Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago housing affordable if you know where to look

- NATALIE Y. MOORE

Chicago is an affordable city. I know that sounds antithetic­al to what we’re accustomed to hearing. I’ll let you read this sentence again. Give it a moment to sink in. Yes, Chicago is affordable.

To be clear, I am talking about homeowners­hip affordabil­ity. I am not talking about the rental market. Low- income families face myriad housing struggles, which I do acknowledg­e. But if you are a middle- class family, want to own a single- family home in the city proper and don’t have a mammoth budget, there are bungalows, Georgians, colonials and ranches awaiting.

And also to be clear, I am not talking about coveted pricey neighborho­ods like Ravenswood, Logan Square or Lake View. Instead, I mean neighborho­ods like Garfield Ridge, Washington Heights and Chicago Lawn.

Lakefront neighborho­ods have long held cache in the city, and certain North Side enclaves get favor as the city’s darlings. Thus, we have a skewed view of where affordabil­ity actually lies. Thousands of single- family homes are on the market for $ 250,000 or less in a city in which the median income for a family of four is $ 79,000. More on that later.

While I believe the city has visible and invisible borders around who lives where ( and that should change), we can’t afford to ignore the so- called middling or non- sexy neighborho­ods. These are the places that also make up the city’s fabric. A number of working- and middle- class communitie­s can welcome first- time homeowners or families looking to expand.

I’m sure you’re thinking the non- name brand neighborho­ods don’t have the best schools, suffer from crime or boast the most amenities. There is truth in that or not, depending on the neighborho­od. But I am for sure not referring to hipster neighborho­ods or pockets real estate agents hype as the next up- and- coming “it” thing.

OK, back to affordabil­ity. What do I mean? I conducted a non- scientific online experiment. I looked on three real estate websites, searching for singlefami­ly homes in the city with at least three bedrooms for no more than $ 250,000. The results yielded myriad results: gut rehabs with well- appointed kitchens and wainscotin­g to foreclosur­es in need of more than tender loving care. A lot in between. Large backyards or big lots. Thousands of such homes exist: more than 2,000 on Trulia, 4,700 on Realtor. com and 4,400 on Zillow. com.

But those homes are not equally distribute­d throughout the city. On Zillow, for example, red dots on a map indicate a home’s location. White space, not red dots, mark the North Side. Huge surprise. There needs to be a reckoning with blatant disparitie­s because every neighborho­od should provide some affordable homeowners­hip options.

Yet we cannot ignore the myriad bedroom communitie­s in Chicago that crave more resources or branding.

As part of my reporting and stake as a city denizen, I drive through or visit these communitie­s — the Park Manors, the Hegewische­s, the Auburn-Greshams, the Ashburns, the Back of the Yards. They have strong block clubs and residents toiling to make their communitie­s stronger while considerin­g how to market them. Some of the neighborho­ods are black, white, Latino or mixed. Many are aging and trying to attract younger families, whether for a starter home or a forever home. Notably, the Greater Chatham Initiative has made restoring the luster of this black middle- class milieu a priority.

The struggles some neighborho­ods experience range from crime to economic disinvestm­ent to poor- performing schools. Not every neighborho­od desires a Starbucks or other type of status developmen­t. And some neighborho­ods struggle more than others, which is all the more reason city and private investment needs to view these places as worthy.

Chicago is vast. We are not bursting at the seams. Empty lots and depopulati­on tell that story well. The upside is that we are not like Washington, D. C., New York, Atlanta, Oakland or San Francisco, where home affordabil­ity has disappeare­d like manufactur­ing jobs in the Midwest. The aforementi­oned Chicago home prices turn people’s faces green with envy in other cities.

A singular focus on neighborho­ods with the latest craft brewery, hot restaurant or boutique does a huge disservice to everyone in Chicago. We need to pay attention to the hollowing out of the middle class and joblessnes­s — major threats to neighborho­ods.

Potential and existing homeowners should pay attention to a much broader swath of neighborho­ods instead of lamenting the high prices in the same handful of trendy areas.

A number of workingand middle- class communitie­s can welcome first- time homeowners or families looking to expand.

 ?? | RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? If you get out of the hippest neighborho­ods, Chicago has plenty of housing to offer in solid communitie­s, writes Natalie Moore.
| RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES If you get out of the hippest neighborho­ods, Chicago has plenty of housing to offer in solid communitie­s, writes Natalie Moore.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States