Vintage Condo
De Golyer
— HISTORICAL PRESERVATION | HIGH RISE
PRACTICE AREA
Custom Residential
LOCATION
East Lakeview | Chicago, IL
SCOPE
Historical Restoration | Luxury Interiors
RECOGNITION
Contractor of the Year by National Association of the Remodeling Industry
— THE PROJECT
The kind of restoration that works
only when you can’t
tell it happened.
This tower carries a pedigree most remodels never touch. Completed in 1926, it was hailed that year by the Chicago Tribune as the largest and finest apartment building in the city, and its Beaux-Arts planning — the careful relationship of every part to the whole — remains the residence’s greatest asset. The client had inherited the fifteenth-floor home after more than forty years in her family, and her brief was Old Hollywood: warm, gracious, and made for entertaining.
The dining room was the apartment’s historical treasure, its walls clad in quarter-figured anigre quoted at over $1,000 a yard. Much of the original molding had been lost or had fallen into disrepair, so our team custom-fabricated the wood and plaster profiles, matched them to the 1926 detailing, and patch-repaired the assembly until the seams disappeared. The original hardwood was restored, and discreet contemporary lighting was introduced to bring out the millwork.
Elsewhere, the work was reinvention. The living room had been reduced to a white box — white walls, white ceiling, white floor, white millwork — and Lake Michigan, its finest feature, was lost in the glare. The palette was warmed, a silver-leaf ceiling and mid-century furnishings were introduced, the walls were skim-coated to a luxurious finish, to allow every tone and color to draw the eye toward the water. The primary bath demanded precision: the structural concrete subfloor was ground by hand to form a zero threshold into the bedroom, and the original cast-iron radiators were removed offsite, refurbished, and reset.
A fifteenth-floor residence in a 1926 high-rise carries its own logistics: the maid’s room served as the staging area and was therefore the first space demolished, boiler shutdowns were coordinated to free the radiators, and the freight elevator and loading dock were reserved around every delivery.
Old Hollywood was never built here; it was uncovered — a measured restoration that readied the residence for another generation of the family that has held it for forty years.
— CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTATION
The finished rooms tell one story. The decisions behind them tell another — what we kept, what we rebuilt, and the sequence that kept a 1926 high-rise livable throughout.
Newspaper clipping from 1927 debuting this Robert Seeley De Golyer tower.
Original architectural plans circa 1921.
The Project Ruffestimator: Moose
Original condition of living room: white on white on white with a side dish of glare.
Original vintage primary bathroom showcasing views of Lake Michigan.
Protective coverings for historic quarter figured anigre millwork at dining room.
Exposed original clay tile interior walls.
Progress restoration of quarter figured anigre (right), custom fabricated high gloss millwork cabinetry beyond.
Meticulous full-height wall penny tile installations at primary bath.
Historical restoration of original quarter figured anigre in situ.
— PROJECT PHOTOGRAPHY
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TOM ROSSITER
PRACTICE AREA
Custom Residential & Remediation
This project lives in our Custom Residential practice, where the work is often restoration as much as construction. The principle holds either way: respect what a building already does well, and change only what earns its keep.