Northerly Island is a
man-made peninsula along Chicago
's
lakefront. .
The site of the Adler Planetarium
, Northerly Island connects to the mainland through
a narrow isthmus along Solidarity Drive dominated by Neoclassical sculptures of Kościuszko, Havliček and Copernicus. With the demolition of
Meigs Field
Airport
, it is now a part of the Museum Campus and slated to be
converted into parkland. A temporary concert venue, the Charter One
Pavilion
occupies the site of the former
airport.
History
The idea
for Northerly Island began with Daniel
Burnham’s “Plan of Chicago”
which called for the creation of Northerly Island as a lakefront
park at the northern end of a five-island chain between Jackson
Park
and 12th Street, the only lakefront structure to be
built based on Burnham's 1909 Plan of
Chicago. In the image to the upper right, Northerly
Island forms the southern border of Chicago Harbor (now Monroe
Harbor). As indicated by the color green on the original plan, the
island was to be populated by trees and grass for the public
enjoyment.
Work on the island began in 1920 when
Chicago
voters approved a $20 million bond issue to create
Northerly Island, and construction was completed by 1925.
A short
time later in 1930 Adler Planetarium
was built, and in 1933-34 the island was at the
center of festivities at the “Century of Progress” World’s
Fair
. Local publishing mogul
Merrill C. Meigs
first recommended converting Northerly Island into an airport in
1935, but construction did not begin until after Chicago lost a bid
to site the United Nations Headquarters
on the island in 1946. The
Works Progress Administration
connected the island to the mainland via 12th Street in 1938 in the
interim period when Northerly Island was full of paths and walkways
as well as a beach at 12th Street. Although Mayor
Richard J. Daley
unofficially proposed converting Meigs Field
into a lakefront park, the airport's lease was not
set to expire until 1996. His son, Mayor
Richard M. Daley, who had pledged to keep the airport
open until 2006, reneged and controversially tore up the runways at
Meigs Field in the middle of the night, in 2003, purportedly in the
name of
Homeland security. Plans
followed to convert the area into green space and expand upon the
neighboring
Museum
Campus.
Today

Charter One Pavilion Sign, photo taken
January 10, 2007

12th Street Beach House
By August 2003, construction crews had finished the demolition of
Meigs Field. Northerly Island is now a park that features prairie
grasses and strolling paths.
In 2005, the 7,500 seat Charter One
Pavilion
opened on the site, which hosts music concerts in
the summer. In February 2006, the city announced plans to
open a
heliport on the island. The island
also has a modest beach, named 12th Street Beach (beach house
pictured).
On January 23, 2007, the
Chicago 2016
Olympics bid committee revealed that
Northerly Island would play a major role in the 2016 Olympics
should Chicago be selected to host the event. In addition to venues
on Northerly Island, the plans would call for rowing events to take
place in Monroe Harbor, just north of Northerly Island.
Other Chicagoans had a different vision for the lakefront area.
After the 2003 closure, the Friends of Meigs Field introduced a new
plan, "Parks and Planes," which promoted the idea of an aviation
museum, small operating runway, and park land on the property. This
plan suggested that Chicago could qualify for federal funds
earmarked for airport property acquisition, to purchase many more
area of parkland in Chicago's neighborhoods and to improve the
Chicago Park District's
maintenance budget.
The FAA maintains a Remote Communications Outlet (RCO) on the
property, for two-way radio communications between the Kankakee
Flight Service Station and
nearby aircraft. This transmission facility (122.15 MHz) provides
unique coverage for the busy lakefront flight corridor.
There is
also a proposal to erect a 1:1-scale replica of Wacław Szymanowski's Art Nouveau statue of Frederic Chopin found in Warsaw
's Royal
Baths
on the site for the 200th anniversary of
Frederic Chopin's birth. The
location is being lobbied for due to its proximity to the monuments
honoring the prominent
Poles Tadeusz Kościuszko by
Kazimierz
Chodzinski and
Nicholas
Copernicus by
Bertel
Thorvaldsen along Solidarity Drive.
References
- Chicago Parks District: Northerly Island
- Graf, John, Chicago's Parks Arcadia Publishing, 2000,
p. 13-14., ISBN 0-7385-0716-4.
- Charter One Pavilion
- Parks and Planes: A Vision for Meigs Field and Northerly
Island
- Chapter 4. Air Traffic Control Section 1. Services
Available to Pilots
External links