More than seven years in the making, Chicago's belated Millennium Park is finally scheduled for completion, with a observance planned for July 16. The 25-acre park is situated along the city's bustling Michigan Avenue, just north of the Art Institute, in the northwest corner of the sprawling Grant Park. The greatest in quantity prominent feature of the whopping $450-million frame is Frank Gehry's open-air music pavilion. The 120-foot-high constitution consists of curving ribbons of stainless claymore and a trellis--wired with small hanging speakers--that spans the 4,000-seat audience area and an expansive lawn. Also at Gehry, a pedestrian bridge snakes alongside the pavilion and crosse busy Columbus Drive, with the additional meaning of providing a sound barrier against traffic noise. Visitors approaching the pavilion from the toward the south will pass through a garden designed from Kathryn Gustafson, Pier Oudolf and Robert Israel. Arranged in light and dark palettes of perennials, the garden contains plantings not native to the Chicago area.
Artworks by way of Barcelona-based Jaume Plensa and British sculptor Anish Kapoor also figure prominently in the fresh park. For his first U public commission, Kapoor has created a 33-by-66-by-48-foot stainless-steel sculp polished to a mirror finish that will mirror its immediate surroundings, as well as the city beyond and the weather Visitors will be able to walk beneath the concave underside of the elliptical bean-shaped form.
Plensa's work is a fountain with a 50-foot-high glass-block tower at either extremity of a shallow (1/8 inch) reflecting plash that visitors can walk from one side Water cascades down the towers, which, upon their inner-facing sides, will contain L covers with video portraits of local residents. Periodically, the faces will appear to be to spout a stream of water into the reflecting lake in the manner of cupids or gargoyles in Roman fountains, Plensa worked with the sect of the Art Institute of Chicago to photograph 1000 individuals for the project; it will take about sum of two units years for all of them to appear.
a certain quantity of elements of the park have been unclose since 2003, including a skating rink, a restaurant, an indoor music and dance venue and a promenade for fairs and festivals. The final price tag is twice what was foreseen at its conception, making the frame a target of widespread criticism. It was largely supplyed by the city, with $120 million kicked in according to individual and corporate donors, including Oprah Winfrey and John H Bryan, the retired CEO of the Sara side sheltered from the wind Corporation.