Friday, June 13, 2014

Donald Trump Has Managed To Enrage An Entire City

Chicago really should have seen this coming.



Construction is almost finished on the enormous silver letters spelling out Donald Trump's name on his eponymous skyscraper in downtown Chicago, much to the dismay of everyone from city residents to Mayor Rahm Emanuel. The display has been called "awful," "extremely tasteless" and "an atrocity."



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Trump Tower's new sign is nearly complete as of Thursday afternoon.





Even the lead architect who helped design the 96-story tower is not fond of the sign. "Anything that would happen that would either reduce the size of the sign significantly or take it off would be great," Adrian Smith told the Chicago Tribune's Blair Kamin. Smith previously insisted to Kamin he had "nothing to do with this sign."



The large letters, which are 20 feet tall and will be illuminated with LED lights at night, pretty much have one main supporter.



"As time passes, it'll be like the Hollywood sign," Trump told Kamin earlier this month.



Trump further defended the sign in an interview with The Wall Street Journal this week.



"It happens to be great for Chicago, because I have the hottest brand in the world," Trump told the Journal, before criticizing Smith as having less to do with the building's design than he himself did.



Trump also lashed out against Kamin and other critics of the sign on Twitter, pointing out that the former Chicago Sun-Times building that previously occupied the riverfront space was not exactly beloved for its aesthetics:



















Meanwhile, Emanuel's office has made it clear they don't share Trump's view of his building's controversial new bauble.



"Mayor Emanuel believes this is an architecturally tasteful building scarred by an architecturally tasteless sign," Emanuel spokeswoman Kelley Quinn said in a statement.



The mayor's office plans to explore possible alterations to the sign, according to the statement.



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The Trump Tower sits along the Chicago River near some of the city's most iconic buildings, including Tribune Tower.





from Chicago - The Huffington Post http://ift.tt/1v9px8B

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