Mecca Flats
Mecca Flats was an apartment complex in Chicago completed in 1892 and originally built as a hotel for visitors to the World's Columbian Exposition. The building was designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke and Franklin Pierce Burnham. Franklin Pierce Burnham was not related to Daniel Burnham. The 96-unit Mecca Flats became an apartment complex after the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition and is also known as the Mecca Apartments to some.
After the Exposition when the building was converted to apartments, rooms were leased only to white tenants at first. This policy was later reversed and the building became home to mostly middle-class black families. IIT razed the building in 1952 after a decade-long fight with tenants who aimed to prevent its destruction. S.R. Crown Hall, designed by Mies van der Rohe, replaced the building. Portions of the building's basement floor were unearthed in 2018 and subsequently displayed by IIT's architectural school, which is located in S.R. Crown Hall.
The building inspired a song by Jimmy Blythe titled "Mecca Flats Blues" and a poem, "In the Mecca", by poet Gwendolyn Brooks.
History
The Mecca Flats was originally seen as a building for the rich since it was initially constructed to serve as housing for the visitors of the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago. The Mecca Apartments were located on the west side of State Street, which at the time, was a line of racial division with white residents on the east side and African-American residents living on the west side. In 1911, the owners of the building retracted their original all-white tenant policy, and allowed African-American families who were looking to rent a larger apartment in a fairly new building to live there. The complex began a transition from only Caucasian residents to mostly African-American residents, with most of these new residents having middle-class professions like hotel clerks and Pullman Porters. The design of the structure made it popular during the time period since it was one of the first Chicago residential buildings with a landscaped courtyard open to the street, which combined the two ideals of building densely while also preserving the natural landscape.However, by 1941, Illinois Tech acquired the building and eventually the Mecca Flat was torn down in 1952 to allow for the construction of S. R. Crown Hall by Mies van der Rohe. Residents of the building objected to the college's plans. The preservation effort for the Mecca Flats lasted for 15 years, from 1937 to 1952, and this effort was one of the first examples of a Chicago community preservation effort to save an important and historic building from demolition. In fact, this might even be one of the first community efforts that opposed a concept that is now known as "urban renewal". The concept of "urban renewal" was a response by mid-20th century urban planners to "urban decline" in American cities, which ultimately led to the erasure of entire neighborhoods, deepened residential segregation, urban poverty, and racism. In 1943, the Illinois Legislature passed a bill that was meant to preserve the Mecca Flat, but Illinois Governor Dwight Green vetoed the bill and the courts allowed for the demolition of the building in 1952.