LEE BEY
the urban observer
Chicago Building of the Day: May 30-31, 2006
320 West Oakdale


The story of architectural modernism is often told in simple
strokes: Mies van der Rohe,
SOM, Mies and more Mies. But
the city offered so much more---good stuff, too---even by
lesser-known modernists. The 21-story 320 W. Oakdale by
architect Milton Schwartz is a sterling example. Built for $2
million, this residential tower was a bit of a revelation when
it was completed in 1954. Its overhanging, exposed
concrete floor slabs and horizontal bands of floor-to-ceiling
window differed from the dark, steel-and-glass-tower model
established by Mies'
860-880 Lake Shore Drive. Visually, the
building appeared weightless at night as darkness reduced
the tower's profile to streams of light shining out from its 57
units. (the building also stands perfectly upright in real life,
as opposed to the tilt in this photo.) The tower took on a bit
of infamy in 1960 when it was reported Loop gambling chief
and Chicago mob underboss Frank "Strongy" Ferraro lived
there. The overhangs were "concrete eyebrows [that]
protected him from undue exposure," the Chicago Tribune
quipped. Schwartz himself had a nice run in the 1950s and
1960s, designing what is now
Hotel 71 at 71 E. Wacker in
1957; a modernist home in the city's Chatham
neighborhood for Dr. Earl Renfroe, an African American
orthodontist; and buildings in Philadelphia and Las Vegas.
Schwartz also oversaw the interior restoration of a Louis
Sullivan-designed residence at 2147 N. Cleveland in 1960.