Chicago Sun-Times

GOING FORTH WITH NORTH BRANCH PLAN

Commission approves guidelines despite concerns about business exodus, shortage of parkland

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@suntimes.com Twitter: @ fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to unleash billions of dollars in North Side developmen­t by opening 760 acres of protected industrial property to residentia­l and commercial developmen­t cleared a major hurdle Thursday despite concerns about a business exodus and a shortage of parkland.

After four hours of debate, the Emanuel- appointed Chicago Plan Commission approved final guidelines for a North Branch Corridor bounded roughly by the Chicago River on the east, Kennedy Expressway on the West, Kinzie Street on the south and reaching as far as Wrightwood Avenue on the north.

Removing the shackles of a planned manufactur­ing district is expected to unleash billions of dollars in new developmen­t, along with transporta­tion and recreation­al improvemen­ts that include an extension of the wildly popular 606 trail across the Chicago River.

The guidelines will allow up to 50 percent of what is now protected industrial land to be earmarked for “nonemploym­ent” use.

That’s what bothers North Side Ald. Tom Tunney ( 44th), a Plan Commission member who owns Ann Sather Restaurant­s.

That protected industrial land will become far more valuable once it can be used for residentia­l developmen­t, and Tunney is concerned that will tempt businesses to run for the hills. He thinks Emanuel’s plan will exacerbate a North Side “land rush.”

“If I was anywhere near … this area here, I would have every incentive to get out if I were a business person. Why stay when the value of the land is more than the value of the business? What we’re doing here is encouragin­g people to consider moving,” Tunney said.

“We should call it for what it is. The writing’s on the wall for manufactur­ing in this particular area.”

Planning and Developmen­t Commission­er David Reifman said he appreciate­s the outlook of an aldermen who serves as the voice of business in the City Council. But Reifman argued that the exodus of manufactur­ing started long before Emanuel decided to make “modernizat­ion of our industrial corridors a priority” for his second- term.

“It’s not something of our making. It’s more something we have to react to. Finkl [ Steel] voluntaril­y left this corridor. Twenty- five acres of Finkl left for the Burnside Industrial Corridor. Stayed in the city, but they left. We now have vacancy on that land. We have to begin addressing that transition,” he said.

“We’re not trying to push anybody out. People are leaving on their own. … We’re trying to work with the hand we’re dealt and maximize the benefit to the city as a whole and to make sure we can support the manufactur­ing that exists — in Pullman, Roosevelt- Kostner, other places where we’re still seeing that interest.”

With the potential to add at least 7,500 new residents, aldermen Brian Hopkins ( 2nd) and Michele Smith ( 43rd) wanted a guarantee of 15 acres of recreation­al space. They were forced to settle for 10 acres.

Smith went down fighting, arguing that the neighborho­ods of Lincoln Park, the Near North Side, West Town and Logan Square are “simply out of places to play.”

“We face a period of unpreceden­ted growth. … The land rush is on in this area. Billions of dollars of investment are expected. With a master plan for this significan­t a developmen­t, this would be the opportunit­y to correct and plan for the park deficits that exist,” Smith said.

Without “at least 15 acres of contiguous open space,” Smith warned that new and old residents will be “entirely dependent on individual developers and one- off decision- making to address their needs” for recreation­al space.

“This plan will likely result … in a patchwork of open spaces attached to planned developmen­ts, as they are downtown, unsuitable for the kinds of sports and recreation­al needs,” of the new and old residents, she said.

The plan calls for developers who build residentia­l and retail projects in what is now a protected industrial corridor to pay for the privilege, though the exact fee will be hammered out this summer.

Fees will also be assessed for bigger and taller projects.

The pot of money generated by those fees would be used to accomplish two goals: to bankroll roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture in areas “transition­ing” from heavy manufactur­ing to lighter uses; and to expand Chicago’s still- thriving manufactur­ing districts, several of them on the South Side.

The most immediate beneficiar­y of the new guidelines could be Sterling Bay.

The developer wants to build what could be a massive residentia­l and commercial developmen­t on a 28- acre site along the Chicago River in Lincoln Park that once housed Finkl Steel.

Another prime beneficiar­y could be Riverside Investment & Developmen­t, owned by former John Buck Co. executive John O’Donnell.

The company wants to build a mix of technology office space, commercial and residentia­l uses on the northeast corner of Chicago and Halsted on land owned by the Chicago Tribune, across the street from the newspaper’s Freedom Center printing plant.

 ??  ?? A developmen­t plan OK’d by the Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday envisions the potential for a series of high- rises along the west bank of the Chicago River. CITY OF CHICAGO
A developmen­t plan OK’d by the Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday envisions the potential for a series of high- rises along the west bank of the Chicago River. CITY OF CHICAGO

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