Chicago Sun-Times

OLD COUNTY HOSPITAL’S $1 BILLION FACE-LIFT

With landmark status pending in City Council, developers busy renovating historic building

- RACHEL HINTON REPORTS,

The old Cook County Hospital’s grand, beaux-arts façade is mostly obscured by a white tarp-like covering these days as constructi­on crews work at demolishin­g some of the old features of the historic building to make way for a hotel and office complex that county officials hope will transform the Illinois Medical District and Near West Side.

Efforts to restore the façade on the front of the building at 1835 W. Harrison started this past fall. Once finished, it will be the extravagan­t face of a $1 billion plan to rebuild the 102-year-old building inside and out.

John Murphy, chair of the Murphy Developmen­t Group — which is one part of the Civic Health Developmen­t Group that was picked to redevelop the hospital — says the effort is on track to finish on time, by 2020, and they’re 70 percent through the demolition phase.

“What is old, and some view as ugly, is going to be restored to new,” Murphy said.

Scaffoldin­g covering the front and east and west sides of the building is being used by crews repairing and replacing masonry — mostly bricks and damaged terra cotta. Thousands of pieces require removal in order to fix years’ worth of neglect, said Matt Beach, the developmen­t project manager. The terra cotta is being sent to a reproducti­on facility and then sent back and reinstalle­d over the course of several months.

Inside, much of the building has been gutted, though its high ceilings remain. Some of the original floor detailing, in black and white tile, is now covered in grit and dirt, and water leaks through in some spots.

There are plans for a dining room and bar and lounge on the second floor, though the back of the building on that floor is almost completely exposed to the elements.

Rebuild includes hotels, offices, museum

After a groundbrea­king ceremony in June, constructi­on workers have demolished chunks of the building, but are keeping some of its facets, like a marble staircase leading from the first floor to the second and intricate detailing in the ceiling. Though it’s no

longer a medical training ground, the redevelopm­ents coming to the old hospital are intended to preserve its history while also bringing jobs and developmen­t to the Near West Side.

When the redevelopm­ent of the hospital is done, it’ll include a Hyatt House and a Hyatt Place hotel as well as medical offices and retail spaces. There’ll also be an on-site museum that “recognizes the past and history of what this great building represente­d to the medical community for more than 100 years,” Murphy said.

“The old building maintains its place as the epicenter of the medical district,” Murphy said. “I think that people embrace the history and what pioneering medical procedures were developed here around the turn of the century and going forward. Some of the most brilliant minds in medicine have gone through that building, were actively trained, did their residencie­s there, and there is just a tremendous digest of stories from the past, and we believe by preserving this we take with us a piece of Chicago’s history for the next 100 years going forward.”

There are about 100 workers there a day, spread throughout the massive building, said Kenneth Johnston, a senior project manager with Walsh Group.

At the peak of the restoratio­n process, 250 to 300 workers are expected to work on the building, Johnston said.

The multiphase developmen­t will also have residentia­l developmen­ts to the south of the hospital. Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e estimates that the total investment will be roughly $1 billion from “private sources,” she said, meaning no county dollars are going into the project.

It’ll also create about 900 jobs during the redevelopm­ent process, from the constructi­on phase to the end, a Preckwinkl­e spokeswoma­n said.

A hub of activity

The old hospital was a proving ground for surgeons and other medical profession­als — the first medical internship and first blood bank in the country were started there, and doctors there did some of the first surgical fixations of fractures.

Some of the surgical halls, some with their old seats rusted over or covered in graffiti, still remain in fairly good condition and will likely be repurposed in some way in hotel rooms. An old exam light — and a mummified cat — found in one of the halls likely won’t be.

Harry Richter III, chairman of the general surgery division at Cook County Health, is the third generation of Harry Richters to have worked at the hospital — his grandfathe­r and father both trained there, and the Harrison Street hospital is also where his parents met. He said it would’ve been “a crime to lose the building entirely,” and he’s looking forward to it being “back online.”

“In its heyday, it was a city unto itself,” Richter said. “It was a city block and more with many buildings interconne­cted with this great tunnel system. It was a hub of social and business activity, and I think you’ll still see a glimpse of that once it’s open.”

Last week, the City Council’s Committee on Zoning, Landmarks and Building Standards moved to give the building landmark status — a vote by the full City Council is needed to seal that deal.

Preckwinkl­e called it “a transforma­tive developmen­t for the West Side, for Chicago and the county.”

“It’s really important to save our architectu­ral heritage, and Chicago is known for its diverse and stunning architectu­re, so I wanted to try to do everything I could to save this building, both because of its historical significan­ce and because it’s kind of beauxarts classic,” Preckwinkl­e said.

“We hope it’ll be a catalyst for further developmen­t around it and contribute to the transforma­tion of the Near West Side,” Preckwinkl­e said.

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 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? The Cook County Hospital facade in 1993.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO The Cook County Hospital facade in 1993.
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? The south side of the old Cook County Hospital.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES The south side of the old Cook County Hospital.
 ?? SKIDMORE, OWINGS & MERRILL ?? LEFT: A rendering of the redevelopm­ent of the old Cook County Hospital, 1835 W. Harrison.
SKIDMORE, OWINGS & MERRILL LEFT: A rendering of the redevelopm­ent of the old Cook County Hospital, 1835 W. Harrison.
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? ABOVE: Cook County Hospital in 1993.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ABOVE: Cook County Hospital in 1993.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN-TIMES ?? LEFT: A former operating theater sits in disrepair in the old Cook County Hospital. Some features of the old hospital that remain in good condition may be incorporat­ed or repurposed in hotel rooms.
PHOTOS BY ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN-TIMES LEFT: A former operating theater sits in disrepair in the old Cook County Hospital. Some features of the old hospital that remain in good condition may be incorporat­ed or repurposed in hotel rooms.
 ??  ?? ABOVE: More scenes from inside the dilapidate­d old Cook County Hospital. When the redevelopm­ent of the building is complete, it will house hotels, offices and retail spaces.
ABOVE: More scenes from inside the dilapidate­d old Cook County Hospital. When the redevelopm­ent of the building is complete, it will house hotels, offices and retail spaces.
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