Quote:
Originally Posted by marothisu
Also speaking of Milwaukee Ave - small stuff, but a 17 unit + ground floor retail building was issued for a new construction building permit at Milwaukee & Ridgeway a few blocks south of Belmont. Currently a vacant lot, so that's good to see:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/31...!4d-87.7206523
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Nice, we met with the developers a while ago on this, it's the old Polish Matress Store which was really not a great business for the area to begin with. I'm glad they are actually moving forward with it.
Originally this was proposed to be an upzoning so they could build the same FAR, but with more units. It was originally going to be 30 regular units and 3 affordable units, all rentals with a 0.5 parking ratio. Then they raised the ARO requirements and the developers dropped the zoning change and are building the same sized building, but with only 17 units which are now condos and twice the size with no affordable units and a 1 to 1 parking ratio. Man that ARO is really helping create affordable housing!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Via Chicago
I think it's unfortunate they aren't interested in preserving the Mills or doing something with integrating their elements into a new station. There's an opportunity to do something really cool there. That said, new metra hub is exciting in itself. But hate the inpulse to just blanket tear down fascinating old industrial architecture which speaks to the history of the area ( imagie exiting a train through the preserved ruins, with that large overhead concrete space, or having their she'll serve as a totem waypoint, with art projects integrated into them). For all the cash they have, SB designs tend to be pretty vanilla and not all that cutting edge sadly
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Uh you do realize what happened with the first project that made SB big right? Did you watch how much of a nightmare the Fulton Cold Storage rehab was? They ended up having to trash everything and clad from scratch and also having to patch massive amounts of rotted concrete. Can you really blame them for not wanting to find a way to re-purpose 100 year old grain elevators? Also they are banned from doing anything other than office north of Lake so their options are limited for reuse of such a unique structure.
Also in what world does SB need to up their design game? I thought we were all just fawning over their McD HQ and the new CH Robinson HQ which both turned out fantastic. SB is putting out by far the highest average design quality of any developer in the city.
Also the notion of just keeping the "preserved ruins" of a grain elevator is abhorrent. I mean do you not see how hypocritical it is for someone so concerned about spreading gentrification to be like "let's preserve a useless industrial structure sitting on some of the most prime land in the city because it looks cool". Yeah, that won't just cause the demand that SB is going to fill on this site to spread somewhere else where it might displace people...