"Glitz and ego” is how Blair Kamin, architecture critic at the Chicago Tribune, summed up Trump’s architecture.

Kamin became a target of Trump’s after he criticized the decision to put a giant sign on one of the Trump’s Chicago buildings.

“The sign consisted of his name in stainless steel letters glowing at night, half as long as a football field.  The letters were 20-feet high and the sign was in a particularly annoying place,” he said.

The city council there passed an ordinance to keep this sort of thing from happening in the future, but the original giant Trump letters are still hung right up there.

Trump’s legacy, Kamin said, “ranges from buildings that have actually been praised to buildings that have been panned.”

Trump’s Chicago tower — aside from the sign — “is a pretty decent building,” he said. Back in New York, Trump World Tower, a sleek obsidian slab near the United Nations, received high marks from New York Times reviewer Herbert Muschamp. It had the first inertial damper in a residential building to control swaying.