Should the State of Illinois sell the Thompson Center?
News came last week that the libertyloving Mr. Rauner wants to free the people of Illinois from the James R. Thompson Center in Chicago. He took steps to establish its fair market value, thus taking the first step toward a possible sale of the 30-year-old building as surplus property. The news shocked no one. The thousand of Springfieldians who have visited it either as state employees or tourists are familiar with the building’s glare, its noise, its spotty heating and cooling, its inefficient use of space. If a camel is a horse designed by committee, the Thompson Center is an office building commissioned by the State of Illinois.
The Thompson Center was designed by Helmut Jahn, then of Murphy/Jahn, Architects. Jahn is a very successful and intermittently capable architect. His
design for what was first known as the State of Illinois Building – a
building open to all meant to house a government open to all – was a
noble gesture. Unfortunately, metaphors usually make lousy buildings.
Architect Jahn created a marvelous public space, but gave Illinois a
poor public building that had problems from its opening, and cost double
the original estimate to boot.
The
Thompson Center’s lousiness made it influential in Illinois, in a
perverse way. Two years after the then State of Illinois Center opened
in 1985, the City of Chicago undertook its own major building project – a
new central library. This is Chicago, remember, so it was a big
project; the finished building ended up in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest public library building in the world.
Rather than commission an architect privately,
as the Thompson administration had done, the city called for a public
“design/ build” competition. (Jahn’s was one of the five firms to submit
a design for the library.) Critics complained at the time that the aim
of the process was not good design but risk management – and the risk
the city wanted to manage was that of ending up with a Thompson Center.
Stung by complaints that Jahn’s building didn’t look like anybody’s idea
of a state government building, too many of the library competition’s
judges opted for the design that looked most like everybody’s idea of a
public library. The result was not merely a flawed building, in my
opinion, but a failed one.
The
Thompson Center also confirmed then- Secretary of State Jim Edgar in
his intention to build a new state library in Springfield that would be
the antithesis of “starship Illinois.”
Edgar later recalled that
Michael Madigan was skeptical of Edgar’s request for funding to build
the project. “He was afraid it was going to look like the State of
Illinois Building, too,” said Edgar. “I said, ‘It’s going to look like
the rest of the Capitol complex. It’s going to look like it’s always
been here. It’s going to have pillars….’” Should the Thompson Center be
sold? The egregious Blagojevich also wanted to sell it, which is good
evidence that it is a bad idea. More to the point, can it be
sold? It’s problematic as office space, but what else could it be used
for? A hotel? A mall? More than one wag has suggested that an aging
spaceship on Randolph would make a good home for George Lucas’ museum of
kitsch.
Officials in Oregon’s biggest city are facing the same dilemma with their main office building. The
Portland Building, by post-modernist Michael Graves, opened three years
before Jahn’s building. Whimsical on the outside, the building inside is
dark, it leaks and it is cramped. People don’t like to work in it, and
the city doesn’t like to keep spending money to maintain it. As the
State of Illinois has done with its building, the City of Portland
neglected Graves’ building for years, ignoring major structural problems
that now will take some $100 million to fix. The alternative is to tear
it down and build something new that would cost probably four times
that much.
In an interview last summer, Tribune architecture
critic Blair Kamin referred to the Thompson Center as state
government’s de facto Capitol in Chicago. It isn’t, really; it has no
ceremonial or no legislative chambers, and the decisions that determine
Illinois’ political, social and economic agendas are not made at Clark
and Randolph but in the office suites in the corporate towers that
surround it. What the Thompson Center is, sadly, is not Chicago’s
Capitol but Chicago’s Stratton Building.
Nonetheless,
the Thompson Center is a major building, and for all its faults it is a
fitting venue for the people’s business in Chicago – indeed, in some
ways it is such a venue because of its faults. (Not all the metaphors
that a building expresses are intended by the architect.) Selling a
building like this instead of fixing it is no different from cutting a
social program instead of reforming it. As solutions, both are simple,
and achieve short-term returns at the cost of long-term gains – in
short, they are business solutions. Let’s hope Illinois’ new CEO learns
to be a governor before he makes a deal for it the rest of us will
regret.
Contact James Krohe Jr. at [email protected].
Editor’s note
Jim
Langfelder’s decisive win for mayor should give him the confi dence to
breathe energy into city hall. His fi rst order of business is to
recruit new leadership for City, Water, Light and Power, where his
campaign emphasized not only transparency but a shift toward clean
energy and renewable fuels. Next he’ll want to ask some of the Houston
administration’s best cabinet members to stay on – but not too many,
because voters are eager to see fresh faces and new ideas. While hiring,
he’ll remember his pledge to reach out to minorities and women, where
he’ll fi nd many eager to serve. The city council, with a half dozen new
faces, is eager to hear from him and to be heard by him. Langfelder is
untested, but seems just right for the time and the task at hand. We
look forward to watching him go to work. –Fletcher Farrar, editor and
publisher
Cover
photo is by Bill Stokes, publisher of Springfi eld Scene magazine, and
is reprinted by permission. In photo, from left to right, are Ted and
Dawn Henry in character as Elizabeth and Ninian Edwards, Pam Brown and
Fritz Klein in character as Mary and Abraham Lincoln, Drs. Sandra Yeh
and Greg Kane in character as Julia and Senator Lyman Trumbull, Laura
and Jonathan Reyman in character as Helen and Benjamin Edwards, and Tim
Connors in character as Stephen A. Douglas. The historical characters
were among the guests at a February dinner to celebrate the completion
of the Edwards Place restoration. See cover story, p. 13.