Millennium Park in Chicago

Millennium Park

Completed | Park | Chicago | Groundbreaking 1998 | Completed 2004 | Views 485 | Added by Urbika, 5 Aug 2010


Links: en.wikipedia.org, chicagoclout.com, millenniumpark.org, skyscrapercity.com |


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Urbika added company Anish Kapoor
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Urbika added company Jaume Plensa
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Urbika added company Gehry Partners, LLP
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Urbika added company Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM)
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Millennium Park is an award-winning center for art, music, architecture and landscape design. From free concerts in the Frank Gehry-designed Jay Pritzker Pavilion, to Jaume Plensa's interactive Crown Fountain, Millennium Park has something for everyone. Tour the Lurie Garden; or have your photo taken by Anish Kapoor's hugely popular Cloud Gate sculpture. Admission is FREE. For more information, visit http://www.millenniumpark.org.


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Millennium Park in Chicago

Millennium Park is a public park located in the Chicago Loop community area of Chicago within Cook County, Illinois, United States. It is a prominent civic center of the city's Lake Michigan lakefront. Completed in 2004, it covers a 24.5-acre (99,000 m2) section of northern Grant Park, previously occupied by Illinois Central rail yards and parking lots. The park, which is bounded by Michigan Avenue, Randolph Street, Columbus Drive and East Monroe Drive, features a variety of public art. Today, Millennium Park trails only Navy Pier as a Chicago tourist attraction.

Planning of the park began in October 1997. Construction began in October 1998 and was completed in July 2004. Millennium Park, which has become the world's largest rooftop garden, was opened in a ceremony on July 16, 2004 as part of a three-day celebration that included an inaugural concert by the Grant Park Orchestra and Chorus. The grand opening festivities included some 300,000 people. The park's design and construction won awards ranging from accessibility to green design. Admission to the park is free. The park features the Cloud Gate, Crown Fountain, Jay Pritzker Pavilion, Lurie Garden and other attractions. The park is connected by bridges to other parts of Grant Park (BP Pedestrian Bridge, Nichols Bridgeway).

The park is considered to be the city's most important project since the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, and it far exceeded its originally proposed budget of $150 million. The final cost of $475 million was borne by Chicago taxpayers and private donors. The city paid $270 million and private donors paid the rest. Private donors assumed roughly half of the financial responsibility for the cost overruns.

The park was finished four years behind schedule and cost approximately three times as much as was initially budgeted. Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley at first placed much of the blame for the delay and cost overrun on Frank Gehry, who designed several parts of the park. Some of the features have changed names due to corporate mergers and acquisitions of Bank One with Chase and SBC Communications with AT&T.

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2 years ago


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Companies involved

Gehry Partners, LLP

Architect United States

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM)

Architect United States

Anish Kapoor

Art and design

Jaume Plensa

Art and design

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