Buildings 1887–1895 by Adler & Sullivan: •
Martin Ryerson Tomb,
Graceland Cemetery, Chicago (1887) •
Auditorium Building, Chicago (1889) •
Carrie Eliza Getty Tomb, Graceland Cemetery, Chicago (1890) •
Wainwright Building, St. Louis (1890-91) , St. Louis •
Charlotte Dickson Wainwright Tomb,
Bellefontaine Cemetery, St. Louis (1892), listed on the National Register of Historic Places (shown at right), is considered a major American architectural triumph, a model for ecclesiastical architecture, a "masterpiece", and has been called "the
Taj Mahal of St. Louis". The family name appears nowhere on the tomb. •
Union Trust Building, St. Louis (1893; street-level ornament heavily altered in 1924) •
Guaranty Building (formerly Prudential Building),
Buffalo (1894)
Buildings 1887–1922 by Louis Sullivan: (256 total commissions and projects) • Springer Block (later Bay State Building and Burnham Building) and Kranz Buildings, Chicago (1885–1887) • Selz, Schwab & Company Factory, Chicago (1886–1887) • Hebrew Manual Training School, Chicago (1889–1890) • James H. Walker Warehouse & Company Store, Chicago (1886–1889) • Warehouse for E. W. Blatchford, Chicago (1889) •
James Charnley House (also known as the Charnley–Persky House Museum and the National Headquarters of the Society of Architectural Historians), Chicago (1891–1892) • Albert Sullivan Residence, Chicago (1891–1892) •
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 Orthodox Cathedral, 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 United Methodist Church,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa (1910) •
Krause Music Store, Chicago (final commission 1922; front façade only)
Banks , Owatonna, Minnesota (1908) By the end of the first decade of the twentieth century, Sullivan's star was well on the descent and, for the remainder of his life, his output consisted primarily of a series of small bank and commercial buildings in the
Midwest. Yet a look at these buildings clearly reveals that Sullivan's muse had not abandoned him. When the director of a bank that was considering hiring him asked Sullivan why they should engage him at a cost higher than the bids received for a conventional Neo-Classic styled building from other architects, Sullivan is reported to have replied, "A thousand architects could design those buildings. Only I can design this one." He got the job. Today these commissions are collectively referred to as Sullivan's "Jewel Boxes". All still stand. •
National Farmers' Bank of Owatonna,
Owatonna, Minnesota (1908) •
Peoples Savings Bank,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa (1912) •
Henry Adams Building,
Algona, Iowa (1913) •
Merchants' National Bank,
Grinnell, Iowa (1914) •
Home Building Association Company,
Newark, Ohio (1914) •
Purdue State Bank,
West Lafayette, Indiana (1914) •
People's Federal Savings and Loan Association,
Sidney, Ohio (1918) •
Farmers and Merchants UNion Bank,
Columbus, Wisconsin (1919) • First National Bank,
Manistique, Michigan (1919–1920), a remodeling of an existing bank building
Lost buildings •
Grand Opera House, Chicago, 1880 remodel and reconstruction with
Dankmar Adler as lead architect and Sullivan as assistant; later remodeled and reconstructed in 1926 by
Andrew Rebori; demolished May 1962 • Washington Elementary School, Marengo, Illinois, Adler & Sullivan, 1883, demolished by early 1990s •
Pueblo Opera House, Pueblo, Colorado, 1890, destroyed by fire 1922 •
New Orleans Union Station, 1892, demolished 1954 •
Dooly Block, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1891, demolished 1965 • Chicago Stock Exchange Building, Adler & Sullivan, 1893, demolished 1972 ::The entrance and other portions of the building were removed prior to the demolition and subsequently were restored in the
Art Institute of Chicago in 1977; the entryway arch (seen at right) stands outside on the northeast corner of the AIC site • Zion Temple, Chicago, 1884, demolished 1954 • Troescher Building, Chicago, 1884, demolished 1978 • Transportation Building,
World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1893–94, an exposition building built to last a year •
Louis Sullivan and Charnley Cottages, Ocean Springs, Mississippi, destroyed in
Hurricane Katrina;
Frank Lloyd Wright also claimed credit for the design •
Schiller Building (later Garrick Theater), Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1891, demolished 1961 • Third McVickers Theater, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1883? demolished 1922 • Thirty-Ninth Street Passenger Station, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1886, demolished 1934 • Standard Club, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1887–88, demolished 1931 •
Pilgrim Baptist Church, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1891, destroyed by fire January 6, 2006 •
Wirt Dexter Building, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1887, destroyed by fire October 24, 2006 • George Harvey House, Chicago, Adler & Sullivan, 1888 destroyed by fire November 4, 2006 ==Gallery==