Building Sustainability
Just shy of 1,200 feet in height and coming in at 101 stories, the Studio Gang-designed St. Regis Āé¶¹APP has already become a recognizable part of the Āé¶¹APPās skyline. Its height and three-stem profile set it apart, while its undulating faƧade and glass gradient evokes the blue-green surface of the river it overlooks. When it opens later this year, it will be the third-tallest building in the city.
Much more than an aesthetic flourish, the glass gradient represents both an achievement in building material advancement and a step forward in energy-efficiency, two areas of architecture that St. Regis Āé¶¹APPās design principal, Juliane Wolf (ARCH ā01), has been pursuing her entire career.
Now a partner at Studio Gang, Wolf grew up in Germany surrounded by architectsāher father, grandfather, great aunt, uncle, and currently, her nephew. She says that she came to Illinois Institute of Technology because its Bauhausian and Miesian ties have given the school a good reputation in her home country.
Illinois Tech was also the place where Wolf met Jeanne Gang, Studio Gang founder and a former professor at the College of Architecture. Wolf became an intern at Gangās studio in 1999, just two years after its founding.
āWhen I started as an intern there were only a handful of people,ā says Wolf. āIt was such an amazing experience. I knew from the moment that I interned there that it was something really special. Jeanneās vision was immediately inspiring.ā
This story was featured in the spring 2020 issue of Illinois Tech Magazine. You can read the .