Directly south of the Daley Center is the Cook County Administration Building which is full of office space for County employees.
Its location is across the street from Chicago City Hall to the South and diagonal across the street from the Daley Center to the southeast.
The structure is clad in Cor-Ten steel, the material used for the Daley Center and the Picasso sculpture in the Center's plaze.
The 17-story, all-glass exterior does not reflect the building's function, and instead conveys an image of pure postmodernism; the effect is striking, especially from the Daley Center.
The Daley Center was opened in 1965.
One was designed simply to fall apart upon its arrival at the Daley Center.
This location is directly to the south of the Daley Center, and nearly directly south of the Chicago Picasso.
Clark Street continues between City Hall and the Daley Center and on to its termination at Cermak Road.
She opened Chicago up to filmmakers, allowing the producers of The Blues Brothers to demolish part of the Daley Center.
In 1979 there was an attempt to remove from the lobby of the Daley Center a sculpture of then Mayor Michael Bilandic.