Marquette Building

Click for Larger View     Address: 140 S. Dearborn St.
Year Built: 1895
Architect: Holabird & Roche
Date Designated a Chicago Landmark:
June 9, 1975

Door Detail In this building, an appropriate exterior aesthetic expression for the then-new, steel-framed skyscraper was found. The facade clearly reveals its underlying structure--with broad windows set in a framework of narrow piers and spandrels. Its open and well-lit interior layout, built around a central light court, significantly influenced the design of modern high-rise commercial structures. The building is named for Jacques Marquette, a French Jesuit missionary and explorer who, in 1674-75, wintered in the area that is now Chicago. The lobby is decorated with mosaic panels made by the Tiffany firm and bronze heads of native Americans, animals, and early explorers.

Construction View     Lobby

Holabird &
Roche/Root

 
Early Skyscrapers
Great Interiors
Terra Cotta
The Loop
 
1.View circa 1895, by J.W. Taylor
2.Door Detail, photo by Barbara Crane
3.Construction View, 1895
4.Lobby