Chicago Sun-Times

New plan coming to old Merc

- DAVID ROEDER droeder@suntimes.com

The half block that sits empty on the west side of Franklin between Washington and Randolph is a laggard in Loop developmen­t. Owned by the billionair­e Crown family in partnershi­p with Tishman Speyer Properties, it’s never arrived at the real estate marketing party in time to secure interest from tenants.

The owners have gotten little but parking revenue from the site for years. It used to have a building on it, the old Chicago Mercantile Exchange at 300 W. Washington, but the Crowns flexed their muscle at City Hall and got it torn down in 2003. It was architectu­rally significan­t, filled with paying tenants, but it was torn down in expectatio­n of something loftier that never came.

Now, however, the Crowns and Tishman are gearing up for a slowly improving office market that could support new corporate monuments. Tishman Managing Director Vicki Noonan said plans are in the works for a million-square-foot developmen­t. The owners have hired the Chicago-based firm Krueck and Sexton Architects to draw up plans.

Noonan discussed the project briefly Tuesday morning and promised to get back, but never did. A Tishman spokesman said renderings were not available.

Noonan told the website Bisnow earlier this month that she expected marketing materials for the site to go out by the end of April.

Krueck and Sexton’s Chicago work includes the Spertus Institute on Michigan Avenue and the Crown Fountain (there’s that name again) with the faces on it at Millennium Park.

The Franklin parcel is just two blocks west of City Hall. It’s an important location for firstrate design. As for what’s in the works, this is all I have to go on from Krueck and Sexton partner Ronald Krueck:

Tishman Speyer “is always interested in good design,” he said. “They tend to hold onto their properties and have found that design is a good investment.”

BUY A VOWEL? If you were downtown the last couple of Sundays, you might have wondered what a helicopter was doing among the high-rises near State Street and the river. Another exercise for the NATO summit?

Nope. It was constructi­on activity by true “men of letters.” They were changing the Unitrin signs at the top of the 1 E. Wacker building to Kemper for Kemper Corp., the insurance company that owns the 50-yearold tower. Unitrin changed the name to Kemper, its best-known operating unit, last year.

The new LED signs on the north and south sides of the building were lighted for the first time Tuesday night. Company officials said the signs will consume half the power of the old versions.

HERD THIS ONE? School kids are taught about Mrs. O’leary and her cow. Not so well known was another cow owner with an impact on Chicago, and it was up to real estate broker Jonathan Zimmerman to enlighten me.

Zimmerman, among the busiest agents downtown, has started his own firm, Willard Jones Real Estate. I asked him about the significan­ce of the name. It turns out Willard Jones owned land in the 1830s that constitute­d much of the Loop. He sold pieces, and in 1844 when he sold a section at today’s 100 W. Monroe, he insisted on a 10-foot-wide easement as a cow path. It’s still there, and the 1920s building on the property was designed over and around it.

Historical sources say the Illinois Supreme Court in 1925 upheld the easement, even though by then cows were no closer to 100 W. Monroe than the stockyards.

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