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Wainwright Building

The Wainwright Building (also known as the Wainwright State Office Building) is a 10-story, 41 m (135 ft) terra cotta office building at 709 Chestnut Street in downtown St. Louis, Missouri.[3] The Wainwright Building is considered to be one of the first aesthetically fully expressed early skyscrapers. It was designed by Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan and built between 1890 and 1891.[4] It was named for local brewer, building contractor, and financier Ellis Wainwright.[n 1]

Wainwright Building
LocationSt. Louis, Missouri
Coordinates38°37′37″N 90°11′32″W / 38.62694°N 90.19222°W / 38.62694; -90.19222
Built1891
ArchitectAdler & Sullivan
Architectural styleChicago school
NRHP reference No.68000054[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 23, 1968
Designated NHLMay 23, 1968[2]

The building, listed as a landmark both locally and nationally, is described as "a highly influential prototype of the modern office building" by the National Register of Historic Places.[1] Architect Frank Lloyd Wright called the Wainwright Building "the very first human expression of a tall steel office-building as Architecture."[5]

The building is currently owned by the State of Missouri and houses state offices.[6]

In May 2013 it was listed by an episode of the PBS series 10 That Changed America as one of "10 Buildings That Changed America" because it was "the first skyscraper that truly looked the part" with Sullivan being dubbed the "Father of Skyscrapers."[7]

Commission, design and construction edit

The Wainwright building was commissioned by Ellis Wainwright, a St. Louis brewer. Wainwright needed office space to manage the St Louis Brewers Association.[8] It was the second major commission for a tall building won by the Adler & Sullivan firm, which had grown to international prominence after the creation of the ten-story Auditorium Building in Chicago (designed in 1886 and completed in 1889).[9] As designed, the first floor of the Wainwright Building was intended for street-accessible shops, with the second floor filled with easily accessible public offices. The higher floors were for "honeycomb" offices, while the top floor was for water tanks and building machinery.[10]

Architecture edit

Aesthetically, the Wainwright Building exemplifies Sullivan's theories about the tall building, which included a tripartite (three-part) composition (base-shaft-attic) based on the structure of the classical column,[11] and his desire to emphasize the height of the building. He wrote: "[The skyscraper] must be tall, every inch of it tall. The force and power of altitude must be in it the glory and pride of exaltation must be in it. It must be every inch a proud and soaring thing, rising in sheer exultation that from bottom to top it is a unit without a single dissenting line." His 1896 article cited his Wainwright Building as an example.[12] Despite the classical column concept, the building's design was deliberately modern, featuring none of the neoclassical style that Sullivan held in contempt.[8]

Historian Carl W. Condit described the Wainwright as "a building with a strong, vigorously articulated base supporting a screen that constitutes a vivid image of powerful upward movement."[13] The base contained retail stores that required wide glazed openings; Sullivan's ornament made the supporting piers read as pillars. Above it the semi-public nature of offices up a single flight of stairs are expressed as broad windows in the curtain wall. A cornice separates the second floor from the grid of identical windows of the screen wall, where each window is "a cell in a honeycomb, nothing more".[14] The building's windows and horizontals were inset slightly behind columns and piers, as part of a "vertical aesthetic" to create what Sullivan called "a proud and soaring thing."[15] This perception has since been criticized as the skyscraper was designed to make money, not to serve as a symbol.[16]

 
The intricate frieze along the top of the building along with the bull's-eye windows.

The ornamentation for the building includes a wide frieze below the deep cornice, which expresses the formalized yet naturalistic celery-leaf foliage typical of Sullivan and published in his System of Architectural Ornament, decorated spandrels between the windows on the different floors and an elaborate door surround at the main entrance. "Apart from the slender brick piers, the only solids of the wall surface are the spandrel panels between the windows. ... . They have rich decorative patterns in low relief, varying in design and scale with each story."[17] The frieze is pierced by unobtrusive bull's-eye windows that light the top-story floor, originally containing water tanks and elevator machinery. The building includes embellishments of terra cotta,[18] a building material that was gaining popularity at the time of construction.[19]

One of Sullivan's primary concerns was the development of an architectural symbolism consisting of simple geometric, structural forms and organic ornamentation.[20] The Wainwright Building where he juxtaposed the objective-tectonic and the subjective-organic was the first demonstration of this symbolism.[20]

 
North end of the building, showing a portion of the state office additions

Unlike Sullivan, Adler described the building as a "plain business structure" stating:[21]

In a utilitarian age like ours it is safe to assume that the real-estate owner and the investor in buildings will continue to erect the class of buildings from which the greatest possible revenue can be obtained with the least possible outlay ... The purpose of erecting buildings other than those required for the shelter of their owners is specifically that of making investments for profit.[21]

The building is considered the first skyscraper to forgo the normal ornamentation used on skyscrapers at the time.[22]

Some architectural elements from the building have been removed in renovations and taken to the Sauget, Illinois storage site of the National Building Arts Center.[23]

History edit

 
The building in 1907

Upon its initial completion, the Wainwright Building was "popular with the people" and received "favorably" by critics.[8]

In 1968, the building was designated as a National Historic Landmark[24] and in 1972 it was named a city landmark.[25]

The Wainwright building was initially rescued from demolition by the National Trust for Historic Preservation when the Trust took an option on the structure.[when?][26] Later, it was acquired by Missouri as part of a state office complex and the St. Louis Landmarks Association, in one of its early victories, is credited with having rescued the Wainwright Building from a construction project.[27]

The neighboring Lincoln Trust building (later known as the Title Guaranty building; designed by Eames and Young, built in 1898 at 706 Chestnut St.) was demolished to make way for the Gateway Mall in 1983. Carolyn Toft, Landmarks Association's executive director, stated that this building "... formed an ensemble with three other late-19th century commercial buildings, including [the Wainwright Building], that could not be equaled anywhere else in the country. Saving the Wainwright was important, but how much more important it would have been to save the entire group."[28] Architect John D. Randall led an extensive letter-writing campaign to the governor and other noted officials; the campaign resulted in the restoration of the building as a state office building instead of its demolition.[29]

After a period of neglect, the building now houses Missouri state offices.[6]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sullivan also designed the Wainwright Tomb in St. Louis's Bellefontaine Cemetery for his wife Charlotte Dickson Wainwright.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on March 1, 2009. Retrieved June 28, 2008.
  3. ^ "Wainwright Building". Structurae.
  4. ^ "skyscraper." The Columbia Encyclopedia. New York: Columbia University Press, 2008. Credo Reference. Web. 25 March 2011.
  5. ^ Wright, Frank Lloyd (1931). "The Tyranny of the Skyscraper". Modern Architecture. Princeton: Princeton University Press: 85.
  6. ^ a b "Best of Political Fix". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. February 12, 2009.
  7. ^ Bear, Rob (May 10, 2013). "Mapping PBS's 10 Buildings That Changed America". Curbed.com. Retrieved May 13, 2013.
  8. ^ a b c Korom, Joseph J. (2008). The American Skyscraper, 1850–1940: A Celebration of Height. Branden Books. pp. 167. ISBN 978-0-8283-2188-4. Wainwright Building.
  9. ^ Elstein, Rochelle Berger (Spring–Summer 2005). "Adler & Sullivan: The End of the Partnership and Its Aftermath". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 98 (1/2): 51–81.
  10. ^ van Zanten, David (March–April 2002). "Master of the Skyscraper". Humanities. 23 (2).
  11. ^ "THE CHICAGO SCHOOL, BEAUX-ARTS, AND THE CITY BEAUTIFUL." The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures: The Midwest. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2004. Credo Reference. Web. 25 March 2011.
  12. ^ Sullivan, Louis H. (March 1896). "The tall office building artistically considered". Lippincott's Magazine.
  13. ^ Condit, Carl W. (1973). The Chicago School of Architecture: A History of Commercial and Public Building in the Chicago Area, 1875–1925. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-11455-4.
  14. ^ Sullivan, quoted in David Van Zanten, Sullivan's city: the meaning of ornament for Louis Sullivan.
  15. ^ "Sullivan, Louis H". The Reader's Companion to American History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 1991. Retrieved March 25, 2011.(subscription required)
  16. ^ Hoffman, p. 3
  17. ^ Morrison, Hugh, Louis Sullivan: Prophet of Modern Architecture, W.W. Norton Company, New York, 1963, c. 1935 p. 146
  18. ^ Mike Michaelson (April 19, 2009). "More than meets the arch". Post-Tribune.
  19. ^ Mark Sommer (October 6, 2010). "Guaranty glows in film role – Landmark featured in documentary on famous architect". The Buffalo News.
  20. ^ a b "Sullivan, Louis H". Encyclopedia of Urban America: The Cities and Suburbs. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. 1998. Retrieved March 25, 2011.(subscription required)
  21. ^ a b Hoffman, p. 5
  22. ^ Glaeser, Edward (2011). "How Skyscrapers Can Save the City". Atlantic Monthly. 307 (2): 40–53. ISSN 1072-7825.
  23. ^ List of Recovered Buildings
  24. ^ National Historic Landmarks Program (NHL) 2009-03-01 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Wainwright Building
  26. ^ St. Louis Historic Preservation
  27. ^ Matthew Hathaway (December 2, 2008). "New boss at Landmarks juggles many challenges Revitalization of Arch grounds could be agency's biggest preservation battle". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
  28. ^ David Bonetti and Diane Toroian Keaggy (July 27, 2008). "Gone but not forgotten We asked our panel of experts to select demolished buildings that have left an unfillable gap in the cityscape or the city's collective memory". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
  29. ^ "John D. Randall – ARCHITECT JOHN D. RANDALL HELPED TO BUILD SIUE, FOUGHT TO SAVE WAINWRIGHT BUILDING". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. January 16, 1999.
Sources
  • Glaeser, Edward (2011). "How Skyscrapers Can Save the City". Atlantic Monthly. 307 (2): 40–53. ISSN 1072-7825.
  • "National Register of Historic Places: Inventory – Nomination Form" (PDF). Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved May 30, 2008.
  • Hoffmann, Donald (January 13, 1998). Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan, and the skyscraper. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-40209-3. Retrieved March 27, 2011.

External links edit

wainwright, building, also, known, wainwright, state, office, building, story, terra, cotta, office, building, chestnut, street, downtown, louis, missouri, considered, first, aesthetically, fully, expressed, early, skyscrapers, designed, dankmar, adler, louis,. The Wainwright Building also known as the Wainwright State Office Building is a 10 story 41 m 135 ft terra cotta office building at 709 Chestnut Street in downtown St Louis Missouri 3 The Wainwright Building is considered to be one of the first aesthetically fully expressed early skyscrapers It was designed by Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan and built between 1890 and 1891 4 It was named for local brewer building contractor and financier Ellis Wainwright n 1 Wainwright BuildingU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkSt Louis LandmarkLocationSt Louis MissouriCoordinates38 37 37 N 90 11 32 W 38 62694 N 90 19222 W 38 62694 90 19222Built1891ArchitectAdler amp SullivanArchitectural styleChicago schoolNRHP reference No 68000054 1 Significant datesAdded to NRHPMay 23 1968Designated NHLMay 23 1968 2 The building listed as a landmark both locally and nationally is described as a highly influential prototype of the modern office building by the National Register of Historic Places 1 Architect Frank Lloyd Wright called the Wainwright Building the very first human expression of a tall steel office building as Architecture 5 The building is currently owned by the State of Missouri and houses state offices 6 In May 2013 it was listed by an episode of the PBS series 10 That Changed America as one of 10 Buildings That Changed America because it was the first skyscraper that truly looked the part with Sullivan being dubbed the Father of Skyscrapers 7 Contents 1 Commission design and construction 2 Architecture 3 History 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksCommission design and construction editThe Wainwright building was commissioned by Ellis Wainwright a St Louis brewer Wainwright needed office space to manage the St Louis Brewers Association 8 It was the second major commission for a tall building won by the Adler amp Sullivan firm which had grown to international prominence after the creation of the ten story Auditorium Building in Chicago designed in 1886 and completed in 1889 9 As designed the first floor of the Wainwright Building was intended for street accessible shops with the second floor filled with easily accessible public offices The higher floors were for honeycomb offices while the top floor was for water tanks and building machinery 10 Architecture editAesthetically the Wainwright Building exemplifies Sullivan s theories about the tall building which included a tripartite three part composition base shaft attic based on the structure of the classical column 11 and his desire to emphasize the height of the building He wrote The skyscraper must be tall every inch of it tall The force and power of altitude must be in it the glory and pride of exaltation must be in it It must be every inch a proud and soaring thing rising in sheer exultation that from bottom to top it is a unit without a single dissenting line His 1896 article cited his Wainwright Building as an example 12 Despite the classical column concept the building s design was deliberately modern featuring none of the neoclassical style that Sullivan held in contempt 8 Historian Carl W Condit described the Wainwright as a building with a strong vigorously articulated base supporting a screen that constitutes a vivid image of powerful upward movement 13 The base contained retail stores that required wide glazed openings Sullivan s ornament made the supporting piers read as pillars Above it the semi public nature of offices up a single flight of stairs are expressed as broad windows in the curtain wall A cornice separates the second floor from the grid of identical windows of the screen wall where each window is a cell in a honeycomb nothing more 14 The building s windows and horizontals were inset slightly behind columns and piers as part of a vertical aesthetic to create what Sullivan called a proud and soaring thing 15 This perception has since been criticized as the skyscraper was designed to make money not to serve as a symbol 16 nbsp The intricate frieze along the top of the building along with the bull s eye windows The ornamentation for the building includes a wide frieze below the deep cornice which expresses the formalized yet naturalistic celery leaf foliage typical of Sullivan and published in his System of Architectural Ornament decorated spandrels between the windows on the different floors and an elaborate door surround at the main entrance Apart from the slender brick piers the only solids of the wall surface are the spandrel panels between the windows They have rich decorative patterns in low relief varying in design and scale with each story 17 The frieze is pierced by unobtrusive bull s eye windows that light the top story floor originally containing water tanks and elevator machinery The building includes embellishments of terra cotta 18 a building material that was gaining popularity at the time of construction 19 One of Sullivan s primary concerns was the development of an architectural symbolism consisting of simple geometric structural forms and organic ornamentation 20 The Wainwright Building where he juxtaposed the objective tectonic and the subjective organic was the first demonstration of this symbolism 20 nbsp North end of the building showing a portion of the state office additionsUnlike Sullivan Adler described the building as a plain business structure stating 21 In a utilitarian age like ours it is safe to assume that the real estate owner and the investor in buildings will continue to erect the class of buildings from which the greatest possible revenue can be obtained with the least possible outlay The purpose of erecting buildings other than those required for the shelter of their owners is specifically that of making investments for profit 21 The building is considered the first skyscraper to forgo the normal ornamentation used on skyscrapers at the time 22 Some architectural elements from the building have been removed in renovations and taken to the Sauget Illinois storage site of the National Building Arts Center 23 History edit nbsp The building in 1907Upon its initial completion the Wainwright Building was popular with the people and received favorably by critics 8 In 1968 the building was designated as a National Historic Landmark 24 and in 1972 it was named a city landmark 25 The Wainwright building was initially rescued from demolition by the National Trust for Historic Preservation when the Trust took an option on the structure when 26 Later it was acquired by Missouri as part of a state office complex and the St Louis Landmarks Association in one of its early victories is credited with having rescued the Wainwright Building from a construction project 27 The neighboring Lincoln Trust building later known as the Title Guaranty building designed by Eames and Young built in 1898 at 706 Chestnut St was demolished to make way for the Gateway Mall in 1983 Carolyn Toft Landmarks Association s executive director stated that this building formed an ensemble with three other late 19th century commercial buildings including the Wainwright Building that could not be equaled anywhere else in the country Saving the Wainwright was important but how much more important it would have been to save the entire group 28 Architect John D Randall led an extensive letter writing campaign to the governor and other noted officials the campaign resulted in the restoration of the building as a state office building instead of its demolition 29 After a period of neglect the building now houses Missouri state offices 6 See also editList of tallest buildings in St Louis National Register of Historic Places listings in St Louis Missouri List of National Historic Landmarks in MissouriNotes edit Sullivan also designed the Wainwright Tomb in St Louis s Bellefontaine Cemetery for his wife Charlotte Dickson Wainwright References edit a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 Wainwright Building National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on March 1 2009 Retrieved June 28 2008 Wainwright Building Structurae skyscraper The Columbia Encyclopedia New York Columbia University Press 2008 Credo Reference Web 25 March 2011 Wright Frank Lloyd 1931 The Tyranny of the Skyscraper Modern Architecture Princeton Princeton University Press 85 a b Best of Political Fix St Louis Post Dispatch February 12 2009 Bear Rob May 10 2013 Mapping PBS s 10 Buildings That Changed America Curbed com Retrieved May 13 2013 a b c Korom Joseph J 2008 The American Skyscraper 1850 1940 A Celebration of Height Branden Books pp 167 ISBN 978 0 8283 2188 4 Wainwright Building Elstein Rochelle Berger Spring Summer 2005 Adler amp Sullivan The End of the Partnership and Its Aftermath Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 98 1 2 51 81 van Zanten David March April 2002 Master of the Skyscraper Humanities 23 2 THE CHICAGO SCHOOL BEAUX ARTS AND THE CITY BEAUTIFUL The Greenwood Encyclopedia of American Regional Cultures The Midwest Santa Barbara ABC CLIO 2004 Credo Reference Web 25 March 2011 Sullivan Louis H March 1896 The tall office building artistically considered Lippincott s Magazine Condit Carl W 1973 The Chicago School of Architecture A History of Commercial and Public Building in the Chicago Area 1875 1925 University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 11455 4 Sullivan quoted in David Van Zanten Sullivan s city the meaning of ornament for Louis Sullivan Sullivan Louis H The Reader s Companion to American History Boston Houghton Mifflin 1991 Retrieved March 25 2011 subscription required Hoffman p 3 Morrison Hugh Louis Sullivan Prophet of Modern Architecture W W Norton Company New York 1963 c 1935 p 146 Mike Michaelson April 19 2009 More than meets the arch Post Tribune Mark Sommer October 6 2010 Guaranty glows in film role Landmark featured in documentary on famous architect The Buffalo News a b Sullivan Louis H Encyclopedia of Urban America The Cities and Suburbs Santa Barbara ABC CLIO 1998 Retrieved March 25 2011 subscription required a b Hoffman p 5 Glaeser Edward 2011 How Skyscrapers Can Save the City Atlantic Monthly 307 2 40 53 ISSN 1072 7825 List of Recovered Buildings National Historic Landmarks Program NHL Archived 2009 03 01 at the Wayback Machine Wainwright Building St Louis Historic Preservation Matthew Hathaway December 2 2008 New boss at Landmarks juggles many challenges Revitalization of Arch grounds could be agency s biggest preservation battle St Louis Post Dispatch David Bonetti and Diane Toroian Keaggy July 27 2008 Gone but not forgotten We asked our panel of experts to select demolished buildings that have left an unfillable gap in the cityscape or the city s collective memory St Louis Post Dispatch John D Randall ARCHITECT JOHN D RANDALL HELPED TO BUILD SIUE FOUGHT TO SAVE WAINWRIGHT BUILDING St Louis Post Dispatch January 16 1999 SourcesGlaeser Edward 2011 How Skyscrapers Can Save the City Atlantic Monthly 307 2 40 53 ISSN 1072 7825 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form PDF Missouri Department of Natural Resources Retrieved May 30 2008 Hoffmann Donald January 13 1998 Frank Lloyd Wright Louis Sullivan and the skyscraper Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 40209 3 Retrieved March 27 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wainwright Building Images and architectural information Wainwright Building photographs University of Missouri St Louis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wainwright Building amp oldid 1169591826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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