Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Field Building (Chicago)

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Location
  
Roof
  
535 ft (163 m)

Official name
  
Field Building

Floors
  
45

Floor area
  
11 ha

Completed
  
1934

Floor count
  
45 total

Height
  
163 m

Opened
  
1934

Construction started
  
1931

Field Building (Chicago) Field Building

Alternative names
  
LaSalle National Bank BuildingBank of America Building

Architecture firm
  
Graham, Anderson, Probst & White

Similar
  
Roanoke Building, LaSalle‑Wacker Building, Montauk Building, Pittsfield Building, Time‑Life Building

The Field Building, also known as the LaSalle National Bank Building and Bank of America Building is an art deco office building at 135 South LaSalle Street in the Loop community area of Chicago, Illinois in the United States. The building was designated a Chicago Landmark February 9, 1994.

Contents

Field Building (Chicago) Field Building Chicago 1934 CHI060633420FieldBuilding Flickr

History and description

The construction of the Field Building was completed 1934 as a 535 feet (163 m) 45-storey skyscraper on the site bounded by South Clark Street, South LaSalle Street and West Adams Street. The architect was the firm of Graham, Anderson, Probst & White. It is considered the last major office building erected in Chicago prior to the Great Depression/World War II construction hiatus which ended with the building of One Prudential Plaza in 1955.

Field Building (Chicago) LaSalle Bank Building Chicago 117618 EMPORIS

Many of the latest innovations such as high-speed elevators and air conditioning were incorporated into the building’s design. The lobby features a multi-level arcade between LaSalle and Clark Streets allowing pedestrians to walk between the two streets and access the retail space without exiting the building. The elevator indicator panel and mailbox in the lobby are in an integrated design which resembles the building’s exterior shape.

Field Building (Chicago) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The building rises from a four-story base that covers the entire site. The exterior of the first story is faced in polished black granite. Windows are framed with polished aluminum or monel metal and have black and polished aluminum spandrel panels. The entrances on the east and west facades rise the entire height of the base and are also framed in black granite. Five pilasters faced in white Yule marble separate the bays containing revolving doors that provide access to the lobby.

Field Building (Chicago) Field Building Chicago 1934 Minecraft Project

The upper stories are sheathed in limestone with windows grouped vertically and recessed to emphasize the building’s height. The 45-story rectangular tower is centered on the base and buttressed by a shorter 22-story tower at each of its four corners.

Field Building (Chicago) Field Building Chicago 1934 Minecraft Project

Several buildings occupied this site until construction commenced in 1931. The world's first skyscraper, the Home Insurance Building (1884-1931), occupied the western portion facing LaSalle and Adams Streets.

Utilization

Field Building (Chicago) Chicago Water Tower Time Tells

Much of the building's rentable area was occupied by the LaSalle Bank, with the remainder occupied by various private tenants. In 2007, LaSalle Bank was sold by its European owner ABN AMRO to Bank of America and the building's name changed to the Bank of America Building. In August 2008, the Bank sold the building to AmTrust but continues to occupy 800,000 feet (240,000 m) of the 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m2) in the building under a lease that runs through 2020.

Mechanical spaces are located at the 25th and 45th floor levels. The 43rd and 44th floors house executive dining rooms for use by the bank and selected other tenants, with a cafeteria located on the concourse level. The west side of the ground floor is utilized by Bank of America for retail banking, with the east side rented to merchants. The rest of the floors consist of typical office space. As was customary in the 1930s, the building does not have a 13th floor.

References

Field Building (Chicago) Wikipedia