Chicago Sun-Times

Gentrifica­tion fears in Albany Pk.

‘ We’ve lost 200 kids over the last five years’ because of it, principal says

- BY PATTY WETLI

A standing- room- only crowd of Albany Park residents turned out on a frigid Wednesday night to learn more about a mixed- use developmen­t proposed for the site of the Lawrence- Kedzie Self Storage building, and what they heard did little to allay concerns about increasing gentrifica­tion in the neighborho­od.

Nick Ftikas, a zoning attorney representi­ng the developer, noted that the plan for 27 apartments — 14 onebedroom, 4 one- bedroomplu­s- den and 9 two- bedroom units — would add housing where none exists. Neighbors countered that the prepondera­nce of one- bedroom units, with monthly rents expected to start at $ 1,200, aren’t what the community’s working- class families need.

“We’ve lost 200 kids over the last five years because of gentrifica­tion,” said Scott Ahlman, principal of Hibbard Elementary, where the meeting was held.

“I’ve seen a lot of families displaced, and I don’t know where they went,” he said, including 25 students whose families were evicted from a single building in 2017.

Ald. Deborah Mell ( 33rd), who hosted the forum, said Communitie­s United and the nonprofit Chicago Metropolit­an Housing Developmen­t Corporatio­n had proposed converting the storage building, 3215 W. Lawrence Ave., into all- affordable- housing, but that fell through.

“We couldn’t make the numbers work,” said Diane Limas, board president of Communitie­s United, an organizati­on instrument­al in pushing the City Council to pass the Keep Chicago Renting Ordinance.

Developer Spiro Arsenis has committed to designat- ing four units — likely three one- bedroom units and one two- bedroom apartment — as affordable, Ftikas said; that’s one more than the 10 percent of units required by city ordinance. Neighbors want two of the two- bedroom units earmarked as affordable, a point Mell said she would press.

The developmen­t requires a zoning change to move forward, which does give the alderman some leverage. Mell said she would even consider allowing Arsenis to add height to the six- story building, pending community agreement, if it meant threebedro­om apartments could be added to the plan.

Arsenis plans to renovate the existing structure, preserving features including an original elevator — with a folding gate — and a massive safe dating to the nearly 100- year- old building’s former life as a bank.

Though neighbors encouraged Arsenis to retain as much of the facade as possible, the project’s architect Ryan Arnaudov, of Evanston- based Kolbrook Design, said a significan­t amount of brick must be removed to install windows that meet lighting and ventilatio­n requiremen­ts.

Because the building is about two blocks from either the Kimball or Kedzie stations on the CTA Brown Line, the project qualifies as a transit- oriented developmen­t, meaning fewer parking spaces are required. Ftikas said 12 spaces, in a lot behind the building, will be provided to residents on a first- come, first- served basis.

Additional tenant amenities will include in- unit washers and dryers and a basement with a fitness area, business center, movie theater room and a multipurpo­se room available to members of the broader community for meetings. The plan calls for two commercial spaces on the building’s ground floor. Cupitol Coffee, which has two locations — Evanston and Streetervi­lle — has signed a letter of intent to lease one of the storefront­s. Cupitol bills itself as an all- day lounge, with a cafe, bakery, coffeehous­e and bar. Owners would have to separately apply for a liquor license to serve alcohol.

Factoring in the zoning and permit processes, as well as constructi­on costs pegged at $ 2.5 million, Ftikas estimated it would be 18 months before the building is ready to occupy.

 ??  ?? Architect Ryan Arnaudov discusses plans for the Lawrence- Kedzie Self Storage building at a public meeting on Wednesday.
| PATTY WETLI/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES
Architect Ryan Arnaudov discusses plans for the Lawrence- Kedzie Self Storage building at a public meeting on Wednesday. | PATTY WETLI/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES
 ??  ?? Ald. Deb Mell
Ald. Deb Mell

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