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#highrises — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #highrises, aggregated by home.social.

  1. A pantone of classic Chicago: Printer’s Row & S. Dearborn

    “The excellence of every art must consist in the complete accomplishment of its purpose.” Source: Quote on the Second Franklin Building on Printer’s Row.

    Easily this blog author’s favorite part of Chicago’s Loop, the classic skyscrapers of Printer’s Row and South Dearborn Street evoke the city’s robust architectural and manufacturing heritage within a few square blocks. From the exterior iron and steel fire escapes, to the brick and masonry facades, to the literal heartbeat of city’s printing and publishing industry, this illustrative historic district in the South Loop showcases a fascinating aspect of Chicago’s muscle and might.

    Mosaic celebrating the “art” of printing at the entrance to the second Franklin Building (1912)

    “Arguably the most famous publisher located on Printers Row was Rand McNally, which was founded in 1856 in Chicago and opened its fourth headquarters in 1912 at 536 S. Clark. But perhaps the most-read publications came from Lakeside Press, a division of R.R. Donnelley & Sons. The company printed both the Montgomery Ward and Sears catalogs, as well as the Encyclopedia BritannicaTime and Life magazines, at 731 S. Plymouth.” Source: playeatlas.com

    Most of these magnificent buildings, once used for offices and/or production of print materials, have been lovingly restored and adapted into mixed uses or residential structures. Many of the ground floors now contain a delightful mix of small shops, pubs, and dining establishments.

    Frankly, today’s modern glass edifices can hardly compete for attention given the distinctive architectural embellishments and adornments set upon these classic Chicago high-rises. They are simply a visual feast for the eyes. One can also easily imagine the continuously rumbling sounds of gigantic printing presses, as the machinery churned out multitudes of documents, magazines, and publications.

    If you are in Chicago, skip the typical tourist venues around downtown and take a stroll along South Dearborn Street (and paralleling streets) through Printer’s Row. If you are lucky enough, perhaps the Printer’s Row Lit Fest will be taking place while you are visiting.

    Peace and enjoy the images in the post!

    Metal, masonry, might, and brick Rowe Building (1892) – the blog author’s personal favorite Beauty in detail Donohue Building (1883) and Annex (1913) Plymouth Building – left (1899) and Manhattan Building – right (1891) A lengthy litany of fire escape stairs. Dearborn Station (1885) – now a shopping and dining venue Old Colony Building (1894) – tallest high-rise in Chicago when completed at ~ 215 feet Fisher Building of Chicago – oldest portion to the left (1896) and addition (1907) to the right Adornment atop the Harold Washington Chicago Public Library Printer’s Row (1925) by Robert Addison – Source: chicagology.com

    #adaptiveReuse #architecture #art #Chicago #cities #design #highRises #highrises #history #Illinois #planning #preservation #PrinterSRow #printing #publishing #skylines #tourism #travel

  2. Working list: Tallest student housing towers by university

    Listed below are the tallest student housing towers by university across the United States. This list includes on-campus housing and dormitories for students, as well as off-campus privately operated rental housing for students. It does not include strictly condominium buildings.

    Evo at Circa Centre South: Philadelphia – Source: aviewoncities.com

    As can be seen from the data, there have been two great boom period for constructing tall student housing towers. The first in the 1960s and early 1970s (46 from the list) were principally on-campus dormitories those the baby boom generation. The second, was in the 2005-2020 (24 from the list) time period as private firms constructed and offered varied high-rise off-campus living for students. This second boom period appears to be continuing well into the 2020s with nine more towers completed or underway.

    309 Green: Champaign, IL – Source: local wiki.com

    As more such towers are identified, they will be added to the list if they are the tallest for a particular university. Please note, in cases where the exact height is not known , “~” is used to show the height is an estimate based on the number of floors times 10 feet per floor.

    Peace!

    The RISE at Riverfront Crossing (left): Iowa City, IA – Source: mmarchtecturalphotography.com

    ——-

    1. Evo at Cira Centre South (2014): Philadelphia/UPenn and Drexel University = 430 feet

    2. 33 Beekman Street (2015): New York City/Pace University = 384 feet

    3. Rhodes Hall (1971): Cleveland State, OH = 373 feet – being converted to student housing

    4. West Sixth Tower Two (2009): Tempe/Arizona State = 345 feet

    5. Union on San Antonio (2025): Austin/University of Texas = 332 feet

    6. John Hancock Student Village (2009): Boston University, MA = 331 feet

    7. The Hub (1983): Columbia/University of South Carolina = 325 feet

    8. MIT Site 4 (2020): Cambridge/Massachusetts Institute of Technology = 315 feet

    9. West End Tower (2021): Nashville/Vanderbilt University, TN = 305 feet

    10. Watterson Towers (1969): Bloomington/Illinois State = 299 feet

    11-13. Eastman, Livingston, and Stuyvesant Towers (1967): Albany/State University of NY = 286 feet each

    14. 2128 Oxford (approved): Berkeley/University of California = 285 feet

    15. The Hub on Campus (2018): Minneapolis/University of Minnesota = 284 feet

    16. Treehouse Residence Hall (2012): Boston/Massachusetts College of Health Sciences and Massachusetts School of Art & Design = 280 feet

    17-21. Calvin Coolidge, John Adams, John Q. Adams, John F. Kennedy, and George Washington Towers (1966): Amherst/UMass = 276 feet each

    22. Gwinn Hall (1967): Denton/Texas Women’s University = 271 feet

    23. Vilcek Hall (1984): New York City/NYU = 269 feet

    24. 309 Green (2009): Champaign/University of Illinois = 268 feet

    25-26. Lincoln and Morrill Dormitory Towers (1967): Columbus/Ohio State = 260 feet

    27. Whistler (2023): Atlanta/Georgia Tech ~ 250 feet

    27. Pearce-Ford Tower (1970): Bowling Green/Western Kentucky = 247 feet

    29-30. Rhoads Hall (1968): Richmond/Virginia Commonwealth and The M (2020): Seattle/University of Washington = 240 feet

    31-32. Moody Towers x 2 (1970): University of Houston, TX = 239 feet each – to be decommissioned in 2027

    33-34. Sunvilla Tower (1963): Springfield/Missouri State and Lawrinson Hall (1965): Syracuse/Syracuse University, NY= 233 feet

    35. Straz Tower (1954): Milwaukee/Marquette University, WI = 229 feet

    36. The Standard (2020): New Brunswick/Rutgers University, NJ = 225 feet

    37-39. McMahon Residence Hall (1992): New York City/Fordham University and GrandMarc Residence Hall (2015): Boston/Northeastern University, MA = 222 feet

    40. Student Living Center (1990): Rochester/Eastman School of Music, NY = 213 feet

    41-42. REV Northgate Student Living (2023): Bryan-College Station/Texas A & M = 200 feet and Commonwealth Hall (1970): Richmond/Eastern Kentucky ~ 200 feet

    43. Parks Tower (1971): Toledo/University of Toledo, OH = 199 feet

    44-45. Woodlawn Residential and Dining (2020): Chicago/University of Chicago, IL = 190 feet and Mertz Hall: Chicago/Loyola University, IL ~ 190 feet

    46. Edge College Hill (2018): Providence/Brown University and others, RI = 172 feet

    47. The Pacific (2013): Tucson/University of Arizona = 170 feet

    48-49. The RISE at Riverfront Crossing (2018): Iowa City/University of Iowa and The RISE on Chauncey (2019): West Lafayette/Purdue University, IN = 167 feet

    50. Abel Hall: Lincoln/University of Nebraska = 161 feet

    51. Bulger Residence Hall (1969): Akron/University of Akron, OH = 160 feet

    52-54. The Abbot (2020): East Lansing/Michigan State = 150 feet and Twin Towers East & West: Huntington/Marshall University, WV ~ 150 feet

    55-57. East and West Towers (1965): Ithaca/Ithaca College, NY and The University Lofts (2002): Atlanta/Georgia State = 148 feet

    58-60. Eigenmann Hall (1970); Bloomington/Indiana University and Dancer and Bender Halls (1969): Cedar Falls/Northern Iowa = 147 feet

    61-62. The Metropolitan (2017): State College/Penn State and White Hall (1967): Laramie/University of Wyoming = 146 feet

    63. Vic Village North (2019): Ann Arbor/University of Michigan = 144 feet

    64-65. Webb Tower: Los Angeles/University of Southern California and Academe at 198 (2024): San Francisco/Cal Law School ~ 140 feet

    66-67. Aber and Jesse Halls (1968/1969): Missoula/University of Montana = 138 feet

    68. Gamow Tower: Boulder/Colorado University = 135 feet

    69. Goodyear Hall (1960): Buffalo/University of Buffalo, NY = 133 feet

    70. Legacy Tower (2004): Ames/Iowa State = 132 feet

    71-73. Westfall and Duward Towers (1967): Fort Collins/Colorado State and Morse College Residential Tower (1962): New Haven/Yale University = 131 feet

    74-76. Beatty Towers East and West (1967): Gainesville/University of Florida and Tamiami Hall (2022): Miami/Florida International ~ 130 feet

    77. The RISE on 9th (2017): Columbia/University of Missouri = 128 feet

    78-86. The Hub/515 Broadway (2015): Eugene/University of Oregon; Slusher Tower (1972): Blacksburg/Virginia Tech; The Hub (2026): Raleigh/North Carolina State; Stevenson Towers x four (1967/1968): DeKalb/Northern Illinois; Ellingson Hall: Rochester Institute of Technology, NY; and Sid Richardson Residences (2021): Houston/Rice University, TX ~ 120 feet

    87-89. North Hedges/South Hedges and Roskie Residence Halls (1964/1966): Bozeman/Montana State ~ 115 feet

    90. Eagleson Residence Hall: Durham/North Carolina Central = 112 feet

    91-100. Theophilus Tower (1967): Moscow/University of Idaho; Yocum Hall (1963): Fayetteville/University of Arkansas; The Hub (2023): College Park/University of Maryland; Byrnes, Lever, and Manning Halls (1967/1968): Clemson/Clemson University, SC; Kays Hall: Jonesboro/Arkansas State; James Stukel Towers: University of Illinois-Chicago, IL; Anthony Wayne Student Apartments (2019): Detroit/Wayne State, MI; Offenhouer Tower (1971): Bowling Green State, OH; and C.J. Dunn Tower (1994): Montgomery/Alabama State ~ 110 feet

    101. Sechrist Hall (1967): Flagstaff/Northern Arizona = 109 feet

    102. The Flats at West Village (2014): Charlottesville/University of Virginia = 101 feet

    Eastman Tower Hall: SUNY Albany – Source: skyscrapercenter.com

    SOURCES:

    Offenhauer Towers – taller to the left – Bowling Green, OH – Source: bgsu.edu

    #cities #colleges #dorms #geography #highRises #history #housing #landUse #offCampus #onCampus #planning #residences #skyscrapers #statistics #studentHousing #towers #universities

  3. RTE: Forty years of Ballymun captured in video collection. “A collection of more than 40 years of camera footage telling the story of Ballymun has been released.’Ballymun Community Films’ tells the story of the unique community that is now available free-to-view worldwide on the IFI Archive Player.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2025/07/20/rte-forty-years-of-ballymun-captured-in-video-collection/

  4. A place that has the air of a simulation, as if it's everything Microsoft shows you on the screen come to life...because that's where Microsoft comes from! They base it all on what they experience as "real life". My capture of Seattle, "Sims, reach for the sky".

    #art #photography #skyline #buildings #city #skyscrapers #highrises #downtown #Seattle

  5. Dear Friends of the Urban garden/farm, 🦞

    My nearest Animal Farm is a
    #walkaway. What about urban #wind and #solar farms for our #high-rises, small garden #spaces, #roofs and other useful #sustainability? 🍀

    What about indoor real
    #light for #greening our #interiors? 🥗

    Indoor
    #ponds? #Herbs and #spice #supplemental #home-grown #medicine? 🕊️

    All these
    #opportunities with those having the #will and the #way for.

    For example
    #yesterday:

    - My
    #morning #macha #tea was #flavoured with a garden #lemon mint
    - Our salad dressing contained thyme and
    #sage from garden #pot-herbs
    - Our fruit pudding had 'strawberry mint' on it
    ❤️

  6. The trains, the cars, the building in this warm twilight scene caressed by the tropical breezes all have one thing in common: they're all vital humming parts of a grand emergent design, our "Machines for Living In". From downtown Miami to your Twitter feed.

    #art #photography #twilight #night #cityscape #city #downtown #train #rapidtransit #transit #trainline #cars #streets #streetscape #technology #transportation #buildings #skyscrapers #highrises #Miami #Florida #trees #palmtrees

  7. Light Fixture from the Powhatan Apartment Building in Chicago, Illinois, completed 1929

    Provenance of the photograph unknown; most likely lifted from an auction catalog together with the note “designed by Victor S. Pearlman & Co., 1929.”

    #StreamlineModerne #ArtDeco #decoration #Highrises #RetroFuture

    instagram.com/p/CydXB41LXeq/

  8. Light Fixture from the Powhatan Apartment Building in Chicago, Illinois, completed 1929

    Provenance of the photograph unknown; most likely lifted from an auction catalog together with the note “designed by Victor S. Pearlman & Co., 1929.”

    #StreamlineModerne #ArtDeco #decoration #Highrises #RetroFuture

    instagram.com/p/CydXB41LXeq/

  9. Light Fixture from the Powhatan Apartment Building in Chicago, Illinois, completed 1929

    Provenance of the photograph unknown; most likely lifted from an auction catalog together with the note “designed by Victor S. Pearlman & Co., 1929.”

    #StreamlineModerne #ArtDeco #decoration #Highrises #RetroFuture

    instagram.com/p/CydXB41LXeq/

  10. Light Fixture from the Powhatan Apartment Building in Chicago, Illinois, completed 1929

    Provenance of the photograph unknown; most likely lifted from an auction catalog together with the note “designed by Victor S. Pearlman & Co., 1929.”

    #StreamlineModerne #ArtDeco #decoration #Highrises #RetroFuture

    instagram.com/p/CydXB41LXeq/

  11. Light Fixture from the Powhatan Apartment Building in Chicago, Illinois, completed 1929

    Provenance of the photograph unknown; most likely lifted from an auction catalog together with the note “designed by Victor S. Pearlman & Co., 1929.”

    #StreamlineModerne #ArtDeco #decoration #Highrises #RetroFuture

    instagram.com/p/CydXB41LXeq/