As a kid i remember visiting my aunt when she was locked up here. It was such a weird feeling walking out from the visit to be hit with the view and sounds of a vibrant downtown. The EL making its noise, cars honking, masses of people on the streets, the lake breeze hitting you ever so slightly between the buildings. It’s almost like the inmates get trolled everyday when they look out their window to realize all the beautiful freedom they were stripped off. The city will forever keep moving while you’re stuck in that mf rotting.
Trenton state prison is like that. Except it's just in the middle of the city. Houses right across the street. And the other side runs along a highway and the train tracks. That's a maximum security prison to. When I was a kid I was at a friend who lived across the street. Felt weird as hell smoking weed at his house. He didn't care. Lol
Theres a federal detention center in downtown Los Angeles and it looks like this building kinda, but I agree it's not an actual jail just a giant holding tank in a sense
Our college dorm was right across the street from this building. We got in trouble for putting signs in our windows trying to communicate with the inmates...
The views out of the front and back of the trains are great in and around the loop. Thanks to you and all the CTA people who keep public transit rolling in Chicago.
When I visited the Sears tower, I noticed the prison. I knew right away what it was. The window style made it obvious. The architecture screams prison. Prisoners were playing sports on top.
I was there in 1993 for about 8 months awaiting trial and sentencing, alot of the floors are dormitories not cells, there are bunk beds tucked into every square inch, its filthy and terribly overcrowded
If the criminals would quit doing their thing it wouldn't be crowded at all. I have absolutely no sympathy for the guilty ones which is the vast majority.
Oh, and guess who pays for those prosecutors? Tax payers. Some of the same people are paying for the salary of the person throwing the book at them as they are the public defender they are getting to defend them. Imagine if youre innocent and the state wants to lock you up for 30+ days. You pay for the prosecutor and you pay for the public defender, or your own attorney. Its incredible. And who pays for the jails? Yep. Tax payers. So you pay for the overcrowding too and the more jailed the better.
Brutalist doesn’t mean “brutal” - it comes from “Beton Brut” which is French for “raw concrete”. While some brutalism is indeed brutal, other brutalist structures are quite lovely!
Exactly, I was thinking the same thing. People just say all brutalism is ugly, when that is not the case. Harry Weese has designed some great burtalist buildings, including the DC subway system.
Yeah this isn't the first time he's mis-defined a word. I still think back to when he said that "gangway" was called that because of the gang activities that happened in alleys in Chicago. I was thinking "No, since English is Germanic some words are derived for the German language. One of those is 'Gangway' which in German is just a corridor of sorts." There's such good research in these videos but the etymology just isn't there.
Thankyou...I have been relating this fact for years. I heard a story that beton brut was transmogrified into brutal at London's Architectural Association in the 1990's.
>In the arts, 1953 in reference to a style characterized by deliberate crudity and exposed structure. Semantics. There are probably some very nice exceptions but as a whole it is ugly, obtrusive and the complete opposite of classical beauty. I might be a lay man, but I know ugly when I see it.
I’ve been going to visitations for about 5 years with the 16th of this month being the most recent time I was there. Renovations were made in parts of the jail. One thing I do like about it is the art created by the inmates displayed throughout the visiting room. Also with programs opening up you can see the drive some of the inmates show trying to correct the wrongs of their past. I’ve had the pleasure to sit in a graduation ceremony for those who passed their GED. Some people do want to change and it’s good to see it first hand.
Milwaukee also has a "skyscraper" prison located in downtown Milwaukee called MSDF, Milwaukee Secure Detention Facility which is ran by the Department of Corrections. It's a building within a building, meaning there is an outer shell that makes it look like a normal building with windows, but then if you go about 5 feet deeper there is another shell which is the actual prison structure, the window in the cells, which are fogged so you can't see out, actually look out to the space in between those two shells. They spent ALOT of money trying to make the building look like a normal office building. I did 342 days at MSDF and it sucked. You're stuck in your cell 23hrs a day. My only saving grace from going nuts was getting a job in the kitchen and the only reason i did that was to get out of my cell and for the extra food. The majority of people in Milwaukee don't even know it's a prison, because it doesn't look like one, but plenty of people are actively trying to get it shutdown because it's a hellhole. Most people don't do more than a year there though because it's really only an intake facility for people who have violated their probation, been revoked and are either waiting to see if their probation or parole will be revoked (aka revocation hearing) or waiting to be transferred to an actual prison in Wisconsin after being revoked. Bottomline is everyone who is there would much rather be in an actual prison then at MSDF.
😳 Informative. I just Googled that place up and viewed it on Google Maps. I was born and raised in Milwaukee, lived here virtually all my life, I had no idea that's what that building was. That said... I would call that more of a high rise than a bona fide skyscraper. It looks nowhere near as tall as that Chicago one in this video.
This was a good one. I live in Palatine (NW suburb of Chicago about 30 miles from the building) and have all my life, but I've always been curious about this mysterious place. I remember when Ken Conley and that other guy scaled down the building with tied bedsheets. They were WAY high up there. I could have NEVER done that! Of course like all escapees, they failed to plan their post-escape. I watch so many reality prison escape documentaries and it always BLOW my mind that these guys are willing to say crawl through a 12" steam pipe for 80' with cockroaches and rats surrounding them and then once free they have NO CLUE where to go or what to do.... SO they get re-captured. BLOWS MY MIND! great video )
Yea, unfortunately these are the same type of people that would creampie a dumb woman and then get surprised when a judge orders them to pay child support. They never plan ahead of time 😅
The thing is some of these guys have been down for multiple years and the landscape can change in as little as 10 years in todays world. Also, some people are booked in different states or counties from which they lived in. They might genuinely know nothing about the area
I can't be the only one who looked at that and immediately could tell it was a prison. One look at the windows or lack of them. It looks nothing like a NORMAL Skyscraper
I grew up in the outskirts of chicago and had never heard of the prion skyscraper. It wasn’t until I was in my 20s and actually noticed the building. Yup I instantly knew that HAD to be a prison. Pretty common sense since it’s the ONLY building in the city that looks like that.
First time I saw it I thought it was normal office building however they needed the windows small as they do highly confidential and secretive things in there so they made the windows smaller.
Since I work construction in Chicago, I’ve been in buildings where we could watch them go to the rec yard while we took break. Always something interesting to watch
That architecture firm designed my high school. No windows opened. We joked that it was a training facility for future inmates, and that was before any of us knew about the MCC.
My uncle worked 30 years at this prison and was assistant warden at one point, I believe. Dealt with the worst of the worst in those years. I remember when a guy escaped lol
Well a floor is like 10ft maybe 12 to 14 given it's a prison so probably thick floors (basing that off zero knowledge) but if a bed sheet is at lest 6ft for a bed. Maybe like 36.8333 bed sheet
@@dabkevinhere5422 You also have to consider that you lose a foot or two for the knots. So however many knots multiplied by the length of both sheets used for each knot needs to be added to this number. 🙂
@@bubzilla6137 Are the sheets to be tied on the full end or is it enough to tie opposing corners? If corners can we get longer useful length for each sheet (according to Pythagoras formula). Asking for a friend.
We got an 8 floor, & a 13 floor county jail here in downtown Detroit. They're also building a new skyscraper County jail complex,& courthouse set to open at the end of 2023/start of 2024. Where's the video on these gems?
Didn’t know this was here until I was walking the loop as a teenager took a photo of the building for being neat then a security guard harassed me to delete my photo. I was on public space so honestly I don’t think he could legally make me
Never been in there but I once had an office in the CBOT that overlooks the MCC and I have a photo of a Peregrine Falcon that nested on the side of the MCC, the bird would eat its prey (pigeons) on a small balcony outside one of the office windows. I posted the photo somewhere and the Peregrine Program at the Field Museum contacted me to learn the particulars about the photo; the bird was banded but they couldn’t get any good photos of the bird due to how high the nest was and how far the MCC is from other tall buildings. But if one of us got to the office early enough we could see the falcon dining on a pigeon.
The county jail in Lexington,KY was like this. A seven story concrete block in downtown Lexington. I had the dubious pleasure of being a guest for ten days or so. Nasty doesn't even begin to describe the place, an effective deterrent for crime.
That’s the ollllddd jail. We have a much nicer one now. I think it was built atleast 20 years ago maybe longer not sure. I’ve been inside there for over a year and it’s not too terrible
It would be impossible for Christopher Nolan’s brother to escape from the 11th floor with a rope made of bedsheets. Some years later bank robbers repelled from the 17th floor with a rope made of bedsheets. Wtf.
I can't believe he omitted disgraced former Democrat Congressman Mel Reynolds from Chicago as one of the most famous inmates at the Metropolitan Correctional Center. Tsk, tsk.
I remember going to the Sears Tower as a kid and seeing this, expressing disappointment to my dad that he didn't have a basketball court on our roof like these lucky guys!
You know hearing this stuff makes me think of the game Watch dogs. They actually based a mission in the prison now. Of course, for security reasons they couldn't use the real layout so they use their imaginations now. It was pretty cool to see The game used the building as a point of interest in the game for mission
San Francisco’s county jail 850 is the same way , well not a skyscraper but it is a high building, right next to highway 80. Getting on the bay bridge from SF. Unless you know what it is you would think it’s just a old building
As many times as I been through Chicago I didn't even know that they had a skyscraper prison. The few people I do know from Chicago or anywhere else in Illinois always talked about doing time in Joliet. Wow I just learned something new.
Same type of building is here in buffalo. The Erie county holding center. More than once Ive been on the roof top yard leaning against the fence on a summer sunset. Watching the rest of the city go about their lives. I'm glad I don't live like that anymore
When I was a teen shortly after this was built I remember commenting to my dad how I wonder what its like inside this place thinking it was a funky modern office building. He replied he hopes I never get to find out. 😄
Looks like a prison to me, just taller. Fort Lauderdale and Miami had vertical windows, when I see those windows I can’t be convinced it’s anything but jail.
Despite the violence that we have here Chicago is an amazing City and like you said when you hear the history of our city it makes you appreciate it so much more
I remember a level in the original Watchdogs was based on this. A friend of mine who was really into the game was surprised this was real when I sent him a picture of it
They found Gerald Scarpelli handcuffed hanging in his cell there, they said he hung himself. Scarpelli's girlfriend cuts my dad's hair & said he would never have killed himself.
I worked right across the street from that building for 15 years at the Monadnock Building. I was on the 14th floor and the prison was 27 but It was a trip seeing the prisoners on the very top waving at people in the office buildings. You'd never know what that Building was unless someone told you.
So does Baltimore & Kansas City as well as the FCI OKLAHOMA (Federal) that is built on the tarmac of the airport so inmates walk into the prison directly from the airplane's cockpit without touching or seeing the ground.
You referring to the "HQ" lockup in KC? Ive been there.. thankfully only a day or so. The other lockup is Jackson County, and I've heard that place was rough. Not that I cared at the time haha. Quite awhile ago now..
MDC in Brooklyn and MCC in Manhattan are similar. Chicagos i feel like looks bigger though. MDC just had the yard as part of the unit where the basketball court had a big open side window just like that to let fresh air in.
The lack of symmetry of those windows was driving me insane throughout this entire video! Why was it done like that? Does it have something to do with confusing the inmates to limit escape attempts?
San Diego has a multi story high-rise skyscraprr with small slits the middle of downtown that is a Federal Prision. My buddy was there. They get their 1 hour of PT on the roof.
my mother would bring me to that neighborhood often to visit her friend. I was a very young child and I had no illusions about the purpose of that building. It frightened me.
I used to live a couple blocks away my old building can be seen in the city views of this vid and I've heard a lot of crazy stuff about that place. A lot of times I'd even run into panhandlers claiming they were just released from there
The Arapahoe County Jail in Dove Valley, CO. It is across the street from the Denver Broncos training facility. It has similarly shaped windows, but elevated. Broncos players have been incarcerated for drunk driving and spousal/girlfriend abuse in the past in that place. They are placed facing the practice field so they can see their teammates practice while they cooled their heels, tiptoed to see. This was in the past when a color man during a preseason game remarked that the Broncos had the biggest police blotter in the NFL. The NFL since have a "no tolerance" policy on these things. The Aurora theater mass shooter was held there for his trial as the building also houses the courts.
Boston got one of those. Actually it's in Cambridge across the river. I think only the top floors are used as the county jail and the "yard" was on the roof. Great city views tho
I always had a similar experiences whenever viewing the Miami Downtown Jail. Vertical slit windows and bare concrete. Different than anything else in the skyline, you can somewhat tell its purpose just by looking at it.
I'm from Kentucky and we had a dude disappear. 4 years later i ran into him. He'd gotten arrested with ecstasy and spent four years in this jail as a white dude. It had to be rough because he kidnapped a girl, was chased and finally pulled over and shot himself. Crazy.
The city of El Cajon, California, has one VERY similar to this building as well. The funny part is, is that its also the tallest building in the city as well. So it's impossible to be in the city and not have you're eyes drawn to the prison.
I spent two years of the end of a 15 year sentence here.....Terrible !!! Hard to leave once you're there, I was on the same floor with R kelly when he got there its just a horrible place to do time
Fort Worth, Texas has one as well. Only 12 stories tall but it's the main intake for Tarrant County. So not technically a prison, just a jail. The courthouse is next door and there is a tunnel underground joining them along with a sky-bridge on the 6th story if I remember correctly.
Pretrial Jail is one of the BIGGEST waste of tax payers resources, not to mention a sometimes life destroying event, and in almost ALL cases it's an unnecessary part of the legal process. I'd say 95% of people arrested would show up to their court date, with or without a bond being paid. 95% of those incarcerated pre-trial due to bond being financially out of reach or no bond being issued would still have showed up without being held in jail. When held in jail you lose everything, including the means to communicate easily or at all with the outside world. Have a car payment due and to one of the last 3 needed to pay it off? Your car will be repoed. Are you re ring an apartment while incarcerated? You will be evicted and all your belongings will be thrown away. Have a good job that you like and they like you? Well if you miss 2 months of work waiting to-see the judge, there's not to many employers that can afford to hold your position, understandably so.
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-56zlBGdHoZQ.html So many people are innocent and lose everything that way. Khalif Browder kid from Bronx. Had a bail of like 1500. His family didn’t have it. 2 1/2 yrs in rikers island. Beaten raped stabbed by inmates and staff. Over stealing a book bag. He was innocent they told him plead guilty and leave today. He said he was innocent he wasn’t going to admit guilt. He finally got out of jail. Then killed himself.16yrs old
@@lauracarrolldebolt9233 thanks for the info. Damn I knew there was a US city or state that had done away with Bail/bonds, but I didn't know it was Illinois. Down here in FL we got people who can't afford bond for non-violent charges. So they plead out when they really not guilty, but can't afford to stay locked up for another 3 or 6 or 12 months for a trial date. Now they on 2-3 paper with all these BS classes like anger management or drug/alcohol group plus drug tests and if you live in a county like Port St Lucie, Clay or St Augustine with P.O.'s who take they job WAY too seriously... your chances of violating are almost certain. And if you gotta Judge like former St Johns Felony Judge Wendy Berger, who publicly stated she wants to hand out a million years of time before she retires, you don't get av2nd chance. One violation and it's up the road for the max. And you don't have to get rearrested to violate. I had completed the anger management and was already on the 4th week of drug/alcohol class but didn't have the $30 on the day of a 1on1 counseling session. I showed up to the Friday appointment at noon which was also my payday, but couldn't get my actual paycheck till after 4. Did they let me do the 1on1 and pay later? Nope. I got kicked out of the entire 12 week class for missing the 1on1, which my SOB P.O. violated me for, had a no-bond warrant, and was locked up in county for 364 days. Why 364? Bcuz 365 would have sent me to the much more desirable state prison with more freedoms, better food and better commissary. No I did 364 in the Daddy Daycare of St. John's County. Oh btw my original charge was for a 1/2 of pot that was in 2 separate bags. This was back I 2009 and I have NO idea why I just told u this, but it felt good to vent to a complete stranger on RU-vid sooooo... thanks again
Inmate Tip: do not store your property in/at a public storage facility while doing time! Even prepaid rates go up. Miss a payment or 2 and your stuff goes to auction. Your outside friend or family might drop the ball, miss a notice or 3 and Poof! Your stuff is sold. As a storage manager, I "protected" known inmates units as long as I could, waiving fees, sending more notices than required and to inmate directly, calls, messages - until my bosses said "Sell it!". It was disappointing to do only to have the friend or family show up days or weeks later all pizzed off. Everything is gone.
@@AdakStillStands I'm pretty sure if you worked out a deal because of your situation they would be willing to work with you. Lock your rate in for the entire prison term and pay upfront. That's a shit load of money though.
Here in Orange County, Ca, we get ignored bc we're between San Diego County (with the same population) & LA (vastly larger than both). However, our Men's Central ALONE holds 1.4k prisoners, with satellite ones adding hundreds more. It was built in 1968 & was and still IS state of the art in tech & innovation. Our Sheriff refused to release our worst offenders during COVlD, despite repeated threats from our governor. He stated his responsibly was to the safety of the citizens of county. WOW.
No, although I’ve never been I’ve heard stories of this jail considering I’m a resident here. It is extremely filthy, chaotic, overcrowded and not as organized as it looks from the outside.
This building was built in '75. Which inspired which? I seriously doubt this building was an inspiration, though. Triangle architecture is common with fortress and citadel design.
I met and got Piper Kerman s autograph when i was in the joint and was taken back to the city to attend a lecture on her womens prison program at Columbus State where i went to school back in 97 for graphic communications
"....treating people with basic humanity." I wonder if the criminals (before becoming prisoners) have treated their victims with basic humanity as well?
Probably not, but do you really want to be the same as them? Your supposed to be better than they are by having a sense of mercy and justice, or are you the same as them?
Are you excluding the ones who committed victimless crimes, or assuming everyone in there victimized someone? Just wondering because it’s a detention center not a prison. Could be some bankers or congress people in there that are addicts and got arrested for possession and just being too high. Was in the news.
i used to live across the street from this place it was wild bc my bedroom view was the sears tower and the prison & i always got to b the person who got to share the fun fact that that was a prison w my friends xD on warm days u could see the prisoners play volleyball on the rooftop
Chicago highrises have really strict fire safety codes. An unchecked fire would really take a bunch of stuff, think a plane. As for women and the yard, they are given access at different times.