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Alfred S. Alschuler (1876-1940) was a graduate of the Armour
Institute of Technology who began his architectural practice
in the office of Dankmar Adler in 1899. With Adler’s
death the next year, he moved to the office of Samuel Treat,
and by 1904 the firm was known as Treat & Alschuler.
In 1907 he established his own firm. Alschuler was noted
for designing a wide variety of building types, from industrial
buildings to warehouses, department stores, offices, and
synagogues. Among his most prominent designs, all in Chicago,
were the Brach’s Candy Factory, the Florsheim Shoe
Factory, the Garment Center Building, Wieboldt’s Department
Store (CL), the London Guarantee Building (CL, NR), Sinai
Temple, and Isaiah Temple.
Alschuler was a capable designer in a variety of historic
or modern architectural styles as well. His factories were
direct, modern expressions of their reinforced concrete
frames, while in his office and religious buildings he demonstrated
a detailed knowledge of historic motifs, particularly in
the classical style. The Congress-Wabash
Building is one of many lesser-known buildings that
exemplify the architect’s work. The building is outwardly
a civic statement of the benevolence of its primary original
tenant, a bank, while providing modern efficiencies on its
interior.
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