Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

City and community seek new life for former industrial park

- LEE BEY lbey@suntimes.com | @LEEBEY

Make a list of the city’s most historical­ly important places, and the buildings of the old Central Manufactur­ing District in the McKinley Park neighborho­od probably wouldn’t make the cut.

But they should. We’d be a different city had it not been for the CMD, among the country’s first industrial parks.

The early 20th century brick, limestone and terra cotta buildings formed a hard-working, welldesign­ed mile-long backbone down Pershing Road between Ashland and Western avenues.

And from 1905 through the 1960s, thousands of CMD workers from 252 companies helped supply the nation with everything from furniture to chewing gum.

During the district’s salad days, players there included Goodyear Tire, Westinghou­se and an assortment of others, including food processors, drug makers, oil refiners and furniture makers who made use of the shared costs of services provided by the CMD.

The CMD represente­d a great deal of Chicago’s early industrial, economic and architectu­ral might.

But you wouldn’t know that by looking at the district today. The CMD has been largely uninhabite­d in recent decades, leaving many of these important buildings in decay — unused and unprotecte­d.

But that could start to change this month as the Department of Planning and the McKinley Park community begin vetting proposals from three developers seeking to reuse the CMD’s easternmos­t building, a vacant 571,476-squarefoot city-owned warehouse at 1769 W. Pershing Road.

The building is among four CMD structures owned by the city.

Planning Commission­er Maurice Cox, imported from Detroit at the start of Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administra­tion four years ago, said he is excited over the prospect of putting the 1769 building and a neighborin­g truck lot back into use.

“I really thought that Detroit had invented the [quality industrial building] type and perfected it,” he said. “So I was all puffy when I got here and then realized, ‘Oh my God, Chicago’s got this collection [at the CMD] — incredible brick work, incredible details, very ornate. And the city owns all four.”

Three proposals

The three short-listed proposals include a $121 million plan from IBT Group to convert the warehouse into 120 units of mixed-income housing, along with 200,000 square feet of offices, plus retail and lab space.

The developer also plans to put a 50,000-square-foot retail building and 132 parking spaces on the current truck lot site.

Meanwhile, in its $95 million proposal, LG Pershing Sound Studios promises to turn the warehouse into a 40,000-square-foot movie studio and 130,000 square feet of retail and commercial space. The plan includes additional studio space on the truck lot.

The developer Quartermas­ter Outpost seeks to build a 75,000-square-foot movie studio on the truck lot while putting 425,000 square feet of business space in the warehouse. The $90 million plan includes building 40 mixed-income housing units on a top floor that would be added to the warehouse.

The McKinley Park Developmen­t Council is among the community groups that helped pick the three developers and will aid in selecting the ultimate winner.

“We’re looking for options that increase public access to the CMD — to make it pedestrian-friendly,” said the organizati­on’s president, Kate Eakin.

“We want to be careful that it’s done well because it will set a standard for what comes next in the CMD,” she said.

‘An impressive thing’

And what’s next for the district? Cox said he hopes to bring the three developers and their concepts before the community at the end of the month.

“And we’re off,” he said. Afterward, the plan is to work westward on Pershing, redevelopi­ng unused CMD buildings.

The architectu­ral stars of the next bunch of buildings are a 12-story neo-gothic clock tower and the district’s former Union Freight Station.

Both are visually striking structures, built when the district was a self-contained, privately owned powerhouse with its own bank, social club, rail lines and police and fire department­s.

The CMD is more than worthy of preservati­on and reuse, especially now as the buildings hold their own against demolition and neglect.

An original CMD Wrigley gum factory building at 35th Street and Ashland Avenue was demolished in 2013, the same year an extra-alarm blaze claimed the former Pullman Couch Factory at 3737 S. Ashland Ave. within the old district.

Still, there’s a lot of the old CMD left. And it’s quite the marvel.

“It’s an impressive thing,” Eakin said. “To see something like that. We make [industry] look good.”

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 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? The Department of Planning is looking for new uses for a vacant warehouse within the former Central Manufactur­ing District in McKinley Park.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS The Department of Planning is looking for new uses for a vacant warehouse within the former Central Manufactur­ing District in McKinley Park.
 ?? ?? A vacant Central Manufactur­ing District building at 1867 W. Pershing Road was once the U.S. Army Quartermas­ters Depot.
A vacant Central Manufactur­ing District building at 1867 W. Pershing Road was once the U.S. Army Quartermas­ters Depot.

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