Ornate Roman Catholic parish center faces demolition on Southwest Side
By Lee BeyOrnate Roman Catholic parish center faces demolition on Southwest Side
By Lee BeyAn archdiocese spokesperson said the structure is under contract to be sold “and our buyer has plans for the site that do not include the building.” The spokesperson wouldn’t disclose the potential buyer.
The 82-year-old parish house would be the second prominent aging edifice under threat of demolition by the archdiocese in recent months. The crumbling 138-year-old St. James Church at 29th and Wabash could also fall to the bulldozers, as this blog first reported in last October. According to a city spokesperson, the spaces behind parish house’s exterior walls are saturated with rainwater because the building’s drainage system either does not work or was removed. Portions of the front walls are so out-of-plumb, the parapet leans over the sidewalk, the city spokesperson also said.
Built in 1931 for $125,000, the parish center was designed to provide community spaces the neighborhood lacked, according to a Chicago Tribune story at the time. The hulking building originally featured a children’s roller rink, three bowling alleys and a second floor assembly hall that doubled as a gymnasium. The center was designed by Boston architect Edward T.P. Graham whose work included more than two dozen noteworthy religious edifices in Boston and Cleveland. Graham also designed Chicago’s St. Malachy Church at 2248 W. Washington.
Here’s a detail from the entrance of the parish center: a relief of a leather-helmeted young man clutching a football.
And another detail from the entrance—tennis, anyone? And here, a hint of Art Deco in the otherwise late neo-Gothic building.