Design history In July 2001, when Donald Trump announced plans for the site of the former seven-story Sun-Times Building, the tower was expected to reach a height of , which would have made it the world's tallest building. It was expected to contain between of floor space and cost about $77 million just for the property rights. Three architectural firms were considered: Lohan Associates,
Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, and Skidmore, Owings and Merrill; Trump selected Skidmore, Owings and Merrill in August 2001. Adrian Smith, who had previously designed the
Jin Mao Tower, headed the SOM team, giving Chicago a third skyscraper from the same firm which had previously designed the Willis Tower and the Hancock Center.
Time magazine reported that a meeting between Smith and Trump about erecting the tallest building in Chicago was taking place at the actual time of the attacks. These claims are supported by computer renderings from 1999 of the proposed skyscraper, shown in the
Chicago Tribune in 2005. The building's design was first released in December 2001. However, the first design did not meet with approval from other architects, or from the residents of Chicago. A subsequent revision in July 2002 resulted in an 86-floor design for use as an office and residential structure, similar to the 2006 design which is, however, for a different combination of uses. Smith's 2002 plans put broadcast
antennas (multiple communications
dishes) at the top of the building. In January 2004, another revision changed floors 17 through 26 from offices into condominiums and hotel rooms. In his May 2004 plan, Smith decided to top the building with an ornamental spire instead of communications dishes. These dishes, according to the
Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, would not have counted toward the building's height. The spire, however, will count, raising the tower's height to . At one point in 2005, Trump aspired to build a slightly taller building that would surpass the Sears Tower as the nation's tallest building, but
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley was against the plan. Eventually, Smith settled on a design with a height of , which was the height of
2 World Trade Center, the shorter of the former twin
World Trade Center towers. This height makes the Tower the
seventh tallest in the United States.
Initial phases On October 16, 2004, Donald Trump and
Hollinger International, the parent company of the
Chicago Sun-Times, completed the $73 million sale of the former home of the newspaper a week after it relocated. On October 28, 2004, Trump held a ceremony to begin the demolition of the former Sun-Times Building. The demolition and construction were financed by a $650 million loan from
Deutsche Bank and a trio of
hedge funds, one of which
George Soros backed.
Chicago 'L' in the
Loop at night In March 2005, the construction process began with the sinking of the first
caisson for the tower into the
bedrock. In April, construction began on the
foundation below the Chicago River. The mat serves as the base of the building, from which its spine rises. Those involved with the construction referred to the day as the "Big Pour". Extensive debate and publicity occurred on the issue of whether such advertising should have been allowed. Two distinct pieces of legislation in 2002 and 2003 by the
Chicago City Council had authorized the kiosk, but sidewalk billboards were not common in Chicago at the time, and their desirability was questioned. Although there were demands from citizens' organizations and the local Alderman
Burton Natarus (who had voted in favor of the legislation) to remove the kiosk, Trump agreed only to remove pricing information from the signage, after a request to remove all advertising from it. Originally, one side displayed the geographical information and the other side functioned as a billboard. As president of the
Sun-Times holding company, Radler had negotiated the sale of the paper's headquarters building to Trump's consortium. The price of Radler's condo had been discounted by 10%, and only a 5% deposit was required instead of the standard 15%. Radler and family were part of a group of 40 insiders who were able to purchase property at about . When the market value of the property eventually rose to over , Trump nullified the "friends and family" sales. The insiders were involved in the planning and designing of the building. In January 2007, Trump cited both a clause about "matters beyond [the] seller's reasonable control" and the desire to "have more income to handle potentially higher construction costs". In addition to the Radler suit over the validity of the "friends and family" discount contracts, a group of four owners sued over revisions to the closing terms, which placed limits on the owner occupancy of condo hotel units and excluded the meeting rooms and ballrooms from the common elements of which the owners have an interest. with visible
rebar|alt=the first few floors of construction of a building from across a river In an additional legal issue, on February 8, 2005, Trump had closed on a construction loan of $640 million from
Deutsche Bank for the project. He also obtained a $130–135 million junior
mezzanine loan from another syndicate headed by
Fortress Investment Group. As part of these contracts, Trump had included a $40 million personal guarantee. On November 10, Deutsche Bank demanded the outstanding loan payment and the $40 million guarantee. Trump not only sought an extension, but sought damages of $3 billion from the bank for its use of
predatory lending practices to undermine the project and damage his reputation, which he claimed "is associated worldwide with on-time, under-budget, first-class construction projects and first-class luxury hotel operations." The suits did not interfere with Trump's ability to continue drawing on the credit line provided by Deutsche Bank, because without the project's continued financing, Deutsche Bank may have had to assume the role of developer. In March 2009, both parties agreed to suspend litigation and resolve the disagreement amicably in an effort to help the project to succeed. In September 2010, an amended loan agreement stopped the litigation and extended the term on an approximately $600 million construction loan for five years.
Construction Bill Rancic,
The Apprentice's
season-one winner in 2004, was originally hired to manage the project for a $250,000 salary. Rancic's title was President of the Trump International Hotel and Tower, Rancic's contract was renewed after his first year, but in September 2005, it appeared that his employment with Trump would finish at the end of his second year in April 2006. During 2005,
Donald Trump Jr., who had been involved in the building since its earliest stages in 1999, was overseeing the construction with weekly visits, while Rancic worked on sales and marketing. In December 2005, Rancic made it clear that he wanted to continue working for Trump, and in April 2006, his contract was renewed for a third year. In that year Donald Trump's children began to assume prominent public roles as in the
Trump Organization; by January 2007, all three adult Trump children (
Ivanka Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and
Eric Trump) were executives in the acquisitions and development division of the organization. three months before the hotel opened amid construction (September 14, 2007)|alt= a tall skyscraper under construction in the middle of a city viewed from an elevation of about 40 stories in another building
Bovis Lend Lease, noted for work on
Disneyland Paris, the
Petronas Towers, and the
Deutsche Bank Center, was the construction company. James McHugh Construction Co, the concrete subcontractor, implemented a comprehensive
formwork for the construction of the building. At the completion of construction the building was the tallest formwork structure in the world, A new chemical process that leveraged more fluid liquid concrete facilitated pumping concrete up several hundred feet to the elevating construction site. The concrete spine uses five
I-beam-shaped walls and exterior columns, narrowing to two as the building rises. Each floor is separated by a
concrete slab, and stainless steel, glass, and aluminum panels are attached to each floor. The extensive use of concrete makes the building more
fireproof. Of the $600 million construction budget, $130 million was earmarked for the James McHugh Construction Co, who handled the concrete-only portion of the job. Although Donald Trump was absent from both of these ceremonies, he, Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric Trump attended the topping off party on September 24, 2008. Original plans called for the windows to be completed and the spire erected in October 2008. However, the spire installation was delayed through high winds in December 2008, and was finally completed on January 3, 2009. Kamin's critical opinion is that the spire is not aesthetically complementary. However,
Donald Trump Jr. said that they were fortunate to complete the project, while the Spire and
Waterview Tower were among developments affected by the
Great Recession. Occupancy had begun on lower-floor condominiums at the time of the ceremony. Residents of the Trump building are zoned to
Chicago Public Schools, more specifically to Ogden School and
Wells Community Academy High School. ==After opening==