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Inland Steel Building

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Construction started
  
1956

Roof
  
332 feet (101.2 m)

Height
  
101 m

Opened
  
1958

Completed
  
1957

Area
  
0.5 acres (0.2 ha)

Floors
  
19

Architectural style
  
International Style

Inland Steel Building

Location
  
30 W. Monroe Street Chicago, Illinois

Location
  
30 W. Monroe St., Chicago, Illinois

Address
  
30 W Monroe St, Chicago, IL 60603, USA

Architecture firm
  
Skid, Owings & Merrill

Architects
  
Bruce Graham, Walter Netsch

Similar
  
Roanoke Building, Joffrey Tower, Pittsfield Building, Grant Thornton Tower, Hyatt Center

Inland steel building steel tower u s a


The Inland Steel Building, located at 30 W. Monroe Street in Chicago, is one of the city's defining commercial high-rises of the post-World War II era of modern architecture. It was built in the years 1956–1957 and was the first skyscraper to be built in the Chicago Loop following the Great Depression of the 1930s. Its principal designers were Bruce Graham and Walter Netsch of the Skidmore, Owings & Merrill architecture firm.

Contents

Inland steel building design of the corporate headquarters


Architecture

The use of brushed stainless steel cladding reflects the corporation that commissioned the building as its headquarters, the Inland Steel Company.

The placement of all structural columns on the building's perimeter—and the consolidation of elevators and other service functions in a separate tower—allowed for a highly flexible interior floor layout with no interior columns. This design is a good example of the widely held principle of the era, "form follows function" (Louis Sullivan). The lobby features a sculpture of gold, stainless steel and enameled copper by Richard Lippold entitled Radiant I.

The Inland Steel Building was designated a Chicago Landmark on October 7, 1998.

References

Inland Steel Building Wikipedia