About the Ganz Hall ...

 

Ganz Hall
Roosevelt University
430 S. Michigan Ave., 7th Floor
Chicago, IL, USA

Ganz Hall
Photo:
Greg Murphey, Gregory Murphey Studios, Inc.

Ganz Hall
Photo: Greg Murphey, Gregory Murphey Studios, Inc.

Ganz Hall
Photo: Greg Murphey, Gregory Murphey Studios, Inc.

Photo Source: :AIA Chicago Website

 


Ganz Hall
Roosevelt University

430 S. Michigan Ave., 7th Floor
Chicago (312-341-3780)

Received 2005 AIA Chicago 2005 Design Excellence Award

"Using archival photographs, the electric lights (electroliers) were translated into drawings. Then foam-core mock-ups were created to determine the light fixtures' impact on the recital hall. Details were cast and recast until a precise reinterpretation was achieved. Final pieces were assembled and wired onto frames. Eventually the fixtures were covered with gold leaf and hand-painted. Each of the 450-lb, six-feet tall lights have authentic lightbulbs. Jurors were swayed by the prodigious amount of research and quest for accuracy. (Double winner; also received Interior Architecture Citation of Merit Award.)"

Article source:AIA Chicago Website

 

 

Received 2003 Chicago Landmark Award for
Preservation Excellence awards.

"Rudolph Ganz Memorial Hall, housed within the Auditorium Building on Roosevelt University’s Chicago Campus, is a little-known, yet much-revered space. It is one of Chicago’s ultimate examples of artistic and architectural collaboration – featuring the work of French painter, Albert Fleury, Louis Millet and Healy, Louis Sullivan, Dankmar Adler and their then-apprentice Frank Lloyd Wright.  

The Auditorium Building, designed in 1890 by Dankmar Adler, Louis Sullivan and their apprentice Frank Lloyd Wright, was built as a 5-star hotel and opera house. During construction, one important detail was forgotten: a banquet hall. So they suspended the banquet hall over the opera house roof on the 7th floor of the hotel, and filled it with the best of their collective work: Gold-leaf stenciled arches punctuated with stunning electric chandeliers, 10 distinct mural paintings by French painter Albert Fleury which depict Midwestern and Plains activities, 12 hand-carved wooden capitols (each one unique) topping beautiful tiger maple wood columns. The room is then flanked by 10 unique hand-painted murals and 17 stained glass windows.

Over the past 100 years, the room had fallen into disrepair. The beautiful electric chandeliers had been replaced by large white globes, and the details of the room had faded.

Using archival photographs, the room was reconstructed and restored to its original glory. The unique steel chandeliers were fabricated to look exactly like the photograph – including the original Edison light bulbs that bathe the room in golden light. The capitols were restored, and all the gold leaf on the archways gleams once again. The back of the room was expanded to include a stage.
"

Source: Pepper construction website

 

 

History

More on the Rudolph Ganz Memorial Hall

Ganz Hall"Ganz Hall was originally conceived as a banquet hall for the Auditorium Hotel after the building had already been constructed in 1890. Louis Sullivan, the architect of the building, was faced with trying to build a new large space within the world's largest mixed-use high-rise building. The only area available for constructing a room for banqueting was above the Auditorium Theatre.

...more . . "

Read the full history - source: Roosevelt University website - (Ganz Hall history taken from a preliminary architectural report by Booth/Hansen & Associates, Sept. 1997).

Direction: Google map

Roosevelt University's Auditorium Building is located at
430 South Michigan Avenue.

Ganz Hall is on the 7th floor of the Auditorium Building and
must be accessed through one of the elevators in the main lobby.

 

Roosevelt University
provided this beautiful concert Hall
for the
2nd, 3rd and 4th Annual Sejong Music Competition
Award Ceremony and Winners Concert
and

"East Meets West" Music With Korean Themes concert
(a part of Silk Road Project Chicago - Aug 19, 2006)

Roosevelt University

Sejong Cultural Society expresses
its sincere appreciation
to Roosevelt University.

Thank you!

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