Man, you ain’t kidding. I’ve been to many other major cities and I can recognize other skylines even to cities I’ve never been to, but to me Chicago is one of the prettiest and there’s no better place to be stuck in traffic than on Lake Shore Dr. Overlooking the skyline to some extent. Even if you’re stuck on the Kennedy or the Dan Ryan going inbound able to see the whole loop clumped up in a cluster in the hazy distance.
I do love how people just refuse to call the Willis Tower anything other than the Sears Tower, while still acknowledging its current name, and that list includes me.
@@imveryangryitsnotbutter The smartest woman in my college class was a trans woman. She got the female scholarship for grad school. 3rd in class compared to the men.
My dad flew all over the world as an airline pilot (particularly europe and the states) and he says his favorite skyline is still chicago. High praise.
Thank you for explaining so well what I couldn't put in words to tell ppl how beautiful Chicago is and how its skyline surpasses NYC. I still remember the breathtaking feeling I had when I first saw Chicago buildings at midnight from the Lake Shore Drive bridge over the Chicago river. Although I have moved away, the city will always be dear to my heart.
I just arrived to Chicago last night to wake up to this treat, a tour of the city by my fav Chicago RUclips architect… thank you Stewart excellent work
I would argue that Chicago's skyline is actually more attractive than New York, if only for the fact that there's still enough space between buildings to appreciate their architecture. For example, Bertrand Goldberg's Marina City benefits from it location, fronting the Chicago River. If you view these twin towers from River North, looking south, your view is blocked by other high-rise buildings. Also, Chicago has the longest extended lakefront of any major city. The model of the city at CAC is ever evolving. As new buildings are completed throughout the city, they are cast and molded for the display.
New York’s skyline viewed from the ground close up in Brooklyn or Jersey is just so bad. There’s many areas where they’ve built 700 or 800ft skyscrapers along the East river and Hudson that block most of the taller buildings deeper in the island even the Empire State Building and World Trade Center, not to mention the several 1400ft and 1500ft buildings recently built or that will be built are still going to be blocked. Tbh the only decent views are from really really far away or several hundred feet in the air.
The mountain range comparison is apt. Having grown up in Chicago, I had this wondrous sense of familiarity when I first saw the Tetons. They're compact, steep and gorgeous, much like heading south on Lake Shore Drive.
Ive always really enjoyed the fact that good skylines also display the history of the city and its architectural trends over time by juxtaposing different eras right next to each other. Using Chicago still as an example, it's has had the fortune of seeing somewhat regular growth and development over its history so you get the blend of old and new playing off one another. But if you drive up the shore to Milwaukee you have a city that shows apparent stagnation where there's plenty of older brick buildings from its industrial past but only a couple more that seem to have been built after that boom time.
@@robertpreston2220 yeah this is weird. I think the south will be uninhabitable in 10 years. Everything will burn up. All those folks in the south will have to make back to Great Lakes and Midwest
Skylines need to have variety, but consistency with character. The Boston skyline is a good example of one that looks distinct, and tells you about the character of the city. The towers are contrasted with the brick houses in the historic residential areas to give a sense of progression and history.
What are you on? Lmao. Boston's skyline looks like every other minor cities in the country. There is NOTHING unique about it. It's actually quite hideous tbh. Show a picture of Boston's skyline to a foreigner and they wouldn't be able to know if it was Boston or Topeka Kansas 😂😂😂
As a life long resident of the far NW side, I have seen the view of the skyline from the inbound Kennedy change from an industrial landscape to an incredible view, especially when you cross north Ave.
@@tomsenft7434 You couldn't have said it better. I never liked the southwest approach. The entire trip is creepy and eerie AF, especially after Harlem Avenue. Ever since it was redone in 2000, California-LSD creeps me out the most. The pavement noise, combined with passing through shithole areas (reason). I mentioned this on a few Soldier Field videos. NW is a lot better!
I love your content sooo much! I particularly love the fact that you highlight the greatness of Chicago! :) When you love Chicago, it demands your loyalty! :)
I’m biased but Chicago does indeed have the best skyline. Especially at dusk when the dark blue sky compliments the lighted buildings. Most beautiful if you’re on the Chicago River or out on Lake Michigan. Magnificent.
The roof of lake point tower has one of the best views of downtown in the whole city. The truth is Chicagos skyline while mainly concentrated downtown does extend up and down lake Michigan for over 10 miles.
Interesting discussion of how advances in technology impact building designs, and hence skylines. Besides those shown, another good view of the Chicago skyline is from Promontory Point in Hyde Park
Without a doubt, Lake Michigan and the Chicago River are the best features of Chicago that make the skyline and city so magnificent. You touched on this briefly, but Chicago’s architecture and planning are so intentional. The buildings all play off each-other. Where New York is magnificently chaotic, Chicago feels harmonious. An example would be so many of the towers along the river that all play off each other’s heights, are an homage to other buildings, and more. It all feels like they communicate with each other, tell a story, and provide a glimpse into that era’s architecture. Apart from the Sears Tower, no building feels like it was put there to be on its own without the consideration of its surroundings. Basically, if you appreciate architecture and haven’t been to Chicago, you must visit make it a priority to visit. Imo, the most beautiful downtown in America.
You focus on viewpoints and asymmetry for the skyline as a whole, and I'd like to also point out how those concepts are demonstrated so beautifully in the Sears/Willis Tower as an individual building. It has an entirely different silhouette depending on the viewing angle. From due west, it resembles a person with head and shoulders--from the southeast (Shedd Aquarium), it's a slender black pyramid.
I just came back (to the Netherlands) from a visit to New York, marvelling at the many views of the city skyline from different positions. I like the comparison with the picturesque. Chicago would be wonderpil to visit next!!
I think you would really enjoy Chicago. I may be a bit biased, because I grew up there, but I think it is a great place to learn more about the history of American engineering, architecture, and design. The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was unfortunate, yet it gave the city the advantage of rebuilding around the time the skyscraper was invented. The city had a clean slate to build from into the 20th century. I think that’s another reason why Chicago’s skyline is so aesthetically pleasing, especially when standing from the vantage point of the museum campus (around where the 1893 Columbian Exposition took place).
i love Chicago. I live on the Michigan side and from Lake Michigan, only on very clear days we can see Chicago. Most of the time we can never see it, which makes us feel like we have our own mini ocean in our backyard, but it’s also nice when we can see the skyline that Chicago is not too far away in the distance.
Really cool video its something I've never really thought about until I helped shoot some videos at the architecture museum. Also to anyone that might have gotten confused at 8:06 that dome is actually the planetarium in the center not the aquarium. The aquarium is the short wide light blue building with the big windows and the field museum is the slightly taller building to the left with a bunch of windows
One of the wonderful things about this beautiful skyline is the different views one gets depending on where you live. I grew up on the NW side (Go Shamrocks 🤘🏼). Going into the city via the Kennedy or Blue Line, the Hancock dominates but so many buildings are in your view. If you take Elston, it's the Standard Oil building that grabs your attention. Coming off of LSD, again the Hancock stands out but many north shore residential buildings precede it like stairs. From the Eisenhower, the massive area of skyscrapers, from north to south is incredible. The Hancock and Willis Towers are the 'broad shoulders' of the city and the classic look of the post office and opera house is something everyone should view. My favorite view is from the south. The beautiful reds of CBOE tower and CNA building compliment the dark of the Willis towers and the blue top of that building whose name I can never remember. The ultimate is riding in from the Brown or Orange lines and seeing some of the 'smaller' structures like Harold Washington Library, Monadnock, The Rookery and Merchandise Mart makes public transportation a pleasure. I've been fortunate to see many great cities on this globe and Chicago is what everyone is compared to.
The Sears Tower was originally going to be around 5.5 million square feet in size. The size they went with was 4.5 million square ft, the reason for them cutting all that floor space was due to the faa limiting the height at 1,450 ft. The developers reduced its size due to those limitations the faa set back in the 70’s. Thanks faa!
I think that’s the same reason why Dallas doesn’t have allot of tall towers due to Dallas Love Field airport close by. If these secondary airports close down like Midway and Love Field, there would be higher towers.
@@BabyBang17datruth they were okay with the Chicago Spire being built back in the 2000’s. It would’ve been 2000ft tall and have 150 floors. It seems the faa got more lax with its height limit, unfortunately the 2008 financial crisis stopped all construction of the spire. All that’s there today is a giant hole for the foundation.
I was just on the phone with my best before I got in RUclips. Our conversation was us (mainly me) about visiting other cities beyond the east coast. The last city we talked about was Chicago. Long story short, I believe this is what they call serendipity.
When talking about picturesque values of skylines and how to plan them I think about this interesting approach to do it in Warsaw, where urbanists, basing on historic paintings of Bernardo Bellotto use places where he captured the panorama of the city to decide where high rises can be placed in order to preserve the historical composition.
There's a lot to complain about regarding US city planning but having a skyline is something I envy. Hamburg's first true skyscraper is currently under construction...
I worked in downtown Dallas for nearly 15 years. I always appreciated the directness of landscape. Apparently, all the “hats” of the skyscrapers had to be dissimilar. IM Pei. Reunion Tower. And that funny one with the neon (later argon) tubes outlining its shape. But Dallas also has heritage. Pegasus (MobilOil) limited the tops of skyscrapers for years. That innocuous square 6-story building at the edge of downtown that held schoolbooks. Thanksgiving Square. So much more. Take a look. I think it offers fascinating fodder for a story.
You've given a wonderful rubric for explaining skylines and why some cities are appealing and others unappealing. The variety found in Chicago, and the relative scarcity of ultra-tall skyscrapers is what makes that cityscape work. Something that is also very visible in your aerial footage (4:12, 6:28, 11:28) is another landscape concept: repetition. One sees the same size and shape of mid-size (25 story) buildings scattered about, the way Gertrude Jekyll planted clumps of repeating plants or colors in her famous gardens. Then the super-tall buildings like the Sears Tower function as specimen trees like an elm, and some others like the Marina buildings are like accent trees such as Japanese Maple or Seven Sons Tree.
I recognise skylines, but I never really thought about what makes a good one before. Very thought provoking. I was also never particularly interested in visiting Chicago until I started watching your videos. I know they're not all in (or about) Chicago, but you certainly make it more intriguing. The only reason I ever wanted to visit before was to see the Robie House
Another thoughtful piece. The Chicago Architecture Centre looks like a spectacular resource. A wee thought, however. By focusing on Chicago and to a lesser degree New York you have considered cities with essentially flat topography. I live in Edinburgh which, like Rome and Lisbon, is built on seven hills that impact crucially on the skyline. Moreover, the urban history of Edinburgh links its 17th century 11 and 12-storey stone-built city-centre tenements with new construction which is itself limited by a 1968 statute to 8 stories in the city centre and to 15 stories beyond. I'd be interested to hear your views on this and to suggest that it might be worthwhile to have a companion piece on another (European) tradition of city formation and whether your principles, adduced at the start of this video, hold good there too.
Thank you for this wonderful program about a wonderful city. I will put the Chicago Architecture Center at the top of my places to visit on my next "Staycation!
The best decision the city ever made was to not allow skyscrapers in the area that is now Grant/Daley/Millennium Park, and restricting development right along the lakefront. Love that you said "Sears Tower" -- I call it that too, mostly just because that's what I grew up with. I also still say "Amoco Building", lol. Maybe I'm in the minority, but I've always hated that red building. I think it's an ugly tone of red, and it sticks out like a sore thumb. Eye of the beholder, I guess. Would be interested to hear your thoughts about Lake Point Tower. Not only its unusual architecture, but also the fact that it was allowed to be built east of Lake Shore Drive. How controversial was that decision?
I agree, the beaches/steps, and parks are a great buffer between the city and the lake, both aesthetically and practically. I believe Montgomery Ward was one of the major proponents of that aspect, also keeping the railroads away from the shore (mostly). I always liked the red CNA Tower. It gives the mostly gray skyline a little punch of color. Also it's a good landmark for directing tourists. "Go n/s/e/w of the red building!". Another great decision was Daley not allowing Trump to build taller than the Sears Tower. 😉
The best move would have been to not allow skyscrapers in the first place at least nowhere near downtown. But the US us obsessed with the idiotic things.
@@bossfan49 Tell that to literally any european city. Like Rotterdam a port significantly larger and busier than any port in the US. You don't need idiotic city planning to have a downtown. What even gave you this idea?
the thing about the chicago skyline that sticks with me is how colorful it is at night. i've only been to NYC once and while there are obviously some beautiful buildings there, all the lights were white. i didn't really realize that until i went on an architectural river tour in chicago (highly recommend) later on and i really noticed all the different color lights the skyscrappers employ. i've lived in chicago all my life and i never really noticed that but the difference in skyscrapper lights really kinda summarizes why i prefer chicago to NY
I'm from Cleveland and there's a vantage point where many photos have been taken. It's on the west bank of the Cuyahoga River (in the "Flats" for those who know) looking east towards downtown, with the Detroit-Superior bridge being a prominent feature in the foreground. Sherwin Williams is currently building their headquarters at Public Square. It will become the 4th tallest building in Cleveland, and will definitely change the appearance of our skyline. Excited to see what that's going to look like.
friend of mine with a hotshot job lives in Marina City towers on the 49th floor, and will have folks up on the roof to watch fireworks from a very special angle - it's a privilege every time he invites me over for a cocktail party or whatnot!
Been living in Chicago 20 years. Very good content Stewart and thanks to Adam as well. My favorite sights of the city or coming southbound LSD just after the Belmont exit. Also the museum campus view near Adler (looking back) is breathtaking on a clear summer night. Finally the view from the top level of Rush Hospital parking deck is pretty cool and unique.
The Sears Tower does not "taper" as it nears the top. It narrows, but that is a design choice, not a method to increase stability and strength as Hicks here seems to think. The Sears Tower gains it's strength from architect Fazlur Kahn's bundled tube design. The narrowing effect comes from the aesthetic decision to bundle "tubes" of different lengths.
The view of Chicago from across Lake Michigan you can see way more than the tippy tops of the buildings as you say. According to the picture you can clearly see the full skyline pretty easily
The best is the mix of old and new buildings. There is no "old Chicago" sections. The architecture is meant to provide continuity of line. We had the best architects and city planners since 1837, when the city was incorporated.
Chicago is the city that links major east coast cities like New York, Boston and Philadelphia with major west coast cities like Los Angeles, Seattle and San Francisco
las vegas has one of the most interesting skylines, i truly love the way the strip stands out to the mountainscape in the background, and the sky in vegas just- there's something in it you really cant find in other west coast skylines like LA
Fun video. I am oh Minneapolis has a cool skyline featuring three tall skyscrapers of nearly the same height surrounded by smaller ones… Plus, it looks great at night when the buildings are lit up.
Wonderful video, mostly because I'm a skyline lover. Chicago's is beautiful, and I got back from New York for the first time a few months ago, which was fantastic as well. But still, I live in Kansas City, and we have a small but beautiful skyline that I never get tired of looking at. I wouldn't trade it.
Years ago, Ogden Ave extended north beyond Chicago Ave via a large overpass that took it over the river and Goose Island. By the 1990s the overpass was severely dilapidated and the surrounding area was a hellscape. but the bridge provided the best view of the skyline there ever was.
For those who have been to both, which do you prefer; Chicago or New York? I think Chicago is superior just because of its layout. It’s just easier to get around and doesn’t hit you like a ton of bricks when you commute into it.
I think the elevated trains really help with that as well. Much easier to get a feel for your location, speed and distance. When I took the subway in NYC it's like teleporting into Manhattan. Taking the Blue Line into Chicago from O'Hare, you can tell you're coming in from the northwest, and can see the Loop marked by the Sears Tower basically all the way in.
NY is quite a bit older than Chicago, so I imagine some of the areas weren't really "planned", just built up as they went.. so that would make it a little more difficult to get around. Chicago has a few small areas like that but most of the city was planned.
Chicago. Been to NYC and wasn't impressed. I'm from Chicago so i appreciate alleys with trash cans not trash bag piles on corners. Besides that Chicago is just prettier, wider, better planned, greener, cleaner and just overall a better quality of life. More affordable. Plus wages are high but cost of living is much lower. New Yorkers who i met that moved to Chicago feel they aren't missing anything but are surprised how much cheaper Chicago is. They feel their dollar goes alot further now and are able to save up to buy a house, which in New York is impossible unless you're ultra rich
Skylines must be appreciated from the distance, you can always find interesting views or angles that play with the light and shadow of the buildings, it also depends on the time of the day
I'm an uber driver in Chicago and thank you for finally putting to words why my heart sings at the sight of my city, even in rush hour
Lived there for four years and being stuck in traffic on LSD SB by division was not too bad
Agreed!!! I love driving on lake shore drive
My g
I was a tour guide there on the river and it never got old. Unfortunately I'm in LA for good due to work but man, I miss home.
Man, you ain’t kidding. I’ve been to many other major cities and I can recognize other skylines even to cities I’ve never been to, but to me Chicago is one of the prettiest and there’s no better place to be stuck in traffic than on Lake Shore Dr. Overlooking the skyline to some extent. Even if you’re stuck on the Kennedy or the Dan Ryan going inbound able to see the whole loop clumped up in a cluster in the hazy distance.
I do love how people just refuse to call the Willis Tower anything other than the Sears Tower, while still acknowledging its current name, and that list includes me.
@@diegomontoya796 Fortunately for you, trans women are not men, so you should have no trouble respecting them by using their correct pronouns.
@@imveryangryitsnotbutter
The smartest woman in my college class was a trans woman. She got the female scholarship for grad school.
3rd in class compared to the men.
@@diegomontoya796 This post has big "Some of my best friends are black" energy.
@@julm7744 imagine spending time hating trans people you've never met when you could just enjoy the last 5 years of the American Empire
@@imveryangryitsnotbutter
Your mom left you the day after your dad told her black men are dangerous gangbangers.
My dad flew all over the world as an airline pilot (particularly europe and the states) and he says his favorite skyline is still chicago. High praise.
Chicago is my favorite skyline and that view from around the Shedd aquarium is just awesome.
I was just walking in downtown Chicago a few days ago, and it was exquisitely satisfying. It really is a marvel.
Thank you for explaining so well what I couldn't put in words to tell ppl how beautiful Chicago is and how its skyline surpasses NYC. I still remember the breathtaking feeling I had when I first saw Chicago buildings at midnight from the Lake Shore Drive bridge over the Chicago river. Although I have moved away, the city will always be dear to my heart.
I just arrived to Chicago last night to wake up to this treat, a tour of the city by my fav Chicago RUclips architect… thank you Stewart excellent work
I would argue that Chicago's skyline is actually more attractive than New York, if only for the fact that there's still enough space between buildings to appreciate their architecture. For example, Bertrand Goldberg's Marina City benefits from it location, fronting the Chicago River. If you view these twin towers from River North, looking south, your view is blocked by other high-rise buildings. Also, Chicago has the longest extended lakefront of any major city. The model of the city at CAC is ever evolving. As new buildings are completed throughout the city, they are cast and molded for the display.
Excellent point. Some of the best buildings in New York cannot be fully viewed and appreciated.
Not even you, most people would
New York’s skyline viewed from the ground close up in Brooklyn or Jersey is just so bad. There’s many areas where they’ve built 700 or 800ft skyscrapers along the East river and Hudson that block most of the taller buildings deeper in the island even the Empire State Building and World Trade Center, not to mention the several 1400ft and 1500ft buildings recently built or that will be built are still going to be blocked. Tbh the only decent views are from really really far away or several hundred feet in the air.
@@blushdog only decent view is that of downtown manhattan from the water tbh
@@VLA1234-t2t yeah lower Manhattan from jersey looks pretty nice
The mountain range comparison is apt. Having grown up in Chicago, I had this wondrous sense of familiarity when I first saw the Tetons. They're compact, steep and gorgeous, much like heading south on Lake Shore Drive.
I had a friend that used to live in Marina Towers. His apartment was pie shaped, lol. That was back in 1995. The city has exploded since then.
I felt the same way when I went last week!
the chicago skyline NEVER gets old!
Ive always really enjoyed the fact that good skylines also display the history of the city and its architectural trends over time by juxtaposing different eras right next to each other. Using Chicago still as an example, it's has had the fortune of seeing somewhat regular growth and development over its history so you get the blend of old and new playing off one another. But if you drive up the shore to Milwaukee you have a city that shows apparent stagnation where there's plenty of older brick buildings from its industrial past but only a couple more that seem to have been built after that boom time.
I just moved to Chicago for college 2 weeks ago, so this is a perfect video! I want to know all I can about the city, so far I think it’s wonderful.
same! i came from a small town in CA, so it’s a huge change, but I love it so much. such a different vibe than LA. such a beautiful and historic city
I went to columbia college. Graduated 2020. Enjoy!
Okay, get ready for the winter now 🥶
@@K4R3N lol we had no winter again
@@robertpreston2220 yeah this is weird. I think the south will be uninhabitable in 10 years. Everything will burn up. All those folks in the south will have to make back to Great Lakes and Midwest
Skylines need to have variety, but consistency with character. The Boston skyline is a good example of one that looks distinct, and tells you about the character of the city. The towers are contrasted with the brick houses in the historic residential areas to give a sense of progression and history.
The city is racist as hell what kinda character are you talking about ?
@@TheStefanp10 Boston is progressive and in one of the most progressive states. Like, have you ever been to a city in the south lol
@@RemixedVoice Progressive doesn’t mean it’s not racist and Boston is a clear example of that.
What are you on? Lmao. Boston's skyline looks like every other minor cities in the country. There is NOTHING unique about it. It's actually quite hideous tbh. Show a picture of Boston's skyline to a foreigner and they wouldn't be able to know if it was Boston or Topeka Kansas 😂😂😂
Chicago is a beautiful place and skyline never gets old: ruclips.net/video/EdoZMurKQJA/видео.html
As a life long resident of the far NW side, I have seen the view of the skyline from the inbound Kennedy change from an industrial landscape to an incredible view, especially when you cross north Ave.
If you come to downtown Chicago from Southwest, on The Stevenson, it's like coming into a house from the alley, through the backdoor.
@@tomsenft7434 You couldn't have said it better. I never liked the southwest approach. The entire trip is creepy and eerie AF, especially after Harlem Avenue. Ever since it was redone in 2000, California-LSD creeps me out the most. The pavement noise, combined with passing through shithole areas (reason). I mentioned this on a few Soldier Field videos. NW is a lot better!
I love your content sooo much! I particularly love the fact that you highlight the greatness of Chicago! :) When you love Chicago, it demands your loyalty! :)
Just moved to Chicago and this is my favorite RUclips channel/ Chicago informative architectural videos already! Thanks
Kudos for using Cloud Gate, an object that distorts the city to the point of creating a new impossible skyline, for a backdrop. Great video as always.
Kudos for calling it Cloud Gate! 😀
@@bossfan49 it’s the bean.
@@jacksonneedham2792 It's Cloudgate SG-1
I was just in Chicago and took the Architecture Riverboat Tour. I gained a new appreciation for the City.
I love the view of the Loop from Adler Planetarium. We still call Willis, the Sears Tower-despite the corporate name buying.
I’m biased but Chicago does indeed have the best skyline. Especially at dusk when the dark blue sky compliments the lighted buildings. Most beautiful if you’re on the Chicago River or out on Lake Michigan. Magnificent.
The roof of lake point tower has one of the best views of downtown in the whole city. The truth is Chicagos skyline while mainly concentrated downtown does extend up and down lake Michigan for over 10 miles.
Interesting discussion of how advances in technology impact building designs, and hence skylines. Besides those shown, another good view of the Chicago skyline is from Promontory Point in Hyde Park
The most beautiful city in the world hands down!
Without a doubt, Lake Michigan and the Chicago River are the best features of Chicago that make the skyline and city so magnificent.
You touched on this briefly, but Chicago’s architecture and planning are so intentional. The buildings all play off each-other. Where New York is magnificently chaotic, Chicago feels harmonious. An example would be so many of the towers along the river that all play off each other’s heights, are an homage to other buildings, and more. It all feels like they communicate with each other, tell a story, and provide a glimpse into that era’s architecture. Apart from the Sears Tower, no building feels like it was put there to be on its own without the consideration of its surroundings.
Basically, if you appreciate architecture and haven’t been to Chicago, you must visit make it a priority to visit. Imo, the most beautiful downtown in America.
You focus on viewpoints and asymmetry for the skyline as a whole, and I'd like to also point out how those concepts are demonstrated so beautifully in the Sears/Willis Tower as an individual building. It has an entirely different silhouette depending on the viewing angle. From due west, it resembles a person with head and shoulders--from the southeast (Shedd Aquarium), it's a slender black pyramid.
Chicago is such a beautiful place. I'm so proud I can call this place my home.
Chicago is good except for the politicians that run it
It’s awesome! I love driving up and down Lakeshore Drive!
Ahhh, I can’t wait to call this my home!!! 😌
Me as well. I just hate the voters here
i heard there are many gang shootings etc there.
U called it the "Sears Tower"
Thank u.
I appreciate that you used the right names of things: Sears Tower and Hancock Tower. ;)
Still refuse to call it “Willis Tower” after some stock broker from the early 19th century
Chicago is the nearest city to me for my whole life, and I always find it so weird going to different cities they just are nothing like Chicago
I just came back (to the Netherlands) from a visit to New York, marvelling at the many views of the city skyline from different positions. I like the comparison with the picturesque. Chicago would be wonderpil to visit next!!
I think you would really enjoy Chicago. I may be a bit biased, because I grew up there, but I think it is a great place to learn more about the history of American engineering, architecture, and design. The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was unfortunate, yet it gave the city the advantage of rebuilding around the time the skyscraper was invented. The city had a clean slate to build from into the 20th century. I think that’s another reason why Chicago’s skyline is so aesthetically pleasing, especially when standing from the vantage point of the museum campus (around where the 1893 Columbian Exposition took place).
Best view of the skyline is from the Southside! Anywhere from 31st street beach to the promontory point.
I might be a little biased but the way our skyline and lakefront were planned and designed is unmatched by any city.
I've been to many big cities in my life. Chicago is in a class of its own. An incredible city, I always tell people to visit there.
i love Chicago. I live on the Michigan side and from Lake Michigan, only on very clear days we can see Chicago. Most of the time we can never see it, which makes us feel like we have our own mini ocean in our backyard, but it’s also nice when we can see the skyline that Chicago is not too far away in the distance.
I realised why I look forward to your videos so much: they make me feel wiser.
Thank you for calling it the Sears Tower
Really cool video its something I've never really thought about until I helped shoot some videos at the architecture museum. Also to anyone that might have gotten confused at 8:06 that dome is actually the planetarium in the center not the aquarium. The aquarium is the short wide light blue building with the big windows and the field museum is the slightly taller building to the left with a bunch of windows
always here for people praising Chicago!
Okay!! Keep loving on my City, it's deserves it.
One of the wonderful things about this beautiful skyline is the different views one gets depending on where you live. I grew up on the NW side (Go Shamrocks 🤘🏼). Going into the city via the Kennedy or Blue Line, the Hancock dominates but so many buildings are in your view. If you take Elston, it's the Standard Oil building that grabs your attention. Coming off of LSD, again the Hancock stands out but many north shore residential buildings precede it like stairs. From the Eisenhower, the massive area of skyscrapers, from north to south is incredible. The Hancock and Willis Towers are the 'broad shoulders' of the city and the classic look of the post office and opera house is something everyone should view. My favorite view is from the south. The beautiful reds of CBOE tower and CNA building compliment the dark of the Willis towers and the blue top of that building whose name I can never remember. The ultimate is riding in from the Brown or Orange lines and seeing some of the 'smaller' structures like Harold Washington Library, Monadnock, The Rookery and Merchandise Mart makes public transportation a pleasure.
I've been fortunate to see many great cities on this globe and Chicago is what everyone is compared to.
Compare City Skyline to a bouquet - brilliant!
I had to pause the video to say thank you for calling it the Sears Tower!
The Sears Tower was originally going to be around 5.5 million square feet in size. The size they went with was 4.5 million square ft, the reason for them cutting all that floor space was due to the faa limiting the height at 1,450 ft. The developers reduced its size due to those limitations the faa set back in the 70’s. Thanks faa!
I think that’s the same reason why Dallas doesn’t have allot of tall towers due to Dallas Love Field airport close by. If these secondary airports close down like Midway and Love Field, there would be higher towers.
@@BabyBang17datruth they were okay with the Chicago Spire being built back in the 2000’s. It would’ve been 2000ft tall and have 150 floors. It seems the faa got more lax with its height limit, unfortunately the 2008 financial crisis stopped all construction of the spire. All that’s there today is a giant hole for the foundation.
I was just on the phone with my best before I got in RUclips. Our conversation was us (mainly me) about visiting other cities beyond the east coast. The last city we talked about was Chicago. Long story short, I believe this is what they call serendipity.
The park in Chicago blew me away the first time i seen it felt amazing being surrounded by beautiful buildings
I just discovered this channel. So good! I like how you keep it smart, rather than dumbing things down for the masses.
When talking about picturesque values of skylines and how to plan them I think about this interesting approach to do it in Warsaw, where urbanists, basing on historic paintings of Bernardo Bellotto use places where he captured the panorama of the city to decide where high rises can be placed in order to preserve the historical composition.
the best view of the chicago skyline (imo) is from the northwest when you are approaching the city on the kennedy.
There's a lot to complain about regarding US city planning but having a skyline is something I envy. Hamburg's first true skyscraper is currently under construction...
I worked in downtown Dallas for nearly 15 years. I always appreciated the directness of landscape. Apparently, all the “hats” of the skyscrapers had to be dissimilar. IM Pei. Reunion Tower. And that funny one with the neon (later argon) tubes outlining its shape. But Dallas also has heritage. Pegasus (MobilOil) limited the tops of skyscrapers for years. That innocuous square 6-story building at the edge of downtown that held schoolbooks. Thanksgiving Square. So much more. Take a look. I think it offers fascinating fodder for a story.
yeah I love the Dallas skyline it’s better than Houston’s imo
@@passi4453 Houston had to grow fast in the 60s and 70s. And it shows.
@@passi4453 not even a contest tbh, Houston is a great city but its skyline is clumpy and uninspiring
You've given a wonderful rubric for explaining skylines and why some cities are appealing and others unappealing. The variety found in Chicago, and the relative scarcity of ultra-tall skyscrapers is what makes that cityscape work. Something that is also very visible in your aerial footage (4:12, 6:28, 11:28) is another landscape concept: repetition. One sees the same size and shape of mid-size (25 story) buildings scattered about, the way Gertrude Jekyll planted clumps of repeating plants or colors in her famous gardens. Then the super-tall buildings like the Sears Tower function as specimen trees like an elm, and some others like the Marina buildings are like accent trees such as Japanese Maple or Seven Sons Tree.
^ This is so brilliantly put!
I've lived in Chicagoland for seven years now and I haven't been to that museum, must check it out!
I recognise skylines, but I never really thought about what makes a good one before. Very thought provoking. I was also never particularly interested in visiting Chicago until I started watching your videos. I know they're not all in (or about) Chicago, but you certainly make it more intriguing. The only reason I ever wanted to visit before was to see the Robie House
Robie House is a great tour, but if you are into architecture, there is a lot to get excited about in Chicago!
Frank Lloyd Wright has a number of other less famous houses in the area as well
@@cameronmastoras9593 indeed. I love FLR
You might already know this, but if you decide to visit Chicago, you have to take architecture river boat tour
There are some Louis Sullivan structures you should see as well.
Another thoughtful piece. The Chicago Architecture Centre looks like a spectacular resource.
A wee thought, however. By focusing on Chicago and to a lesser degree New York you have considered cities with essentially flat topography. I live in Edinburgh which, like Rome and Lisbon, is built on seven hills that impact crucially on the skyline. Moreover, the urban history of Edinburgh links its 17th century 11 and 12-storey stone-built city-centre tenements with new construction which is itself limited by a 1968 statute to 8 stories in the city centre and to 15 stories beyond. I'd be interested to hear your views on this and to suggest that it might be worthwhile to have a companion piece on another (European) tradition of city formation and whether your principles, adduced at the start of this video, hold good there too.
The best example of a city with hills and skyline are probably rio de janeiro and Hong Kong.
Our skyline is beautiful #CHITOWN #CHICAGO
My city always amazes me. I didn’t even know you could see the skyline from the Dunes of Michigan.
Chicago truly has one spectacular skyline
Thank you for this wonderful program about a wonderful city. I will put the Chicago Architecture Center at the top of my places to visit on my next "Staycation!
8:15 That's the Adler Planetarium, not the Shedd Aquarium. The aquarium is visible at the base of the peninsula.
A million points for calling it the Sears Tower.
The best decision the city ever made was to not allow skyscrapers in the area that is now Grant/Daley/Millennium Park, and restricting development right along the lakefront.
Love that you said "Sears Tower" -- I call it that too, mostly just because that's what I grew up with. I also still say "Amoco Building", lol.
Maybe I'm in the minority, but I've always hated that red building. I think it's an ugly tone of red, and it sticks out like a sore thumb. Eye of the beholder, I guess.
Would be interested to hear your thoughts about Lake Point Tower. Not only its unusual architecture, but also the fact that it was allowed to be built east of Lake Shore Drive. How controversial was that decision?
I agree, the beaches/steps, and parks are a great buffer between the city and the lake, both aesthetically and practically. I believe Montgomery Ward was one of the major proponents of that aspect, also keeping the railroads away from the shore (mostly). I always liked the red CNA Tower. It gives the mostly gray skyline a little punch of color. Also it's a good landmark for directing tourists. "Go n/s/e/w of the red building!". Another great decision was Daley not allowing Trump to build taller than the Sears Tower. 😉
The best move would have been to not allow skyscrapers in the first place at least nowhere near downtown. But the US us obsessed with the idiotic things.
@@XMysticHerox If there were no skyscrapers downtown, then it wouldn't be downtown. What good is a port city if your hub is 10 miles inland?
@@bossfan49 Tell that to literally any european city. Like Rotterdam a port significantly larger and busier than any port in the US.
You don't need idiotic city planning to have a downtown. What even gave you this idea?
@@XMysticHerox So go live in fucking Rotterdam then.
Don’t forget 90/94 in ether direction. They are also beautiful skylines!
the thing about the chicago skyline that sticks with me is how colorful it is at night. i've only been to NYC once and while there are obviously some beautiful buildings there, all the lights were white. i didn't really realize that until i went on an architectural river tour in chicago (highly recommend) later on and i really noticed all the different color lights the skyscrappers employ. i've lived in chicago all my life and i never really noticed that but the difference in skyscrapper lights really kinda summarizes why i prefer chicago to NY
Best big city in America! Sorry New York! Chicago is King!!
I'm from Cleveland and there's a vantage point where many photos have been taken. It's on the west bank of the Cuyahoga River (in the "Flats" for those who know) looking east towards downtown, with the Detroit-Superior bridge being a prominent feature in the foreground. Sherwin Williams is currently building their headquarters at Public Square. It will become the 4th tallest building in Cleveland, and will definitely change the appearance of our skyline. Excited to see what that's going to look like.
The examples of contextualism and referencing other buildings is very strong along the river as well
friend of mine with a hotshot job lives in Marina City towers on the 49th floor, and will have folks up on the roof to watch fireworks from a very special angle - it's a privilege every time he invites me over for a cocktail party or whatnot!
We watched fireworks from the Hancock observatory one time. It's really strange to look down on fireworks!
It's so cool seeing the skyline from Six Flags
I did the Chicago triathlon a few years ago and the city is very beautiful.
Been living in Chicago 20 years. Very good content Stewart and thanks to Adam as well. My favorite sights of the city or coming southbound LSD just after the Belmont exit. Also the museum campus view near Adler (looking back) is breathtaking on a clear summer night. Finally the view from the top level of Rush Hospital parking deck is pretty cool and unique.
A Great video again, it's always interesting to find out more about cities planning next to architectural planning all at the same time
The Sears Tower does not "taper" as it nears the top. It narrows, but that is a design choice, not a method to increase stability and strength as Hicks here seems to think. The Sears Tower gains it's strength from architect Fazlur Kahn's bundled tube design. The narrowing effect comes from the aesthetic decision to bundle "tubes" of different lengths.
Top Ten US Skylines
1. Chicago
2. New York
3. Seattle
4. Dallas
5. San Francisco
6. Philadelphia
7. Atlanta
8. Los Angeles
9. Boston
10. Houston
The view of Chicago from across Lake Michigan you can see way more than the tippy tops of the buildings as you say. According to the picture you can clearly see the full skyline pretty easily
this is incredibly thought provoking, Im appreaciate you for giving me a new way to look at city skylines.
We are so lucky to live in an iconic mid century building The Statesman in Edgewater. One of the few left built by Architect Melvin Schwartz.
The best is the mix of old and new buildings. There is no "old Chicago" sections. The architecture is meant to provide continuity of line. We had the best architects and city planners since 1837, when the city was incorporated.
It is really quite the sight to see the skyline on a clear day across Lake Michigan from Warren Dunes in Sawyer, MI.
Sometimes I think I can see the cooling towers in Michigan City.
september 8th, 2022, and this guy still calls it the sears tower. my mans.
I’m from the San Francisco Bay Area, and aesthetically Chicago is my favorite city. Chicago is beautiful.
Chicago is the city that links major east coast cities like New York, Boston and Philadelphia with major west coast cities like Los Angeles, Seattle and San Francisco
Why have I never been interested in architecture, but this video made me like the topic
las vegas has one of the most interesting skylines, i truly love the way the strip stands out to the mountainscape in the background, and the sky in vegas just- there's something in it you really cant find in other west coast skylines like LA
Thank you Vince Gilligan for teaching us about skylines
Fun video. I am oh Minneapolis has a cool skyline featuring three tall skyscrapers of nearly the same height surrounded by smaller ones… Plus, it looks great at night when the buildings are lit up.
One of the best views of Chicago's skyline is from North Avenue Beach on a warm sunny summer day.
John Hancock is center-piece then!
Wonderful video, mostly because I'm a skyline lover. Chicago's is beautiful, and I got back from New York for the first time a few months ago, which was fantastic as well. But still, I live in Kansas City, and we have a small but beautiful skyline that I never get tired of looking at. I wouldn't trade it.
Years ago, Ogden Ave extended north beyond Chicago Ave via a large overpass that took it over the river and Goose Island. By the 1990s the overpass was severely dilapidated and the surrounding area was a hellscape. but the bridge provided the best view of the skyline there ever was.
CHICAGO DEFINITELY.IVE NEVER LIVED THERE BUT IVE VISITED MANY TIMES. I THINK OF CHICAGO AS MY SECOND HOME!!
I think it's the most pleasing Skyline and that's not because I'm from the suburbs
I LOVE CHICAGOS Skyline.Its BY Far The Best There Is.
I live in 2800 N Lake Shore Dr and have the best view of the Chicago skyline.
For those who have been to both, which do you prefer; Chicago or New York?
I think Chicago is superior just because of its layout. It’s just easier to get around and doesn’t hit you like a ton of bricks when you commute into it.
I think the elevated trains really help with that as well. Much easier to get a feel for your location, speed and distance. When I took the subway in NYC it's like teleporting into Manhattan. Taking the Blue Line into Chicago from O'Hare, you can tell you're coming in from the northwest, and can see the Loop marked by the Sears Tower basically all the way in.
New York has better neighborhoods
New York is 3 times the size of Chicago so its not as crowded as new york.
NY is quite a bit older than Chicago, so I imagine some of the areas weren't really "planned", just built up as they went.. so that would make it a little more difficult to get around. Chicago has a few small areas like that but most of the city was planned.
Chicago. Been to NYC and wasn't impressed. I'm from Chicago so i appreciate alleys with trash cans not trash bag piles on corners. Besides that Chicago is just prettier, wider, better planned, greener, cleaner and just overall a better quality of life. More affordable. Plus wages are high but cost of living is much lower. New Yorkers who i met that moved to Chicago feel they aren't missing anything but are surprised how much cheaper Chicago is. They feel their dollar goes alot further now and are able to save up to buy a house, which in New York is impossible unless you're ultra rich
I love my City 🌃
Amazing video. Really loved it. Thank you!
Its the sears tower dont ever come to Chicago and call it the willis towers unless you wanna get hit
I love the Chicago skyline!!
I love the view while driving on lakeshore drive toward the west
Skylines must be appreciated from the distance, you can always find interesting views or angles that play with the light and shadow of the buildings, it also depends on the time of the day
Wonderful as always. Suggest Sydney Robinson’s Inquiry into the Picturesque for further reading
"OMG, the skyline is so unique! Theres nothing like it!"
Every skyline around the world: 🌁🌁🌁
1:25 Starting to see the Matrix Awakens map being used as stock footage in many videos lately.