Mies van der Rohe influenced the world with his architecture. The establishment was caught off guard and began to criticize what vab der Rohe said they didn’t yet understand. Over time, he was considered a living legend by many of his colleagues. However, to this day his work is controversial. For Mies, simple elegant form and function eliminated ornamentation which he considered useless. He inspired a generation of architects and along with Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright, is considered a Chicago master. He won every possible major award in the field and in 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented Mies van der Rohe with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Among other brilliant design changes, Mies lifted buildings up a few floor exposing the living and working space on the ground level of buildings. It made viewing buildings more appealing from the outside in and the inside out. Mies’ work defines the campus design of the Illinois Institute of Technology where he taught. His buildings dot Chicago, the United States and the rest of the world. Even today, many Chicago architects find a way in their design to give a tip of the hat to the master
who helped make Chicago arguably the most important architecture city of its time.
Author: N2OO2
Ice Water
The past two week’s cold weather dotted with sub-zero temperatures left the shoreline of lake Michigan a mysterious landscape. Seawalls morphed into walls of stelagtites and two foot bouies into icebergs.
Baseball on deck
Sleepy man on bus
A 45-minute commute is commonplace, a two hour commute is insane, but not shocking to anyone. The fact is people who ride public transportation live a significant part of their lives publicly. A one hour commute to and from work each day represents 12.5 percent of a person’s waking hours. I’m looking for the times when people forget they are next to other people or don’t care. Instead of posing, avoiding all glances, lost in earbuds or reading furiously from an electronic slate, I like fingernail painting, radios, manners or no manners, blowing one’s nose and looking, pulling out a mirror and primping, eating and whatever else seems real. All the world’s a stage and never have I seen more acting than on public transportation. I want non-acting and so I’m going to see if I can get it.
Another sleepy man on bus
Lake Michigan on way to major frozen ice fields
Loyola University Chicago, School of Communication

Snow, horses, more snow, only 30 seconds
White Christmas in Chicago, unusual
A fight between a 45 caliber and some 2% milk that was minding its own business
A video with no meaning whatsoever other than I had two compelling visuals and I mixed ’em up.









