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The Fisher Building is 20-story, 275-foot-tall (84 m) neo-Gothic landmark building situated at 343 South Dearborn Street within the Chicago Loop community space of Chicago. Commissioned by paper big businessman Lucius Fisher, the initial building was completed in 1896 by D.H. Burnham & Company with AN addition later intercalary in 1907. At the time of its completion, the building was one amongst 2 buildings in Chicago that was eighteen stories tall, the opposite being the Masonic Building. To the current day, the Fisher Building is that the oldest eighteen story building in Chicago that has not been destroyed. The Masonic Temple, whereas taller and older, was destroyed in 1939.
Though a project of D.H. Burnham & Company, the initial structure was designed by Charles Atwood. In 1906, AN addition on the northern facet of the building raised it from eighteen to twenty stories. A former worker of the Burnham firm, Peter J. Weber, designed and oversaw the building’s addition that was completed in 1907. The Fisher Building options terra-cotta carvings of assorted aquatic creatures as well as fish and crabs. Additionally, there area unit eagles, dragons and legendary creatures portrayed on the facade also.
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