Chicago Sun-Times

Clocktower renovation will help put Pullman, Far South Side back on track

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The remarkable progress being made of late in Chicago’s Pullman community is an encouragin­g sign for the future of the city and the value of its historic places.

Officials this week symbolical­ly broke ground on a $34 million restoratio­n of Pullman’s historic clocktower and administra­tion building at 111th Street and Cottage Grove Avenue.

The building will be the heart of the Pullman National Monument, a designatio­n given to the landmark neighborho­od five years ago under President Barack Obama.

What a turnaround for a building that was nearly lost in an extra alarm fire in 1998. Now, once restored, the 120-year-old clocktower and administra­tion building and its 12-acre site will become the national monument’s visitors’ center, operated by the National Park Service.

It’s good to see Pullman getting its due. Since the 1970s, residents in the civically active neighborho­od have worked to preserve the historic and architectu­rally significan­t ex-company town created in the 1880s by railroad car manufactur­er George Pullman.

Alongside that work over the last decade, Pullman-based non-profit developer Chicago Neighborho­od Initiative­s has restored vacant historic rowhouses on the north half of the landmark district.

CNI also spearheade­d the constructi­on of a shopping center a half-mile east of the clocktower, near 111th Street and the Bishop Ford Freeway, and the Pullman Community Center, a 38,000-square-foot sports complex near 103rd and the Bishop Ford.

We hope this keeps up. Rehabs and restoratio­ns on Pullman’s northern end must continue in order to bring it to the same tourist-friendly level of beauty that the neighborho­od’s southern half currently enjoys.

And we’d like to see neighborin­g Roseland get some benefit from Pullman’s success and momentum. The community’s mile-long Michigan Avenue commercial strip and turn-of-the-last-century housing are in need of reinvestme­nt.

But none of this would be possible — neither the progress to date nor the continued potential — without the years of preservati­on work that provided the platform. Pullman is enjoying success today because the historic places that make it special were preserved.

That’s important to remember in a city that still rolls the bulldozers a little too quickly on the South and West sides, often leaving no more than vacant lots — rather than new developmen­t — behind.

The neighborho­od of Pullman, an architectu­ral pioneer 120 years ago, can show us a different way once again.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? The Pullman National Monument hosted a ceremonial groundbrea­king on Monday.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES The Pullman National Monument hosted a ceremonial groundbrea­king on Monday.

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