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Archive for the ‘Mega projects’ Category

The New South

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

South Side day-campers

Streeterville and the Gold Coast may have a corner on the high-profile luxury tower market, and the South Loop and West Loop may be home to the trendiest new condo projects, but when it comes to large-scale projects with a variety of home types and sizes, few areas of Chicago have seen as much activity in recent years as the South Side.

In old neighborhoods like Bronzeville, Bridgeport, North Kenwood-Oakland and beyond, new townhouses, single-family homes and condominium buildings are springing up, covering whole city blocks with the promise of revitalization. Many are participants in the Plan for Transformation, the Chicago Housing Authority's "blueprint for positive change" that promises to replace the city's old public housing system.

Although most Plan for Transformation projects are known for their public housing units and affordable homes, many also have strong market-rate components that are attracting buyers who have traditionally looked for homes in areas to the north. The allure of these market-rate homes could help these developments become true mixed-income developments with a level of diversity found nowhere else within Chicago.

The six developments listed below are some of the largest currently underway on the South Side, but they by no means represent the area's only new residential construction projects. For a comprehensive list of new homes on the South Side, visit NewHomeNotebook.com.

35th Street Red Hots

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Parkside's condos and townhouses rejuvenate Old Town

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Parkside of Old Town

A decade ago, developers tiptoed around the west side of Old Town with a “here and there” mindset toward redevelopment: a million-dollar townhouse here, a mid-rise over there (and yes, entire city blocks were reconstituted).

But in the midst of it all, Cabrini-Green and its environs continued to serve as a barrier to the cathartic and comprehensive rejuvenation of Old Town – until Parkside of Old Town was born.

Parkside is a mixed-income community from Kimball Hill Urban Centers, Holsten Real Estate Development and Cabrini-Green LAC Community Development. The project is well on its way to completing almost 800 new homes on eight square blocks spread over 18 acres in Old Town, bounded by Larrabee, Division and Oak streets and Seward Park.

“Parkside is truly an infill development,” explains Steve Ryniewicz, a principal with FitzGerald Associates Architects, which designed the project. “Developments were springing up all around the site. Parkside came along and restored the street grid system, made sense of auto and foot traffic, and brought back a feeling of community to the entire neighborhood.”

The project is laid out to look like other neighborhoods that surround the heart of the city. Higher-density housing is found along the busier streets, so mid-rise condo buildings like the The Hudson and The Cambridge were located on bustling Division Street as part of Parkside’s first phase.

The Hudson is just to the west of the two-acre Seward Park, which was meticulously refurbished several years ago. The building has condos with one or two bedrooms and one to two bathrooms, as does its Division Street neighbor, The Cambridge. The Elm, an all-rental mid-rise, is located immediately to the west of The Cambridge, at the corner of Division and Larrabee streets.

Prices in The Hudson and The Cambridge range from the $260s to the $590s. Closings on these units are scheduled for June and July of 2008.

“The trick here was to place the higher density on the exterior of the project without creating a “canyon” effect,” says Ryniewicz. He explains that this was accomplished by using a Chicago-style aesthetic, but varying the elevations and materials and wrapping the mid-rises around the corners to eliminate the look of a wall or barrier.

Phase I also includes low-rise buildings containing 72 two- and three-bedroom townhouses with 1.5 to three baths and attached garages, located behind the mid-rises to the south and priced from the $490s to the $750s.

All buildings are wired for state-of-the-art multimedia, and the condominium residents have access to a fitness center and a business lounge. All Parkside homes include hardwood flooring in living areas, washer/dryer hookups, maple or oak kitchen cabinetry, granite countertops, stainless-steel appliances, ceramic bath tile and kitchen islands per plan.

The townhouses have gated entries and Juliette balconies, and some of the condos include balconies or terraces. Condos range from 714 square feet for the smallest one-bedroom to 1,500 square feet for the largest two-bedroom.

“We paid a lot of attention to how people live in designing Parkside,” said Ryniewisz. For example, horizontal living works much better for families, so that the kids can just run out the door to the tot lots. Vertical living is more likely to attract single residents or couples without children.”

Overall sales of Parkside’s first phase are at about 80 percent, says Catherine Hughey, director of sales. Construction on Phase II should begin by the end of the year, with a couple of apartment buildings opening in 2009.

“Parkside is simply remarkable,” says Allison McDonald, development manager for Kimball Hill. “Everything from its location to the quality of the finishes. I have a lot of development experience, and this project is top-of-the-line.”

The Parkside of Old Town sales center is located at 465 W Division St. Hours are weekdays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and noon to 5 p.m. Sundays.

Roosevelt Square enters second phase

Friday, March 21st, 2008

Roosevelt Square

By Dana Dubriwny

Planning is key at Roosevelt Square, a $750 million development by Related Midwest and Quest Development on the Near West Side.

Six phases, each consisting of about 450 homes, were initially envisioned for the site, which started life as a public housing complex. Today, with just three units left in the first phase, the developers are moving quickly to break ground on the second phase.

“By breaking it down into phases, we are able to review and change each phase as we go along, detailing different things from phase-to-phase,” says Michael Kelly, sales director with Related Midwest. “It really gives us some time to change things that the market is looking for and get neighborhood input.”

The objective, according to Kelly, has been to complete one phase every two years. The 137-acre development, once home to 12,000 residents in the city’s ABLA Homes, has kept reasonably close to that schedule, delivering the first group of homes in just over two years.

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New South

Wednesday, April 25th, 2007

Park Boulevard, 47 W 35th St

Park Boulevard rebuilds a neighborhood on former CHA land

The drive south along State Street into the Bronzeville neighborhood used to mean venturing past the striking, modern buildings of the Illinois Institute of Technology toward dilapidated public housing high-rises, which lined State from 35th to 55th streets.

Now, a welcoming beacon stands at the corner of 35th and State: a four-story mixed-use building topped by a tower with a peaked roof. The banner draped across it proclaims the arrival of Park Boulevard, a development of more than 1,300 new-construction homes. About 880 of the new housing units will be built on the 34-acre site where the Chicago Housing Authority's Stateway Gardens public housing complex once stood, with the rest scattered throughout surrounding neighborhoods. (more…)

The high life

Thursday, July 27th, 2006

The Elysian Hotel and Private Residences, 11 E. Walton St.

High-rise builders offer hot designs, "wow" finishes in fiercely competitive market

When interior designer Hollis Savin went looking for a new high-rise condo downtown, the empty nester promised herself that she wouldn't settle for anything short of spectacular.

Her future home would be steps from Mag Mile shops, so she could dive in and out of Nordstrom easily on cold days. Her condo would be cleverly designed to maximize the available light and space. And above all, her new home would be full of luxurious touches, from the ground-floor lobby to the designer soaking tub.

"I don't go to the Double Door, I go to the Peninsula," Savin says. "You want the luxuries of life when you get to the empty-nester stage because you're tired. I need the 24-hour doorman and a health club in the building." (more…)

Boom towns

Friday, April 15th, 2005

Riverside ParkBuyers are flocking to the mega projects that increasingly dominate downtown housing

In the coming decade, buyers of new homes in Chicago will be shopping for burgs not buildings. Developers enjoyed a banner year in 2004, and the hottest developments in the city were large planned communities offering their own infrastructure, retail, parks and services as well as multiple residential phases. These "mega projects," as they've come to be known, essentially are their own small towns, and they represent the new face of residential building in Chicago. (more…)

University Village opens 219-unit phase

Monday, April 4th, 2005

If you haven't been to the Near West Side lately, as the saying goes, you haven't been to the Near West Side. The change is perhaps most dramatic driving down Halsted south of Roosevelt Road, where the University Village development has brought new stores, condos, townhouses dormitories and more to a vintage streetscape that hadn't changed much in the previous 50 years. (more…)

Blackstone Hotel eyed for restoration

Monday, October 4th, 2004

A Denver company that resurrects historic hotels is buying the Blackstone, the beautiful 1908 Marshall & Fox hotel at 636 S. Michigan that was slated for a high-end condo conversion before the deal fell apart. (more…)

Hollinger sells stake in Trump Tower

Friday, June 25th, 2004

Hollinger International is selling its stake in the joint venture to redevelop the Chicago Sun-Times building into Trump International Hotel & Tower for $73 million. Trump International will then have full control of the project at 401 N. Wabash. (more…)

No little plans

Thursday, April 15th, 2004

Buyers drawn to extra amenities at city's booming mega-projects

For a while there, residential development in central Chicago seemed to be going the way of banking, media and other industries that have seen the emergence of fewer and fewer players with bigger and bigger holdings bent on dominating their respective marketplaces. (more…)