
At least 22 — perhaps more — have closed since December 21, and at least another 52 are under contract, according to MLS data available on Redfin. (I use all those qualifiers because Redfin’s sales figures are as only as good as the number of homes that were actually listed in the building to begin with.)
The closed units include:
- Tier A: One-bedroom / 1.5-bath with 1,015 square feet; seven closed from the $550s to $810s
- Tier B: Three-bedroom / 3.5-bath with 2,715 square feet; three closed from $1.68 to $1.9 million
- Tier C: One-bedroom / 1.5-baths with 845 square feet; five closed from the $460s to $540s
- Tier D: Two-bedroom / 3.5-baths with 1,956 square feet; one closed for $1.29 million
- Tier E: Three-bedroom / 3.5-baths with 2,161 square feet; four closed from $1.4 to $1.53 million
Now you know why they call it “boutique” — aside from a few combo units, the only other floor plans at Ten East Delaware are the three styles of penthouses available on the 33rd and 34th floors. I wouldn’t spend too much time worrying about those, though; it looks like they’re all under contract for $2.02 to $2.5 million.
Homes are still for sale in every tier, ranging from one of those 845 square-foot Tier C’s listed in the $490s to a 22nd-floor B-C combo priced at almost $2.6 million.

A one bedroom for at least a half a million?
And they ask why Chicago’s population is so stagnant.
If you want to live in a city in which the chance of being killed by a bullet is less than 3%, you have to pay 10 years’ worth of an average person’s salary..
^ Correct that to say:
“If you want to live in a PART of the city in which the chance of…etc etc”
Pardon me, the Goose Island Honker’s Ale has affected my grammar
So people are actually choosing to live in this monstrosity…
While not my style, I can at least understand the Elysian. This thing is despicable.