Chicago Sun-Times

Holy Name, N. Branch projects win Plan Commission approval

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

The Chicago Plan Commission on Thursday signed off on a pair of projects with a combined $ 700 million price tag: one filling a surface parking lot near Holy Name Cathedral, the other triggering a developmen­t boom in the North Branch Corridor.

The twin- tower complex known as “One Chicago Square” will include 869 residentia­l units at a cost of $ 500 million.

It will become Chicago’s 6th- tallest building — nearly as tall as the Hancock Building — filling a parking lot owned by the Archdioces­e of Chicago at the corner of State Street and Chicago Avenue.

Both towers will rise from a nine- story commercial base.

Roughly 225 of the developmen­t’s 1,090 parking spaces — none of which would be visible from the street — would be reserved for use by Holy Name parishione­rs.

Instead of building affordable units on site, JDL Developmen­t will make a $ 6.1 million payment that will bankroll constructi­on of 22 affordable units at the Lawson House SRO developmen­t across the street.

JDL will satisfy the remainder of its city mandate by making the largest payment ever made to Chicago’s Affordable Housing Opportunit­y fund: $ 11.3 million.

That’s on top of a $ 13.2 million contributi­on — the second- largest bonus ever paid — to the so- called “Neighborho­od Opportunit­y Bonus Fund.”

The share the wealth fund was created by Mayor Rahm Emanuel to rebuild neighborho­od commercial corridors with contributi­ons from developers allowed to build bigger and taller downtown projects.

Planning and Developmen­t Commission­er David Reifman credited JDL with devising a “great creative approach” to Chicago’s affordable housing mandate.

“They’re not doing affordable housing on- site, but it works well for us because the Lawson YMCA . . . is a very important SRO. We’re looking for sources of funding to make sure that project can work. So, it’s a great synergy. The location is ideal. It’s right down the block,” he said.

Reifman argued that concerns about adding density to an already congested area will be mitigated by a host of traffic improvemen­ts negotiated by local Ald. Brian Hopkins ( 2nd) and bankrolled by JDL aimed at remedying what the alderman has called a daily “traffic gridlock nightmare” on Chicago Avenue.

That includes a host of traffic signal improvemen­ts, removal of parking lanes, the addition of left- turn and right- turn arrows and the return of articulate­d buses to the area.

“It’s right by the Red Line, the Chicago Avenue stop. It’s a major transit- oriented developmen­t. I don’t think it’s too much. It’s a beautiful building. It’ll be a real asset architectu­rally. It’s not that overwhelmi­ng a number of units for the area,” Reifman said.

The Plan Commission also signed off on a $ 200 million commercial building — with 4.5 acres of open space and a picturesqu­e walkway along the Chicago River — on a site owned by Tribune Media at 640- to- 740 W. Chicago Ave.

As many as 6,000 people could ultimately work and 800 of them could live on the massive riverfront developmen­t triggered by Emanuel’s plan to open 760 acres of protected industrial land to residentia­l and commercial use in the North Branch corridor.

But Tribune Media and its partner, Riverside Investment and Developmen­t, will have to return to the Plan Commission for approval of subsequent phases.

Riverside will pay the city a $ 1.1 million “Industrial Modernizat­ion Fee” for the right to convert five acres of previously protected land to non- industrial uses.

 ?? COURTESY OF HARTSHORNE PLUNKARD ARCHITECTU­RE ?? Artist’s rendering of a high- rise developmen­t proposed in River North at the site of the current parking lot for Holy Name Cathedral.
COURTESY OF HARTSHORNE PLUNKARD ARCHITECTU­RE Artist’s rendering of a high- rise developmen­t proposed in River North at the site of the current parking lot for Holy Name Cathedral.

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