About the time of Henry Regnery's death in 1996, The Cliff
Dwellers was required to
find new quarters. We moved to the top of the next building north
of Orchestra Hall (now Symphony Center).
Chicago architect and Club member Larry Booth designed our new
space with a vaulted
ceiling and other aspects reminiscent of our old Kiva yet as current in concept
as, in 1907, was the former location. The view is much the same as before,
though from 13 stories higher.
Enter the welcoming ambiance of this private club and you sense the reassuring familiarity
of a second home. And, indeed it is a home -- call it a comfortable refuge for those who've
made the fine arts a valued part of their lives, a premiere social site nurtured by nearly a
century of active interest and participation.
The Cliff Dwellers constitute a family of individuals, many of
them associated with fine arts
organizations or performing groups while others identify
themselves simply as devoted
followers and patrons. Since its inception, this has been a club
that meets the needs of those
who seek the delight of engaging conversations, of being
informed or entertained by
learned, often provocative presentations -- all of this enhanced by
the enjoyment of a superb
cuisine.
By the windows, during any weekday noon hour, you
can observe the
camaraderie at designated "open" tables for members. In a
long-observed tradition that
dispenses with the need for a reservation, individuals share
that special pleasure of dining
together, complemented with wine.
Throughout our Kiva, the dining room, one notices members and
guests being served a wide
choice of regular and light selections on the daily menu. For
even more variety, on selected
days and special occasions, the chef provides diners with
elaborate buffets. All of the food is
prepared on premises, served directly from a modern, commercial
kitchen.
Standing in the dining room, everyone who enters the club,
whether a newcomer or a
long-time member, is immediately drawn to the spectacular
panorama
that lies beyond the wall
of windows. It is a breathtaking view of Chicago's lakefront,
made even more eye-filling
by a collection of renowned skyscrapers that frame the scene.
With views in three directions,
this penthouse setting has to be one of the Club's most envied
assets.
It's a scene also enjoyed seasonally from the adjacent
terrace. On days when the
weather is pleasant, al fresco dining is popular; the deck
serves also as a vantage point
for an unsurpassed view of lakeside events during
summer months, including
holiday fireworks.
Elsewhere in the
Club's space is the Louis Sullivan Room, a library and facility used for
meetings and smaller-scaled functions. Its name honors a legendary architect,
one of the most illustrious of the Cliff Dwellers.Another tribute to the
past is the Fireside Lounge area. Containing a current sampling of periodicals
and fitted with comfortable furniture, this alcove is highlighted by the
fireplace located in a wall covered with oak paneling, both having been
installed intact from the original Club's home, atop the nearby Symphony
Center's Orchestra Hall. That location, created expressly for the Cliff
Dwellers, was its address from 1907 --1996. And during that span of almost
ninety years the Club paid homage to the fine arts, ably led by a succession
of officers and members that were to include author Hamlin Garland, publisher
Henry Regnery, sculptor
Lorado Taft, composer
Leo Sowerby, and Frederick Stock, famed Chicago Symphony
conductor. Today, that
heritage continues. The Club now presents ongoing exhibitions of
artwork, graphic design,
and photography. Noon-hour talks are scheduled with a year-long
series of early evening
activities that range from book reviews to recitals to dramatic
presentations.
In its new home, twenty-two floors above the Michigan Avenue
entrance to the
well-known Borg-Warner building directly across the street from
the Art Institute of Chicago
and next door to Symphony Center, the Cliff Dwellers club
continues to function as one of the
city's most honored establishments.
It takes to its heart those to whom the fine arts are
intrinsic to daily life, acknowledging
and enjoying the familiar while testing the challenges of the
new. The Club is both a
presence and a symbol. It exists to serve its members while it
lends ongoing support to
perpetuating the values that the arts provide, through patronage
of local events and via funding
by the Club's own Arts Foundation.
When the Cliff Dwellers choose to honor an individual or an
event, the members will rise
to offer the Club's familiar toast. To all who visit this
sky-high aerie with its down-to-earth
congeniality, as guests and as friends and, possibly, future
Cliff Dwellers: Zivio!
AFTER THE FIRE OF 2001
It’s typical for the Cliff Dwellers clubhouse to be occupied by a
member-sponsored private party on a Saturday evening, especially during the
bleak winter months. And so it was on January 28, 2001. What made this one
special was not the event itself, but the aftermath. Whether too many of the
used table cleaning cloths wound up in the same refuse container, or whether
some other combustible agent got accidentally mixed with them, or yet another
circumstance—what is known is that a fire started during the early morning hours
on Sunday, the 29th, when no one was present.
Technically, the fire itself was limited to the kitchen and connecting walls.
Equipment either was rendered useless or was in a state requiring cleaning or
repair. Unfortunately for the club, though, the greater disaster existed in
areas beyond the kitchen. Smoke creates soot and on walls, the ceilings, and
furnishings there was evidence of a fire by both a blackish film and a smoky
odor.
What followed throughout the winter and spring months might well have been
scripted from a Dickens novel or a dark comedy. Three insurance groups became
involved in negotiating the cost of restoration and loss of business, and the
consequent assignment of expenses. Decision-making came very slowly and,
customarily, only after much prodding by an ad hoc legal committee created by
the club.
Throughout the summer and early fall, work went remarkably smoothly and
adhered closely to a firm schedule. It even was possible to include some
modifications that enhanced club operations and appearance—such as creating a
more convenient entrance to the supply room adjacent to the kitchen and
improving airflow through new ductwork
A gala re-opening party took place on Friday, November 2, 2001.
Written by Richard L. Eastline, CD '73
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