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Demolition of the First Regiment Infantry Armory, Chicago, 1967, photographed by Richard Nickel for the Historic American Buildings Survey Richard Nickel (1928 – April 13, 1972) was an American photographer and historian best known for his efforts to preserve and document the buildings of architect Louis Sullivan. During the urban regeneration of the 1960s and 1970s, many 19th century buildings in Chicago were demolished. Among these were the works of Louis Sullivan and members of the Prairie School. By this time many of the buildings were neglected and unloved, and there was little public interest in their retention. Richard Nickel was a rare individual who believed such buildings were an important part of the city's architectural and cultural heritage. Nickel encountered Sullivan's work while photographing the architect's buildings for a school project at the IIT Institute of Design in Chicago. Studying and photographing Sullivan's buildings quickly became an obsession for him. Ultimately, he devoted much of his life to photographing them, hoping to produce a comprehensive photographic compendium. Realizing that the pace of renewal and development seriously threatened many of these historic buildings, Nickel campaigned and lobbied for their preservation. Sullivan buildings such as the Garrick Theater and Chicago Stock Exchange were torn down despite the best efforts of Nickel and others to preserve them. However, after Nickel's death, his crusade gained momentum and was responsible for many of Sullivan's buildings being spared. Of the ongoing threat to Chicago's buildings Nickel said "Great architecture has only two natural enemies: water and stupid men." In the cases where he was unable to protect a building, Nickel extensively photographed both its interior and exterior to archive the craftsmanship and attempt to preserve the buildings' character in his images. He also stripped some of the doomed buildings of their distinctive ornamentation before their destruction. Dozens of such items were sold to Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) and are on display. Nickel was killed on April 13, 1972, while attempting to obtain more items for SIUE, when a stairwell in the Chicago Stock Exchange building collapsed on him. He is buried in Chicago's Graceland Cemetery, not very far from where Sullivan is buried. He died without completing his great collection of photographs of Sullivan's work, but Nickel's black and white photos have been displayed at the Art Institute of Chicago and elsewhere. The Richard Nickel Committee and Photographic Archive is a non-profit organization devoted preserving the photographer's work, and holds the copyrights for most of his pictures. The 1994 book They All Fall Down by Richard Cahan is about Nickel's lifelong effort to preserve Chicago's architectural heritage along with friend and architect John Vinci. Cahan and Michael Williams co-edited Richard Nickel's Chicago: Photographs of a Lost City, a collection of Nickel's photography. External links WTTW's The Richard Nickel Story The Richard Nickel Committee and Photographic Archive Richard Nickel's Chicago Persondata NAME Nickel, Richard ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH