The 10 Best Architectural Buildings in Chicago, Illinois (IL)

August 1, 2021 Christa Meece

The windy city is a cornucopia of modern art, fine dining, cutting edge comedy, and die-hard sports fans. Snap a photo of your reflection in the silver Cloud Gate sculpture at Millennium Park before heading to Grant Park to get hit with the refreshing spray of Buckingham Fountain. There are dozens of museums and theater companies in Chicago, so a cultural experience is never hard to find. You’re sure to laugh your head off at the Second City Theater, the professional launch pad of many famous comedians.
Restaurants in Chicago

1. Skydeck Chicago - Willis Tower

233 S Wacker Drive entrance on Jackson Blvd (south side of building), Chicago, IL 60606-7147 312-875-9696 https://theskydeck.com/
Excellent
55%
Good
30%
Satisfactory
10%
Poor
3%
Terrible
2%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 17,474 reviews

Skydeck Chicago - Willis Tower

No trip to Chicago is complete without a visit to the top of the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere and The Ledge at Skydeck Chicago! Treat yourself to a "one stop Chicago" experience on your journey to the 103rd floor. Enjoy 360-degree views spanning up to 50 miles and 4 states and our most spectacular view - 1,353 feet straight down! "Dare to Stand Out" on The Ledge - glass balconies extending 4.3 Feet outside the building provide a thrilling, once in a lifetime experience!

Reviewed By manjushap1907 - Visakhapatnam, India

A must visit place when u visit Chicago.. A unique experience when you stand in the glass box and have unparalleled views of Chicago city.. Advise don’t visit this place during long weekends as the waiting time is too long and you cannot have a good experience due to the rush of the crowds.. You are given 1-2mins to just take pics and you cannot really enjoy the experience..

2. Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie House

5757 S Woodlawn Ave, Chicago, IL 60637-1698 +1 312-994-4000 [email protected] http://flwright.org/tours/robie
Excellent
64%
Good
26%
Satisfactory
8%
Poor
2%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 808 reviews

Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie House

To ensure the health and safety of our guests, tours at Robie House return on June 11 and are limited to nine guests per time slot. (Updated 6/2/20) The Frederick C. Robie House on the University of Chicago campus is considered one of the most important buildings in the history of American architecture. This Prairie style masterpiece is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site on the 20th Century Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright List. Discover the residence Wright described as “a cornerstone of modern architecture” on guided tours that take in both the exterior and interior of the building. Inspired by the expansive landscape of the Midwest prairie, Wright’s Robie House is the most famous of the architect’s groundbreaking Prairie houses. Public tours are available Thursday - Monday. The museum is closed Tuesday and Wednesday. Visit flwright.org to learn more.

Reviewed By reneeu435

We enjoyed the tour and wished we had been able to take the in-depth tour. I have toured a couple FLW houses and this one is beautifully restored.

3. Chicago Cultural Center

78 E Washington St, Chicago, IL 60602-4801 +1 312-744-3316 http://www.chicagoculturalcenter.org/
Excellent
68%
Good
27%
Satisfactory
5%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 2,992 reviews

Chicago Cultural Center

The Chicago Cultural Center is the nation's first free municipal cultural center and one of the most visited attractions in Chicago. The stunning landmark building, opened in 1897 as the city's first public library, is home to two magnificent stained-glass domes, and annually presents hundreds of free cultural exhibits and performances. Admission is free.

Reviewed By pookala - Philadelphia, United States

Aside from being a beautiful building filled with finely executed mosaic work, a lovely marble staircase and an always interesting array of changing exhibits; the Cultural Center also has a free weekly recital under the largest Tiffany glass dome in the world. The 45 minute Wednesday concerts take place in the Preston Bradley Hall at 12:15 pm. Be sure to get there early (20-30 minutes) if you want to sit up front. The space fills up quickly. If you have nothing planned afterwards go to the Randolph St entrance after the concert and go on a tour of the building. Space is limited for this tour and they start at 1:15 pm daily. Check out their calendar of events before planning your Chicago itinerary to take advantage of this excellent cultural institution.

4. Auditorium Building

430 S Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60605-1315 https://www.loc.gov/item/il0091/
Excellent
82%
Good
9%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
9%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 11 reviews

Auditorium Building

Once the tallest building in the city, the Auditorium now houses a performance space and the campus of Roosevelt University.

5. Sullivan Center

1 S State St, Chicago, IL 60603-2802 +1 312-641-7000 http://www.thesullivancenter.com/index.html
Excellent
59%
Good
26%
Satisfactory
4%
Poor
4%
Terrible
7%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 27 reviews

Sullivan Center

A unique rounded entrance marks one of the city's true architectural gems, the last major structure designed by famed architect Louis Sullivan.

Reviewed By Rumples - Tucson, United States

We stopped at this 1899 building during a Chicago Architecture Foundation walking tour, and, as an architecture buff, I was blown away by the structure's elaborate cast-iron ornamentation. It surrounds the large display windows of the lower two floors and is especially elegant at the entrance located at the corner of South State and East Madison streets. The design incorporates plant and geometric shapes in a delicate, precise pattern. I took an even closer look at the work inside the entrance before crossing the street for a better overall view of the effect. From there I could see how much the bottom levels differ from the rest of the 12 stories. The plain upper floors of the commercial building display a terra cotta facade with many windows made possible because of steel-frame construction. For decades, the structure was known as the Carson, Pirie, Scott and Company Building, after the department store housed there for decades. It moved out in 2007 and now bears the name of the Sullivan Center, after the famous architect responsible for the building's original design. A City Target currently occupies the first two floors.

6. Monadnock Building

53 W Jackson Blvd, Chicago, IL 60604-3606 +1 312-922-1890 http://www.monadnockbuilding.com/the-building.html
Excellent
52%
Good
43%
Satisfactory
4%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 23 reviews

Monadnock Building

The two-building block represents old-style masonry and new-fangled steel framing.

Reviewed By MooreReviews - Baltimore, United States

We heard about this building on a tour. Loved to hear the history of. Tallest fully brick sky scraper, and so heavy they have to reinforced the foundation every year to prevent it from sinking. Fascinating architecture in this city.

7. Tribune Tower

435 N Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60611-4066 +1 312-222-3787 [email protected] http://www.chicagoarchitecture.org/2013/03/05/pictures-of-all-149-rocks-stuck-on-the-tribune-tower
Excellent
57%
Good
35%
Satisfactory
7%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 626 reviews

Tribune Tower

The neo-gothic tower's signature is the exterior collection of stones from other famous edifices, like the Parthenon, St. Peter's Basilica, Notre Dame, the White House and most recently, the Berlin Wall.

Reviewed By 866TaylorB - Chicago, United States

As a retired newspaperman who worked for the competitor across the street for more than 30 years, I can't get over the fact that the publishing, editorial and advertising offices of the Chicago Tribune no longer are housed in iconic Tribune Tower. It's like taking Mickey Mouse out of Disneyland or Babe Ruth out of Yankee Stadium. Located at 435 North Michigan Avenue, the 470-foot-tall, 36-floor neo-Gothic skyscraper was built between 1923 and 1925. The tower features carved images of Robin Hood and a howling dog near the main entrance to commemorate the architects John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood and the top of the tower is designed after the Tour de beurre of the Rouen Cathedral in France. While it has been recognized for its classic architecture and has earned a reputation as the most beautiful and distinctive office building in the world, it is most noted for the rocks and bricks that Tribune correspondents brought back from a variety of historically important sites throughout the world at the request of then Tribune publisher Colonel Robert McCormick to be incorporated into the lowest levels of the building. In all, there are 149 fragments in the building, including a piece of steel recovered from the World Trade Center and a rock from the Moon. In addition, there are stones from the Taj Mahal, the Parthenon, Hagia Sophia, Corregidor, Westminster, the Alamo, the Great Pyramid, Notre Dame de Paris, Abraham Lincoln's tomb, the Great Wall of China and Independence Hall in Philadelphia. Today, Tribune Tower is being converted into condominiums with work expected to be completed by 2020.

8. Chicago Board of Trade Building

141 W Jackson Blvd La Salle Street, Chicago, IL 60604-2992 +1 312-435-3590 [email protected] http://www.cbotbuilding.com
Excellent
40%
Good
49%
Satisfactory
8%
Poor
3%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 118 reviews

Chicago Board of Trade Building

An art deco masterpiece, this is the home of many of the city's financial movers and shakers.

Reviewed By 866TaylorB - Chicago, United States

Remember the frenzied trading operations scene in the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off and the bustling streetscape in the La Salle Street canyon in the movie The Untouchables? It all had to do with the Chicago Board of Trade Building, the primary trading venue for the Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, a popular sightseeing attraction and location for filming motion pictures. Located at 141 West Jackson Boulevard, at the south end of La Salle Street, in a veritable canyon surrounded by other iconic buildings, the CBOT is known for its art deco architecture, sculptures, large-scale stone carvings and large trading floors. It is clad in gray Indiana limestone and topped with a copper pyramid roof and features black and white marble interiors, an open three-story lobby that once housed the world's largest light fixture and 12 Otis elevators. Built in 1929-1930, the 45-story, 605-foot-tall structure presides over Chicago's financial district. It was the city's tallest building from 1930 to 1965. Notable sculptures include John H. Storrs' aluminum, three-story art deco statue of Ceres, the Roman goddess of grain, which caps the building and is a nod to the exchange's heritage as a commodities market, and John W. Norton's three-story mural of Ceres, which is displayed in the atrium. Today, in the wake of two extensive expansion projects in 1980 and 1997, the trading floors, including the corn pit, the wheat pit and the soybean pit, now encompass 115,150 square feet. In addition to the CBOT and the Mercantile Exchange, the three-building complex is occupied by other financial and trading concerns, the Ceres cafe on the first floor in the lobby, and other businesses such as banking, travel, insurance, beauty, health, commodities speculators and the U.S. Futures Exchange. The CBOT building was named a Chicago Landmark in 1977 and designated as a National Historic Landmark and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

9. 360 Chicago Observation Deck

875 N Michigan Avenue 94th Floor, Chicago, IL 60611-1803 +1 312-751-3681 [email protected] http://www.360chicago.com
Excellent
63%
Good
28%
Satisfactory
7%
Poor
1%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 10,847 reviews

360 Chicago Observation Deck

Located on the 94th floor of the John Hancock Center, 360 CHICAGO offers breathtaking views of Chicago’s skyline, the lakefront, and four states. It’s the only place you can enjoy Chicago’s highest thrill ride, TILT – a giant moving platform that literally TILTs visitors over the edge of the building. Relax at BAR 94 with local favorites, a large cocktail selection, and front-row seating to the city’s best views from 1,000 feet up. Explore HD interactive touch screens in seven languages and learn more about the Windy City. If you really want to experience Chicago, make your first stop 360 CHICAGO.

Reviewed By Mobile750626

I visit the observation deck last week and I have to say it was incredible!, I was there when the sun goes down and the view everywhere you look at was simply amazing, and the tilt experience is also highly recommended!!!

10. Wrigley Building

410 N Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60611-4213 800 WRIGLEY [email protected]
Excellent
60%
Good
34%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 303 reviews

Wrigley Building

This white, terra-cotta landmark was built in 1922 as headquarters for the Wrigley chewing gum company.

Reviewed By 866TaylorB - Chicago, United States

My wife and I have fond memories of the Wrigley Building. As a sportswriter for the Chicago Daily News in the 1970s, I once joined a platoon of other sportswriters that gathered at Philip Wrigley's top-floor office to learn about a reported Chicago Cubs trade. My wife worked in an office in the Wrigley Building for more than 20 years. I used to get monthly haircuts in the Wrigley Building's barber shop. We used to enjoy breakfasts, lunches and dinners at the old Press Club, which was headquartered in the Wrigley Building. And I cashed my weekly checks at the bank that once was housed on the first floor of the Wrigley Building's South Tower. Today, it remains a Chicago Landmark, an architectural beauty, one of the city's most distinguished buildings. Located at 410 North Michigan Avenue, on the Chicago River, at the head of the Magnificent Mile, the Wrigley Building was built from 1920 to 1924 to house the corporate headquarters of the Wrigley Company, which sold chewing gum and owned the Chicago Cubs. It was the first major office building north of the Chicago River and the city's first air-conditioned office building. The glazed terra cotta structure was designed by the architechural firm of Graham, Anderson, Probst & White using the shape of the Giralda tower of Seville's Cathedral combined with French Renaissance details. The 425-foot, 30-story South Tower was completed in April 1921 and the 21-story North Tower was completed in May 1924. Walkways between the towers were added at the ground level and the third floor. In 1931, another walkway was added at the 14th floor. A signature feature is the clock tower. Who hasn't walked across the Michigan Avenue Bridge or along the Chicago River and glanced up at the Wrigley Building's clock tower to check the time of day? Today, the bank is gone. So is the Press Club. And the barber shop. But the new owners, who purchased the building in 2011, have added a Walgreen's drug store, Giardelli chocolate shop, coffee shop, fitness center and a nursing room for mothers. At night, bathed in lights, the grace and elegance of the Wrigley Building is beholden to one and all.

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