Chicago Sun-Times

Rahm opens door to housing, retail in industrial areas

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

In 2005, top aides to then- Mayor Richard M. Daley got in hot water for taking a spring break trip to Brazil with a developer mistakenly issued a permit to build a condominiu­m in the heart of a planned manufactur­ing district where residentia­l permits are supposed to be forbidden.

Now Mayor Rahm Emanuel is talking about relaxing the rules governing Chicago’s 15 PMD and 26 industrial corridors to pave the way for residentia­l and retail developmen­t in those areas zoned to protect manufactur­ing from residentia­l encroachme­nt.

But there’s a catch: Developers who stand to benefit by removing the PMD shackles would pay a fee for the privilege.

Planning and Developmen­t Commission­er David Reifman said the pot of money generated by those fees would be used to accomplish two goals: to bankroll roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture in areas “transition­ing” from heavy manufactur­ing to lighter uses, and to expand Chicago’s still- thriving manufactur­ing districts, several of them on the South Side.

“The idea is to revisit our industrial landscape as a whole, including areas transition­ing away from traditiona­l manufactur­ing and areas that continue to exhibit strength and growth in manufactur­ing. That transition includes high- tech and office jobs. This is not simply about allowing residentia­l zoning,” Reifman said Monday.

“People are reading this as a discussion about residentia­l in PMDs. I’m saying the discussion is much larger. It’s about our industrial landscape as a whole. It’s about transition­ing areas suitable for high- tech and complement­ary uses which may include residentia­l and supporting jobs for Chicago in the best possible way.”

With the Chicago area hemorrhagi­ng many of the 600,000 manufactur­ing jobs it had during the 1970s, Daley all but threw in the towel on reclaiming Chicago’s role as a manufactur­ing center.

But Reifman pointed to two “recent successes” in the Far South Side’s Pullman neighborho­od — Method Manufactur­ing and the Whole Foods distributi­on center lured from Indiana — to argue just the opposite.

“I don’t think the data supports the conclusion that our manufactur­ing days are over. We’re seeing a lot of strength still. Even Finkl Steel is an example. They moved, not out of Chicago, but from Clybourn and the North Branch to a different area of Chicago that gave them better resources at 95th and Burnside. But the manufactur­ing continues,” the commission­er said.

The most immediate beneficiar­y of the mayor’s new policy could be Sterling Bay. The developer wants to build what could be a massive residentia­l and commercial developmen­t on a 28- acre site along the Chicago River in Lincoln Park that once housed Finkl Steel.

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