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  Category: Intensive Industrial/Commercial
 
 
 
 

Project: Millennium Park, Chicago, Illinois

Award Winner: Terry Guen Design Associates, Inc., Chicago, Illinois
(Project Landscape Architect)

Co-Submitted By: Jeffrey L. Bruce & Company
(Irrigation, Great Lawn and Turf Consultant)

Owner: City of Chicago, Chicago Department of Transportation, Public Building Commission of Chicago

Operator: The City of Chicago, Richard M. Daley, Mayor; The Chicago Park District; Millennium Park Inc., John Bryan, Chair (park donors)

Project Director: Edward K. Uhlir, FAIA

 
 
 
 

click here for hi-res .jpg Millennium Park is perhaps the largest intensive green roof project in the world! This 24.5 acre public park was dedicated July 16, 2004, as a crowning civic achievement in the City of Chicago (and Mayor Richard Daley's) 15-year quest to "green" an industrial metropolis and develop cultural arts. This green roof construction furthered Daniel Burnham's 1908 plan for the 320 acre Grant Park, by completing the historic park's northwest corner and consequently stabilizing and stimulating new economic growth at this edge of Chicago's downtown. What was once gravel and pavement is now artwork and green space with over 900 trees, shrubs, groundcovers, perennials, annuals and growing medium which absorbs and polishes storm water, cleans the air, reduces the urban heat island and provides multiple social, cultural and economic benefits.

City agencies and a private donor group, Millennium Park, Inc., partnered to champion and direct this vision, as well as raise the $480 million project cost. The overall project objective was to create a free cultural venue for Chicagoans and tourists with a focus on providing a new state-of-the-art outdoor music facility. The secondary goal was to remove (or cover) the unsightly train terminal, railway lines, and 800 space surface parking lot, which occupied this prominent location within Chicago's front yard. Transformation of the underutilized rail yard and deteriorated underground parking facility into Millennium Park was guided by City agencies, the Donor group, artists, landscape architects, architects, engineers, construction managers, and contractors, requiring six years between 1998 and 2004 for design and construction.

The design of the new park has transformed the physical and economic vitality of this foremost City location. While matching the patterns of the historic Michigan Avenue frontage, the park comfortably integrates cutting-edge technology and art into a multilevel contemporary usable public space. The park holds not one, but many now renowned works of architecture, fountains, sculpture, and botanic garden spaces, as well as grand performance facilities, restaurants, and a skating rink. The green roof covers two new subterranean parking garages with 4,000 spaces, a multi-modal transit center including a bridge over the existing railroad lines and station, and a 1,525-seat indoor performance theater.

The layout of the park connects pedestrian circulation from the city blocks of Michigan Avenue, along two walkways lined with formal double rows of pear trees blooming white in the spring. Separate "rooms" defined by allees of elm, maple, crabapple, and hawthorn trees provide space for the Wrigley Square fountain and peristyle, the McCormick Tribune Skating Rink/Dining Terrace at the Park Grill, and the Crown Fountain whose fifty foot height video towers projects 1000 faces of Chicagoans. In the center of the Park, on top of the restaurant roof sits the "Cloud Gate" silver bean sculpture, reflecting the lakefront, city, sky, and all visitors in between.

The Lurie Garden is a 3-acre botanic garden featuring a grand "shoulder hedge" of mixed arborvitae, beech, and carpinus trees. The hedge creates a visual separation from the active public areas of the park, and shelters the contemporary garden of 26,000 perennial plants of 140 varieties which depict a vignette of the pre-settlement Midwest landscape with blended sweeps of blooming flowering plants and grasses. This continuous display of color and textures highlights native prairie perennial plants and non-native perennials grouped as combinations within plant communities, selected for cultural compatibility, display value, and dependability.

The centerpiece of the park is the Pritzker Pavilion, and BP Pedestrian Bridge, constructed of enormous sculptural plates of curvilinear stainless steel. The 4000 seat Pavilion is home to the Grant Park Music Festival, which provides free performances throughout the summer. The Pavilion is backdrop to the 7,000 seats Great Lawn; a 95,000 square foot reinforced natural turf lawn, spanned by a grand steel trellis, which holds lighting, and a state of the art sound system. Designed for extreme traffic use and recovery through use of emerging turf technology, the Great Lawn includes a layered high performance drainage system.

Because the structural deck was designed to support four-feet of growing medium, the park design is not limited by of the pattern of the structural columns below. Growing medium for most park areas is a natural, locally available sandy loam or a blended soil based on a local sandy loam mix. The end result is varying profiles of growing medium with sand drainage throughout the project ranging from 8 inches to 4-foot depth.

The entire 24.5 acre deck was waterproofed with a hot-applied rubberized membrane system. Styrofoam fill was used to create landforms, which did not exceed the designed load capacity. Below the green roof, the subterranean parking areas provide direct pedestrian connections to the theatre and restaurants. Two reinforced concrete cast-in-place garages support most of the roof deck, while a combination of steel structure and pre-cast concrete structural tees span the railroad tracks.

Economic stimulation of area real estate includes seven adjacent condominium developments, which directly attribute their success to the construction of the park. A projected 3 to 4 million additional Park tourism visits to the City for 2005 translates into a major financial benefit for the City. This project is proof that an innovative public-private funded partnership can spearhead a major public works construction project and achieve a product that serves as public open space, as well as provides an unprecedented center for world-class art, music, architecture and landscape architecture. Millennium Park also proves that carefully conceived urban centers can be redesigned with green roofs, changing key locations of civic blight into cultural and economic amenities, and generators of urban pride.

 
  Listing of full Millennium Park Project Team:

West Phase Finishes (2001-2002)
URS Corporation – Project Management
McDonough Associates – Project Engineer
Terry Guen Design Associates – Project Landscape Architect
Carol JH Yetken – Landscape Architect
Jeffrey L. Bruce & Co. – Irrigation Design
Christopher B. Burke Engineering Ltd., Pat Kelsey – Soil Scientist
City of Chicago Department of Forestry
The Chicago Park District
The Morton Arboretum
Skidmore Owings Merrill
– West Phase Architect, McCormick Tribune Skating Rink
OWP&P – Architect Wrigley Peristyle, Wrigley Square
Walsh Construction Corporation of Illinois -General Contractor
Christy Webber Landscapes – Landscape Contractor
James Michael Co. – Landscape Contractor

East Phase Finishes (2003-2004)
URS Corporation – Project Management
McDonough Associates – Project Engineer, Project Architect, Engineer for Lurie Garden
Terry Guen Design Associates – Project Landscape Architect, Landscape Architect for Lurie Garden
Carol JH Yetken – Landscape Architect
Jeffrey L. Bruce & Co. – Irrigation Design, Irrigation Design for Lurie Garden
Christopher B. Burke Engineering Ltd., Pat Kelsey – Soil Scientist
City of Chicago Department of Forestry
The Chicago Park District
The Morton Arboretum
The Chicago Botanic Garden
Gehry Partners
– Architect for Pritzker Pavilion, Trellis, BP Bridge
The Talaske Group – Acoustical Consultant and Audio Systems Design
Schuler & Shook – Project Designer, Theater Consultant and Lighting Design, Harris Theatre, Pritzker Pavilion, Lurie Garden
Skidmore Owings Merrill – Structural Engineer Pritzker Pavilion, BP Bridge
Hammond Beebe Rupert Aigne – Architect for Harris Theatre for Music & Dance, Excelon Pavilions at the Harris Theatre
Mueller & Mueller – Architect for Chicago Department of Transportation Bike Station
Daniel Weinbach and Partners – Landscape Architect for Bike Station, Crown Fountain
James McHugh Construction – General Contractor, East Phase Site Finishes
Valley Crest Landscape Development – Landscape Contractor for the Great Lawn, East Phase Park, Harris Theatre Green Roof
Walsh Construction Corporation of Illinois -General Contractor for Pritzker Pavilion & Trellis, BP Bridge, Exelon Pavilions north & south, the Lurie Garden
Christy Webber Landscapes – Landscape Contractor for the Lurie Garden, Crown Fountain
Beary Landscaping – Landscape Contractor for the east BP Bridge Landing
Gustafson Guthrie Nichol – Landscape Architect, Architect for Lurie Garden
Piet Oudolf – Landscape & Perennial Design for Lurie Garden
Robert Israel - Landscape Design for Lurie Garden
Renzo Piano Building Workshop – Architect for Exelon Pavilions at Lurie Garden
KPFF -Structural and Consulting Engineers for Lurie Garden
CMS Collaborative - Fountain Design for Lurie Garden
EME - Mechanical and Electrical Engineer for Lurie Garden
Spectrum Strategies – Project Management for the Lurie Garden, Exelon Pavilions
US Equities Development – Project Management for Pritzker Pavilion & Trellis, BP Bridge, Cloud Gate Sculpture, Crown Fountain
Anish Kapoor – Artist for Cloud Gate Sculpture “the Bean”
Ove Arup – Engineer for Cloud Gate
Performance Structures – Fabricator of Cloud Gate Sculpture
Jaume Plensa – Artist for the Crown Fountain
Krueck & Sexton – Architects for Crown Fountain
Halverson Kaye SE – Engineer for Crown Fountain
WE O’Neill Construction – General Contractor for Crown Fountain

 
  To view pictures and profiles of the other 2005 winners, please return to our main awards page.