Posts Tagged ‘Olympics’

Richard M. Daley Remade the Face of Chicago – Despite Controversy

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Whether you loved him or hated him, Mayor Richard M. Daley left an indelible mark on Chicago’s landscape.  Richard M. Daley dropped a bombshell on Chicago with his announcement that – after serving as mayor for 21 years, longer than his father Richard J. Daley – he would not seek an unprecedented seventh term.  As citizens and pundits pondered the reasoning behind the decision and political hopefuls immediately started jockeying to be his replacement, the Chicago Tribune‘s architectural critic Blair Kamin wrote that the mayor “changed the face of his city as well as its tired Rust Belt image.”

According to Kamin, Daley “was the Boss and the Builder – a democratically elected king who could remake vast swaths of the city at will.  He ruled with an iron fist and a green thumb, and he often used the power of the former to carry out the agenda of the latter.”  Daley’s legacy includes planting more than 600,000 trees, building more than 85 miles of landscaped medians and building more than 7,000,000 SF of green roofs.  Public construction of schools, police stations and firehouses are designed with energy-saving LEED standards.  “All that greenery was simply the beginning of Daley’s efforts to transform Chicago from a City Functional, where utilitarian concerns were paramount, into a City Beautiful, where quality of life issues carried equal weight,” Kamin wrote.  “Indeed, Daley’s long tenure – and his unchallenged grip on power – allowed him to take urban design risks that other mayors, nervously contemplating the next election, would be too timid to try.”

Other important public works projects carried out by the Daley administration include the de-malling of the State Street bus corridor; the renovation of Navy Pier into a tourist mecca; the construction of Millennium Park over an unsightly rail yard; the creation of the Museum Campus along the lakefront; and the controversial overhaul of Soldier Field – a move that deprived the stadium of its National Historic Landmark status.

“Daley’s style of operating often seemed to come straight from the playbook of Robert Moses, the all-powerful, mid-20th Century New York ‘master builder.’  Moses believed it was better to get things done now and apologize to his critics later,” according to Kamin.  “Yet Daley rarely apologized, earning him a reputation for arrogance as well as boldness.  Outside Chicago, his high-handedness didn’t cost him.  Within the city, it bred deep resentment, particularly when the economy turned sour.”

As someone who arrived in Chicago when Daley came to power, I saw first hand the transformation of our city into a world-class metropolis.  The redevelopment and architectural boldness did much more than re-inscribe our physical environment – it made the city cosmopolitan and multi-cultural, a focus for exciting ideas and a largeness of spirit, which still surprises people who travel here.  Daley leaves a legacy.

Chicago 2016 Shouldn’t End

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Chicago Olyimpics ReactionAlthough Chicago’s 2016 Olympic dreams were shattered on October 2, the experience should be a learning experience about shaping the city’s future.

According to Blair Kamin, the Chicago Tribunes Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic, “It’s all about whether Chicago can transform its grand defeat on the international stage into a back-to-basics victory on the home front, taking the best ideas from its Olympic quest and carrying them forward to make a better city and better lives.”

Kamin provides these examples:

The long-neglected south lakefront can be given new life with the redevelopment of the former Michael Reese Hospital campus into a mixed-income residential community.  Even though the City of Chicago seems determined to tear down the entire site, preservationist Grahm Balkany believes that the buildings co-designed by noted modernist architect Walter Gropius are worth saving and should be incorporated into the redevelopment.

The Frederick Law Olmsted-designed Washington Park – which was to have been the setting for the main Olympic stadium and aquatic center – is now well-known to Chicagoans because of the publicity it received.  Perhaps it’s time for the Chicago Park District to turn its attention to enhancing this major recreational resource on the city’s South Side.

Chicago’s blue-green city concept – an environmental theme to conserve water, save energy and recycle resources – should not be limited to the failed Olympic bid.  The concept is a sound one and the city should implement this program to improve the quality of life for every Chicagoan.

The Olympic bid doesn’t need to go to waste.  It was a $72 million, three-year master-planning project and we shouldn’t cast it away.

Chicago 2016 Had its Rewards, But Also Risks

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

So Chicago was eliminated in the first round of International Olympic Committee voting as the host city for the 2016 Summer Olympics, a source of great surprise to many, particularly in light of Barack Obama making the final pitch personally.chicago202016

Still, one thing bears repeating:  no city hosting the games has ever made money from the Olympics. Los Angeles’ $233 million surplus only took direct expenses into account; it did not include indirect expenses such as security and infrastructure.  Montreal took 30 years to pay off their Olympic debt.  Nagano, Japan’s Olympics were so costly and controversial that the city’s Olympic organizers destroyed the games’ financial records.

“There has never been an Olympic Games that has made a profit,” notes Robert Barney, director of the International Centre for Olympic Studies at the University of Western Ontario and co-author of Selling the Five Rings:  The International Olympic Committee and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism.  Add in all costs and revenues “including federal allotments, state allotments, it’s always been that a debt has to be paid somewhere.”

On the plus side, Chicago 2016 would have been a tremendous boost to the city’s international trade, (though it would have impacted tourism only slightly).  Then there’s the unquantifiable brand enhancement.  Chicago 2016 might have been the catalyst to wipe away the moniker of the City of Al Capone forever.

In the spirit of good sportsmanship, we send our congratulations to the host city of the 2016 Summer Olympics – Rio de Janeiro.  The first South American city to host the games, few in Chicago can begrudge Rio its victory.