“the modern concrete skyscraper” at the skyscraper museum

University Towers, NYC. I.M. Pei. 1966-1967. JSTOR

Happy to announce that after a couple of years of great conversations, deep dives into obscure 1920s issues of Cement Age, and ace model-making by a student team here, The Modern Concrete Skyscraper is opening this week at the Skyscraper Museum in New York. Carol Willis, the Museum’s Director and Founder, approached me about helping to curate an exhibition that would be a ‘gentle corrective’ to the idea that the skyscraper’s evolution was primarily a steel story. “”Steel is a chapter, but it’s not the whole story” is the consistent theme throughout. What we’ve heard from engineers, architects, historians, and what we’ve seen in the historical record presents a much more nuanced and interesting story, where the two materials often worked in concert, often in competition, as skyscraper heights rose throughout the 20th and 21st centuries.

Gair Factory #7, Brooklyn, NYC. Wiliam Higginson/Turner Construction, 1914. Cement Era.

The exhibition looks at the history of concrete–one could argue that the first concrete ‘skyscrapers’ were the Roman insulae, apartment blocks that rose at least five and possibly as high as seven stories–and how the drive for greater height, safety, and efficiency led builders and designers to experiment with concrete as a more fireproof replacement for steel. Over time, research and development also made it competitive in terms of spatial efficiency and speed of construction. Today, the world’s tallest towers and construction sites are concrete, not steel, and the material’s emergence as the system of choice for supertalls is the result of a century of painstaking chemical, structural, and fabricational developments. “The rise of reinforced concrete skyscrapers evolved in several stages and from many influences,” Carol’s summary notes,

“…including architectural aspirations, engineering innovations, advances in the strength of materials and efficiencies in building construction, wind engineering, and computer-assisted design. While most of those changes were hidden from view behind sleek curtain walls or Postmodern ornament, the exhibition exposes the material concept and process in multiple structural models, construction views, and videos.”

However, this history hasn’t been adequately documented or presented previously. Carol asked questions throughout the project that seemed simple–how did flat plate construction become the global standard for residential construction as early as the 1920s, for instance, or why did composite construction–concrete cores with steel framing–become the norm for mid-sized office towers beginning in the late 1980s? The answers to these proved to be complicated but enlightening. Subsequent research uncovered some new stories, found some new heroes, and suggested a handful of buildings that should be in the skyscraper ‘canon’ but have so far been underappreciated by historians of construction and architecture alike.

1000 Lake Shore Plaza, Chicago, IL. Sidney Morris/William Schmidt, 1963-1965).

The exhibition includes models of key buildings–some from the firms that designed them, others newly built by UIUC architecture students–as well as photographs, both new and historical, and diagrams that show the progression of height and technology from the 1905 Ingalls Building in Cincinnati at 16 stories and 210′–what I now think of as a steel framed tower re-imagined in concrete–to the 163-story, 2722′ tall Burj Khalifa, which SOM structural engineer emeritus Bill Baker, has described as a tower “cantilevered out from the crust of the earth.” “The strength and moldability of “liquid stone” into any form,” as the press release for the exhibit notes, “

“…has enabled bold experiments in forms, inside and out, as can be seen in the dramatic voids of the atriums of the architecture of John Portman, the open core of SOM’s Jin Mao tower in Shanghai, or Zaha Hadid’s 1000 Museum in Miami. Another advantage of high-strength concrete is the stiffness it affords for extremely slender buildings such as the “pencil towers” of Manhattan’s Billionaires’ Row, including 432 Park Avenue, a model of which is featured in the show.”

All of this is supplemented by eleven online lectures that have taken place throughout the exhibition’s conception and creation with engineers, architects, critics, and historians who have helped shape the narrative–these are all available online here. They form an outstanding companion to the show now open at the Skyscraper Museum in Battery Park City.

The Skyscraper Museum General Information

Location: 39 Battery Place, Battery Park City, New York, 10280

Hours: Wednesday – Saturday, 12 – 6pm

Admission is FREE, but timed tickets are recommended

Guided gallery tours are available for groups by appointment booking on Tuesday from 10:15am-5pm and on Wednesday-Friday from 10:15am-12pm.

For directions and more information, visit skyscraper.org. For questions, email info@skyscraper.org or call 212-945-6324.

For image inquiries, please contact Daniel J Borrero at Borrero@skyscraper.org or call 212-945-6324. For exhibition & press inquiries, please contact Carol Willis at Caw3@columbia.edu.

CBS Tower, NYC. Eero Saarinen/Paul Weidlinger, 1965. (Image courtesy Eero Saarinen Collection (MS 593). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library).

N. Clifford Ricker and “The Elements of Construction”

Any University of Illinois School of Architecture graduate will recognize the name Nathan Clifford Ricker.  Our library and two school publications are named for him. We’ll waste no opportunity to point out that he was the first American to receive a home-grown architectural degree—in 1873.  He designed several key buildings on the Urbana-Champaign campus, in addition to his own home nearby, and he stayed on as a faculty member (1916), director of the nascent architecture program (1910), and general guiding spirit until 1922.  The School’s reputation for turning out technically-fluent graduates was primarily due to his vision of a program emphasizing building construction, bucking the national trend toward education inspired by the compositional theories and tropes of the French Beaux-Arts.  “Shop Practice,” a hands-on introductory course requiring students to draft and fabricate elements in wood and metal shops, set the early School’s high bar for practical, real-world knowledge and know-how.

Image of the Fair Building under construction, one of many contemporary journal illustrations reprinted by Ricker in The Elements of Construction.

Ricker also compiled a comprehensive textbook on building technology of all sorts for use in his classes here, based on his practice and his diligent reading of seemingly every journal or book that came out on the subject (among other things, Ricker translated and published excerpts from Viollet-le-Duc during his career).  The two volumes of his Elements of Construction were constantly updated; master copies were typed onto vellum. New students ‘printed’ their copies using sunlight and blueprint paper, an agile process that allowed Ricker to slip in new pages as new technologies came online.

The Elements of Construction must have been profoundly influential—Illinois’ students would have taken their copies with them to offices in Chicago and throughout the Midwest.  However, the fragile nature of blueprint paper also meant that the copies would have disintegrated, making it an ephemeral book at best.

Newton A. Wells, Portrait of N. Clifford Ricker, 1917, etching, 7 x 6 in. (17.8 x 15.2 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Chicago Society of Etchers, 1935.13.379

Until now.  My colleague here at Illinois, Marci S. Uihlein, has just published the result of her painstaking research into and reconstruction of Ricker’s book from original blueprints in the School’s archives.  The Elements of Construction: N. Clifford Ricker, Architecture, and the University of Illinois makes the convincing case that Ricker and his textbook deserve to be seen alongside the most important authors on building technology of the era—J.K. Freitag and William Birkmire.  Freitag and Birkmire published vital books on skyscraper design that Elements echoes and enhances. Since Ricker was writing for students who would go on to design many different building types, his book is broader in scope, covering stonework and masonry in addition to iron and steel.  It’s a holistic work that addresses skyscraper technology in the wider context of architectural engineering in general.

This new book reproduces four complete chapters of Ricker’s Elements of Construction: Foundations; Stone Masonry; Bricks, Tiles, and Terra Cotta; and Iron and Steel Construction.  It includes original and reconstructed illustrations from Ricker’s vellums and framing essays by Construction History scholars, including Don Friedman, Tom Peters, Rachel Will, and myself, that put Ricker’s text and pedagogy in context.  The result is a richly detailed overview of architectural technologies and construction in the late 19th and early 20th century—but also of the unique pedagogy that went hand-in-hand with the innovation happening in Chicago, especially, at the time.  It’s also a good read for alumni of the School and anyone interested in the era’s building culture.

Available for pre-order on Bookshop.org and that other site; copies are due to ship March 11.

Ricker’s best-known work on campus–Altgeld Hall (1896-97). Author’s collection.

5icch planning

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That’s the Construction History Society’s fearless leader, Brian Bowen, checking out the Adams Room at the Palmer House, where the 2015 Congress will be held. We’re both in town for the semi-regular meeting of the local organizing committee, and spent the morning going over the Palmer House with a fine toothcomb. Suffice it to say that, in addition to being the oldest continually operated hotel in America. our host venue may be the only hotel on the planet with its own in-house historian. A suitable venue, to say the least…