Chicago Sun-Times

HITTING THE BOOKS

Rahm to break ground on 3 library- housing partnershi­ps designed by top Chicago architects

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

In 2012, Mayor Rahm Emanuel forged a groundbrea­king partnershi­p between the Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Public Library that put a new community library — open to the public — in Back of the Yards High School.

By pooling diminishin­g resources, CPS and City Hall were able to offer “teen- focused collection­s and digital learning amenities” and still operate a public library for all Back of the Yards residents, who had lost their storefront library to flooding.

On Sunday, Emanuel will break ground on three more neighborho­od libraries — all designed by prominent Chicago architects — that are the product of partnershi­ps with the Chicago Housing Authority.

The first and most controvers­ial project is the Roosevelt Library that will be built at the base of the Taylor Apartments, a CHA building at 1342W. Taylor Street.

The 73- unit Taylor Street project will include 37 units of CHA housing, 29 affordable apartments and sevenmarke­t- rate apartments. Designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, it’s part of Roosevelt Square, the massive redevelopm­ent of what was once the ABLA homes.

Constructi­on is also getting underway at the Independen­ce Apartments and Independen­ce Library at 4022 W. Irving Park Road in Irving Park and the Northtown Apartments and Northtown Branch Library at 6800N. Western inWest Ridge.

Both of those projects will have 44 apartments set aside for seniors, including 30 public housing and 14 affordable. The Independen­ce project was designed by John Ronan Architects. The Northtown project was designed by Perkins & Will.

The architects were chosen in a design competitio­n tailor- made to deliver on Emanuel’s promise to break from what City Hall calls the “standard, cookie- cutter designs” that have long been the standard for government buildings and bring “world- class design” to Chicago neighborho­ods.

Mixing libraries and CHA housing is a way to make the most of diminishin­g resources and convince local residents to accept public housing they might otherwise fear. But, it hasn’t always worked that way.

Last summer, more than 500 Little Italy residents signed petitions urging the Chicago Plan Commission to put off a vote on the project to give them more time to negotiate the size and scope of the project Taylor Street project.

They talked about a “visible increase in crime,” they fear will only be exacerbate­d by the CHA project. They warned that a 9- to- 1 ratio between low- andmarket- rate housing in a seven- story, 73- unit complex in Little Italy was a “train wreck” and a “prescripti­on for neighborho­od de- stabilizat­ion.”

Ald. Jason Ervin ( 28th) countered that the new library that will anchor a seven- story CHA building will be a sorely needed “shot in the arm” to a Taylor Street commercial strip in “decline.”

Ervin also bristled at the suggestion that the project would open the door to increased crime.

“Just because one is poor does not mean they are prone to criminal activity. There are plenty of rich individual­s who have been prone to criminal activity,” Ervin said then.

Under pressure from area residents, Developer Jacques Sandberg argued that it would be “impossible” to build a stand- alone library without the housing component, which makes the entire project eligible for tax credits and federal funding.

In August, 2016, Emanuel announced that the cramped public library at one of the CHA’s most historic developmen­ts would be replaced by a new library that doubles as a “community center.”

Work continues on that Koodesigne­d new library to be built on CHA- owned land along 130th Street, near Ellis Avenue, adjacent to the Far South Side’s Altgeld Gardens developmen­t. The CHA will pick up the $ 7 million tab for constructi­on. The city will operate and maintain the facility.

 ?? SKIDMORE, OWINGS& MERRILL ?? Taylor Street Apartments and Roosevelt Branch Library
SKIDMORE, OWINGS& MERRILL Taylor Street Apartments and Roosevelt Branch Library
 ?? PERKINS+ WILL ?? Northtown Apartments and Northtown Branch Library inWest Ridge
PERKINS+ WILL Northtown Apartments and Northtown Branch Library inWest Ridge
 ?? JOHN RONAN ARCHITECTS ?? Independen­ce Apartments and Independen­ce Library in Irving Park.
JOHN RONAN ARCHITECTS Independen­ce Apartments and Independen­ce Library in Irving Park.
 ?? SKIDMORE, OWINGS& MERRILL ?? Taylor Street Apartments and Roosevelt Branch Library
SKIDMORE, OWINGS& MERRILL Taylor Street Apartments and Roosevelt Branch Library
 ?? PERKINS+ WILL ?? Northtown Apartments and Northtown Branch Library
PERKINS+ WILL Northtown Apartments and Northtown Branch Library
 ?? JOHN RONAN ARCHITECTS ?? Independen­ce Apartments and Branch Library
JOHN RONAN ARCHITECTS Independen­ce Apartments and Branch Library

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