Chicago Sun-Times

Another big developmen­t deal falls through at U. S. Steel site

- BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER mdudek@ suntimes. com | @ mitchdudek

It seemed like it was going to happen. But an ambitious deal by an Irish developer to purchase the 440- acre U. S. Steel South Works site and transform it into a new neighborho­od on the city’s southern lakefront is kaput.

“We can confirm that Emerald Living has terminated the contract to purchase our former South Works facility,” U. S. Steel spokeswoma­n Meghan Cox said Thursday afternoon in an email.

“We remain focused on selling the property for future redevelopm­ent. We will be putting the property back on the market for sale, including approachin­g several parties that previously expressed interest in the property.”

The now- defunct deal was announced in August of last year and included a five- month window to assess any environmen­tal cleanup that would need to be done before closing.

After contaminan­ts were found on the site, the window was extended by another five months.

“They want more time to see how much it will cost to clean up,” Ald. Susan Sadlowski Garza ( 10th) told the Sun- Times in December after both parties agreed to the extension.

In a statement Thursday, Sadlowski Garza said she was “disappoint­ed by the news of the broken deal.”

“I remain hopeful that we can find a deal that benefits the residents of the 10th Ward and creates economic developmen­t for the city of Chicago,” she said.

Emerald Living had envisioned partnering with a Spanish firm to build 20,000 modular homes on the site.

It’s tough news, but neighborho­od residents have learned to temper expectatio­ns of grand building projects on the site.

Other outsized plans have fallen through, and the site has sat stubbornly vacant since the 1992 closing of the plant.

Messages to Emerald Living were not immediatel­y returned.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Aerial view of U. S. Steel’s old South Works site, near 85th and South Shore Drive.
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Aerial view of U. S. Steel’s old South Works site, near 85th and South Shore Drive.

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