Jonathan Cohen's photos

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29 Sep 2018

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414 visits

The Cable House – Magnificent Mile, East Erie Street, Chicago, Illinois, United States

The Cable House is a Richardsonian Romanesque-style house near Michigan Avenue at 25 East Erie Street in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The house was built in 1886 by Cobb and Frost for socialite Ransom R. Cable. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on October 2, 1991. In 1902, the house was purchased by Robert Hall McCormick for his son, Robert Hall McCormick III. This was where Marconi stayed in Chicago in 1917. The house is located in a part of the Near North Side neighborhood west of Michigan Avenue that was once dubbed "McCormicksville," due to the concentration of McCormick family members living there within a few blocks of each other. The Cable House is currently occupied by the offices of Driehaus Capital Management, which is operated by Chicago financier, preservationist and philanthropist Richard H. Driehaus. His Richard H. Driehaus Museum is located across the intersection in the historic Edward J. Burling-designed Samuel M. Nickerson House at 40 East Erie Street.

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30 Sep 2018

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319 visits

Tiffany Art Glass Dome – Driehaus Museum, Magnificent Mile, East Erie Street, Chicago, Illinois, United States

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30 Sep 2018

281 visits

Gilded Mantle – Driehaus Museum, Magnificent Mile, East Erie Street, Chicago, Illinois, United States

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30 Sep 2018

285 visits

Tiffany Nautilus Shell Lamp – Driehaus Museum, Magnificent Mile, East Erie Street, Chicago, Illinois, United States

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29 Sep 2018

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Driehaus Museum – Magnificent Mile, East Erie Street, Chicago, Illinois, United States

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29 Sep 2018

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363 visits

The "Gwen" Hotel – The Former McGraw-Hill Building, Magnificent Mile, North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, United States

The McGraw-Hill Building was a 16-story, 190-foot-tall (58 m) landmark building in the Near North Side community area of Chicago, Illinois, at 520 N. Michigan Avenue. The facade and its architectural sculpture by Chicago-born artist Gwen Lux were designated a Chicago Landmark on February 7, 1997. The building was demolished in 1998; however, its facade was saved and reinstalled in 2000 on the new Le Méridien Chicago hotel building. The hotel was renamed the Conrad Chicago in 2005. The hotel was again renamed in 2015, becoming The Gwen, for sculptor Gwen Lux, and is part of The Luxury Collection division of Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide.

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29 Sep 2018

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245 visits

Angled Awning – InterContinental Hotel, Magnificent Mile, North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, United States

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29 Sep 2018

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242 visits

Art Deco Staircase – InterContinental Hotel, Magnificent Mile, North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, United States

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29 Sep 2018

352 visits

Curved Awning – InterContinental Hotel, Magnificent Mile, North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, United States

InterContinental Chicago Magnificent Mile is a hotel in Chicago, United States. The hotel currently occupies two multi-story buildings. The historic tower, or "South Tower," is a 471-foot (144 m), 42-story building which was completed in 1929 originally as the home of the Medinah Athletic Club. The new tower, or "North Tower" is a 295-foot (90 m), 26-story addition, completed in 1961 Before the stock market crash of 1929, the United States was experiencing a building boom. One of these projects was the future home of the Medinah Athletic Club in Chicago, commissioned by the Shriners Organization and designed by architect Walter W. Ahlschlager. The Chicago Shriners Club purchased the property at the northeast corner of Michigan Avenue and Illinois Street directly north of the Tribune Tower for $1 million, while $5 million more was spent on building and equipping what was then to be the 42 story Medinah Athletic Club. The plan was for there to be 3500 members, all of whom had to be a Shriner; at the time of the announcement in 1925, 1000 Shriners had taken out founder memberships for the club. The ceremony to lay the cornerstone of the Medinah Athletic Club was held on November 5, 1928, and to commemorate the occasion, a copper time capsule was placed within the cornerstone. The capsule, which currently remains sealed within the hotel’s limestone exterior, contains records of the organization, photographs of members, and a copy of the Chicago Tribune announcing the proposal of the building, as well as coins and other historic data. Construction of the building’s 42 floors and 440 guest rooms was completed in 1929, and its facilities were made available for the exclusive use of the club’s members and guests.
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