Rookery Building Delaware Building Washington Block Haskell-Barker-Atwater Buildings Reliance Building Leiter II Building Manhattan Building Monadnock Block Old Colony Building Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Building Gage Group Chicago Building Heyworth Building Marquette Building Ludington Building Auditorium Building Page Brothers Building Fisher Building Brooks Building Yale Apartments New York Life Building
Early Skyscrapers Tour
Following the Chicago Fire of 1871, the City's Common Council banned the building of wooden structures within the city limits. As the industrial revolution arrived, along with the growth of Chicago into a city of half a million, traditional urban centralization occurred and the business district known as "The Loop" was born.

An escalation in land prices forced lot owners to maximize available space. This, combined with advancements in engineering and services such as electricity and the elevator, saw architects starting to think vertically.

The city's swampy land base created challenges for building designers, as these buildings created a tremendous weight load on their foundation. This tour showcases the remaining landmarks from this important developmental period, and reflect the ingenuity of the architects of the first great skyscrapers -- from the first masonry-based buildings, to early 20th century steel frame structures.

Bear in mind that the term "skyscraper" has changed in meaning dramatically over the last 100 years. Today we think of the Hancock Building and Sears Tower, buildings well over 100 stories and 1,000 feet high. The first Chicago building called a skyscraper, the since demolished Montauk Building, topped the 1882 Chicago skyline at a then-dizzying 10 stories.

  1. Page Brothers Building
  2. Washington Block
  3. Rookery Building
  4. Auditorium Building
  5. Leiter II Building
  6. Manhattan Building
  7. Ludington Building
  8. Yale Apartments
  9. New York Life Building
  10. Old Colony Building
  11. Marquette Building
  12. Fisher Building
  13. Gage Group
  14. Chicago Building
  15. Heyworth Building
  16. Brooks Building
  17. Monadnock Block
  18. Haskell-Barker-Atwater Buildings
  19. Reliance Building
  20. Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Building
  21. Delaware Building

Landmarks Home
Tours
Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War Tour
African-American History Tour
Art Deco Tour
Boul Mich Tour
Churches & Synagogues Tour
Early Skyscrapers Tour
Education Tour
Great Interiors Tour
Innovative Housing Tour
Labor and Industry Tour
Mansions Tour
Music & Art Tour
Parks Tour
Prairie School Tour
Pre-Fire Chicago Tour
Railroad and Bridges Tour
Terra Cotta Tour
The Loop Tour
The Modern Era Tour

You will find tour links in this location on every page. Look for this arrow to continue the Early Skyscrapers Tour tour.

 
 
 

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