- his SELECTED PROJECT
- Buildings 1887–1895 by Adler & Sullivan:
Transportation Building, Chicago World's Fair, 1893 |
- Martin Ryerson Tomb, Graceland Cemetery, Chicago (1887)
- Auditorium Building, Chicago (1889)
- Carrie Eliza Getty Tomb, Graceland Cemetery, Chicago (1890)
- Wainwright Building, St. Louis (1890)
- Charlotte Dickson Wainwright Tomb, Bellefontaine Cemetery, St. Louis (1892) which is lised on the National Register of Historic Places is considered a major American architectural triumph, a model for ecclesiastical architecture, a "masterpiece", and has been called "the Taj Mahal of St. Louis." Interestingly, the family name appears nowhere on the tomb.
- Union Trust Building (now 705 Olive), St. Louis (1893; street-level ornament heavily altered 1924)
- Guaranty Building (formerly Prudential Building), Buffalo (1894)
- Buildings 1887–1895 by Louis Sullivan, with Dankmar Adler until 1895.
Guaranty Building, Buffalo, 1894 |
- Springer Block (later Bay State Building and Burnham Building) and Kranz Buildings, Chicago (1885–1887)
- The Auditorium Building, Auditorium Hotel and Auditorium Theater (now Roosevelt University), Chicago (1886–1890)
- Selz, Schwab & Company Factory, Chicago (1886–1887)
- Commerical Loft for Wirt Dexter, Chicago (1887)
- Standard Club of Chicago, Chicago (1887–1888)
- Hebrew Manual Training School, Chicago (1889–1890)
- James H. Walker Warehouse & Company Store, Chicago (1886–1889)
- Warehouse for E. W. Blatchford, Chicago (1889)
- Kehilath Anshe Ma'ariv Synagogue (also known as the K.A.M. Temple, later known as the Pilgrim Baptist Church), Chicago (1890–1891)
- James Charnley House (also known as the Charnley–Persky House Museum Foundation and the National Headquarters of the Society of Architectural Historians), Chicago (1891–1892)
- Albert Sullivan Residence, Chicago (1891–1892)
- Transportation Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago (1891–1893)
- McVicker's Theater, second remodeling, Chicago (1890–1891)
- Bayard Building, (now Bayard-Condict Building), 65–69 Bleecker Street, New York City (1898). Sullivan's only building in New York, with a glazed terra cotta curtain wall expressing the steel structure behind it.
- Commercial Loft of Gage Brothers & Company, Chicago (1898–1900)
- Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church and Rectory, Chicago (1900–1903)
- Carson Pirie Scott store, (originally known as the Schlesinger & Mayer Store, now known as "Sullivan Center") Chicago (1899–1904)
- Virginia Hall of Tusculum College, Greeneville, Tennessee, 1901
- Van Allen Building, Clinton, Iowa (1914)
- St. Paul's Methodist Church, Cedar Rapids, Iowa (1910)
- Purdue State Bank, West Layfayette, Indiana (1913–1915)
- Krause Music Store, Chicago (final commission 1922; front façade only)
SULLIVANS BANKEN (Sullivan's Banks) |
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