Jeanne Gang and Michael Kimmelman's proposal to save Prentice Women’s Hospital

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Image courtesy of Studio Gang Architects; Illustration, Jay Hoffman

The preservation battle continues over the fate of Bertrand Goldberg’s 1970’s Prentice Woman’s Hospital. As we reported in July, an ever-growing community of prominent architects – such as Frank Gehry, Jeanne Gang, Tod Williams and Billie Tsien – have joined preservationists in the fight to save the late modernist structure that is at risk of being replaced by a new biomedical research facility for Northwestern University.

The seven-story concrete cloverleaf, cantilevered 45 feet from the supporting core and floating atop a glass and steel box, is an engineering feat ahead of it’s time as well as an important icon within the Chicago skyline. As architecture critic Michael Kimmelman argues, “Great late-Modernist buildings, innovative and ruggedly beautiful, deserve respect and, increasingly, careful custody. Prentice is a good example.” However, it is not suited for 21st-century research labs and many Chicagoans hate it. Currently, Northwestern University is leading the debate by arguing that a new building would “bring to the city millions of investment dollars, create jobs and save lives”.

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Cite: Karissa Rosenfield. "Jeanne Gang and Michael Kimmelman's proposal to save Prentice Women’s Hospital" 24 Oct 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/284783/jeanne-gang-and-michael-kimmelmans-proposal-to-save-prentice-womens-hospital> ISSN 0719-8884

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