All in Architecture

Pretty Flamingo

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The landscape has changed significantly in since I moved to Chicago 25 years ago.  Some change for the good, other change not so good.  Developers have all but destroyed the branch of the Chicago River that bisects the north from the south.

The Pit

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Soon it will be impossible to reproduce anything that looks like this photograph.  The finished building will yield images that are largely differentiated by atmospheric conditions.  The building will the same in every image.

Frozen Shards

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At 1PM, the temperature is down to 5-degrees Fahrenheit, but the wind chill makes it feel like 10 to 15 degrees below-zero.  Layers are essential, but unfortunately, I have not found a pair of gloves that allows me to operate at camera without taking them off.

Parasite or Love?

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Two days after the Apple store moved several blocks south on Michigan Avenue to its new riverfront location, I stopped by the old Apple store to see what remained.  I was greeted by an all-black wall where a sleek glass storefront once welcomed me, with what was for me an intriguing statement stenciled in white: "We would never leave you."

A Wet Fall Day

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I am standing dead center on the BP Bridge, which connects Chicago's Millennium Park with the newer Maggie Daley Park.  The bridge is one of the most frustrating photographic subjects in Chicago.  Designed by famed architect Frank Gehry, its stainless steel parapets and hardwood planked floor slithers across Columbus Drive, bringing children and their parents to the two gigantic climbing walls, an ice skating ribbon, and the playground areas that makeup much of Daley Park.

Apple of Concord

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Finally, after at least a year and half, Apple's new flagship store opened tonight at 5PM, with Apple CEO Tim Cook on the premises.  The hordes were out there, worshipping the glass monolith just as the apes worshipped the black monolith in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey.  From the monolith comes knowledge.  

Taco Tragedy

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The Cubs will not be repeating this year thanks to a powerful LA Dodger team, but that is not the only tragedy befalling Wrigleyville, Cubs fans, and late night drunks at bar time.  News broke in early August that the much beloved Taco Bell at 111 West Addison would be closing, to be replaced with a shiny new 39,755 square foot three-story retail development.

Buckingham Fountain

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This photograph is either a two or four-minute exposure at F32 and ISO 100.  I was using the iPad wireless app to trigger the shutter, and the camera appears to have recorded the shutter speed shown on the dial rather than the one I inputed into the application.  My camera was fitted with a 10-stop neutral density filter, which explains the silky water and fuzzy clouds.

No One on Balconies

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I hate balconies, particularly when they are added to classic brick buildings.  The developers will tell you that apartments and condos must have balconies to make them attractive,  Yet, aside from storing grills on them, nobody seems to use them.  Look closely at this photograph.  It is a beautiful Saturday afternoon in August.  Not a single person is on any of the balconies.

From the Ace Hotel Chicago

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The photograph was taken from the rooftop bar of the Ace Chicago Boutique Hotel.  If I had guests in town, I might suggest staying here.  It is a little off the beaten path if the Michigan Avenue, Lake Michigan, and Millennium Park are your destinations, but they are all a relatively quick "L" or cab ride away.  One thing is for sure, this neighborhood is now restaurant central.

Curving Up the Skyscraper

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The photograph may not fully capture the effect of the curve, but someone standing at the base, looking up, first sees the actual bend.  If the person stares long enough, the top of the building appears to bend back over the person, which is just an illusion.

The Dubuffet Reflected

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A few weeks back I said that I have had trouble capturing an image of the Jean Dubuffet sculpture that sits in front of Helmut Jahn's State of Illinois building.  While heading out from today's 50th-anniversary reenactment of the the unveiling of the Picasso statue in Daley Plaza, I passed the west wall of the Daley Plaza.  I had noticed the reflection before, but today the colors were striking and I liked the tableau of pedestrians.   Not much more to say.