
O’Hare International Terminal, Chicago, Illinois, Perspective and Section
<p>Adding to the “airport city” of O’Hare International, Ralph Johnson of the firm Perkins & Will designed O’Hare’s fifth and final airport terminal, serving international flights, in 1990. This huge structure was designed to handle a mass capacity of over 6,000 people per hour, thus making the terminal itself an infrastructure for mass transit. This dynamic section drawing emphasizes this complex transit structure with a high level of detail—capturing linear, hangarlike extension of the ticketing area, the terminal’s connection to the airport’s “people mover,” or light-rail train, and a network of stairs and escalators leading up and out to the street. As many critics remarked at the time of its dedication, the O’Hare terminal buildings by Johnson, as well as Helmut Jahn five years earlier, both capture the excitement of travel with a rigorous and muscular structural language that recalls the form of the great 19th-century steel and glass train stations of Europe.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1989
- Medium
- Ink on polyester film
- Dimensions
- 91.4 × 122 cm (36 × 48 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
More
More by this artist
Crate and Barrel Headquarters Entrance, Northbrook, Illinois, Perspective
1999 · Colored pencil on paper
Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, Chicago, Illinois, Perspective
1995 · Ink on tracing paper
Seoul Metropolitan Airport Competition, South Korea, Site Plan
1992 · Ink on polyester film with cellulose pressure-sensitive tape
Departure Concourse Trans World Airlines, JFK International Airport, New York, Interior Perspective
1989 · Ink on polyester film
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Year
- 1989
- Medium
- Ink on polyester film
- Dimensions
- 91.4 × 122 cm (36 × 48 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1989-089476
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified



