Chicago Loses 2016 Olympics Bid

1 MIN READ

Chicago is known for its winner-take-all politics, so its loss of the 2016 Olympics a stunner—especially when it was the first one eliminated in the final sweepstakes against Rio de Janeiro, Madrid, and Tokyo. Even the last-minute deployment of favorite son and daughter Barack and Michelle Obama to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in Copenhagen failed to win the high-stakes bid. Rio de Janeiro, the first city in South America to host the games, was chosen by the IOC on Oct. 2.

During the three-year planning period in Chicago, Mayor Richard M. Daley put together a strong team of former planners from his administration to lead the effort. Many local architectural firms provided pro bono design services for various venues in hopes of garnering the prestige-laden commissions that would have come with a win. Chicago’s presentation to the IOC stressed sport and the city’s ethnic diversity rather than iconic architecture, which defined 2008’s Beijing Olympics.

With no need for an 80,000-seat Olympic stadium, local preservationists are relieved that a Frederick Law Olmstead–designed meadow just blocks from the Obama’s Chicago home will not become a construction site. But the fate of a large swath of land already being cleared for the now-unneeded Olympic Village poses a more difficult planning dilemma. Formerly the site of Michael Reese Hospital, a Sasaki Associates-designed landscape has already been bulldozed, and a complex of Walter Gropius buildings is slated for demolition. With no 2016 impetus to finance the development, the current economy offers no reason to continue with site preparation.

About the Author

Edward Keegan

ARCHITECT contributing editor Edward Keegan, AIA, is a Chicago architect who practices, writes, broadcasts, and teaches on architectural subjects.

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