the largest, most important and most controversial design contests of the 1920s. The international competition generated 263 entries for the design of the new Tribune office building, and they represented a broad constellation of approaches to the skyscraper at a time of transition. In the decades following the competition, the design entries have often been evaluated in terms of the rise and demise of particular conceptions of modernism. This study examines the various contexts in which the Chicago Tribune Tower design competition took place and how they shaped the event. Analyzing how the competition contributed to changing concepts of the skyscraper, it also demonstrates how it engaged with the production of consumer culture, with conflicts of national identity and cultural unity, and with a newspaper's efforts to produce a civic and corporate icon during the turbulent years following World War I.

    • Discusses a competition which produced entries that demonstrate the range of experimentation in early-1920s skyscraper design
    • Analyzes skyscraper design at a time of considerable change - architectural, political, and social - in the wake of World War I
    • Considers the relationship between architecture, consumer culture, and constructions of American cultural identity

    Awards

    Winner of the Alice Davis Hitchcock awarded by the Society for Architectural Historians

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    Reviews & endorsements

    'In Solomonson's careful and many-sided account, Tribune Tower becomes a pole around which the whole pattern of a society turns. Building up from details, she draws together a fascinating social and material history … The book represents a landmark effort to connect architectural discourse to the larger culture of which it is a part … this fine social history offers an exemplary model for anyone seeking to understand what buildings mean to people.' Chicago Tribune

    'Solomonson … Understands the issues and writes engagingly not oly about the competition itself, but about the architectural and commercial cultures - both European and American - that formed its backdrop.' The Times Literary Supplement

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    Product details

    June 2001
    Hardback
    9780521590563
    384 pages
    262 × 187 × 28 mm
    1.187kg
    183 b/w illus.
    Unavailable - out of print April 2004

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Planning the competition
    • 2. 'Class appeal' for the masses: imagining community
    • 3. Conducting the competition: shaping an international agenda
    • 4. In the public eye: design for advertising
    • 5. 'Ancient beauty' versus 'ultra modern': the problem of style and the meanings of gothic
    • 6. City of towers: transforming the skyscraper
    • 7. Tribune tower: constructing the icon.
      Author
    • Katherine Solomonson , University of Minnesota