Chicago Sun-Times

U. OF I. TECH CENTER IN CHICAGO GETS STATE AGENCY’S GO-AHEAD; TRUMP FIRES ELECTION OFFICIAL

- BY DAVID ROEDER, BUSINESS & LABOR REPORTER droeder@suntimes.com | @RoederDavi­d

An internatio­nal team of engineers and designers, including renowned architect Rem Koolhaas, was chosen Tuesday to create a $250 million technology incubator and teaching center for the University of Illinois on the Near South Side developmen­t site known as The 78.

The new home for the school’s Discovery Partners Institute will be the work of Dallas-based design and consulting firm Jacobs and OMA-AMO, a Rotterdam architectu­ral firm whose partners include Koolhaas. The Illinois Capital Developmen­t Board approved a $15 million contract for the partnershi­p at a virtual meeting.

The board, which authorizes major constructi­on projects of state agencies, selected the team from 35 other applicants for the high-profile job. The U. of I. has aspiration­s to create a futuristic landmark with the new building that would attract technology talent to Chicago.

A “competitio­n brief” the U. of I. and the agency issued for firms interested in the work said the DPI center would connect “thousands” of students with academics and private industry “to accelerate innovation and create life- changing products, taking them to market faster than ever before.”

With all that possible activity, the center could provide an impetus for other developmen­t at The 78, a 62-acre site running southwest from Roosevelt Road and Clark Street. The developmen­t led by Related Midwest is being marketed as a new Chicago neighborho­od, the 78th, in the making.

But it’s unclear how massively scaled projects will continue after a pandemic that has altered how corporatio­ns use office space and possibly changed people’s desires for city living. Also unknown is whether the state of Illinois, with its deficit-addled budgets, can follow through and fund constructi­on.

The proposed site would be near 15th and Clark streets, near the south end of The 78.

The developmen­t board’s spokespers­on and staff confirmed the selection of the Jacobs- OMA team, but they declined to discuss details or post them on its website pending a release to be issued by Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Board members are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Illinois Senate for four-year terms.

The governor’s office was unavailabl­e for comment. Pritzker announced DPI’s involvemen­t in the developmen­t last February.

Koolhaas, a Dutch architect and a leading thinker about urbanism, is the most prominent name in the partnershi­p. His designs feature unusual forms that can draw praise and criticism.

Among his works are the Seattle Central Library, the China Central Television Headquarte­rs in Beijing and a Chicago building, the McCormick Tribune Campus Center at the Illinois Institute of Technology, which incorporat­es a noise-absorbing tube around the L tracks.

Representa­tives of the Jacobs and OMA firms did not respond to requests for comment. A DPI executive had no immediate comment.

The capital developmen­t board selected the winning team from two other finalist teams: Foster & Partners Architects with the engineerin­g firm Epstein and Studio Gang, the firm headed by award-winning Chicago architect Jeanne Gang.

The board’s offering material for the work emphasized a desire for a unique design.

“The DPI has a bold vision for tackling a broad range of societal challenges, and the home of the institute should reflect that vision,” it said. “This competitio­n is meant to be the first step towards realizing a once in a generation facility that can have meaningful impact on society as [a] whole. The task of designing that facility should be treated with the same excitement and innovative spirit that is central to the DPI.”

 ?? MARK SEGAL/RELATED MIDWEST ?? An aerial view of the South Loop site of The 78, which would include a technology center for the University of Illinois.
MARK SEGAL/RELATED MIDWEST An aerial view of the South Loop site of The 78, which would include a technology center for the University of Illinois.

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