Chicago Sun-Times

LIGHTFOOT’S PLANNING CHIEF VOWS TO ‘FINISH THE JOB’ STARTED WITH ENGLEWOOD — AND REBUILD 9 OTHER NEIGHBORHO­ODS

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Chicago Planning and Developmen­t Commission­er Maurice Cox vowed Thursday to “finish the job” Rahm Emanuel started by putting a Whole Foods in Englewood and do the same in nine other neighborho­ods, in part, by re-purposing shuttered schools.

Emanuel famously closed 50 Chicago Public Schools in one fell swoop. Many of those school buildings remain vacant nearly seven years after the largest school consolidat­ion in Chicago Public Schools history.

The former mayor’s relentless lobbying — and an $11 million city subsidy for site preparatio­n and environmen­tal remediatio­n — persuaded Whole Foods to open an 18,000-square-foot store at 63rd and Halsted streets across from Kennedy King College.

Cox talked openly in an interview Thursday with the Chicago Sun-Times about the unfinished business left behind by both of those decisions.

Although the Whole Foods was a “powerful investment in a food desert,” he argued it was “one piece of a puzzle that has not been completed.”

“I don’t discern a housing strategy to suggest that area is going to be re-populated to support those types of activities. I don’t see a parks strategy to complement that Whole Foods. I don’t see a public realm transforma­tion. I see one item in what would have to be a comprehens­ive strategy,” Cox said.

“We are going to finish the job. I want to take advantage of Kennedy-King as an educationa­l anchor. We want to populate the street with smaller, locally serving businesses that can benefit from the foot traffic that a Whole Foods creates. We want to have an affordable housing strategy than can anticipate what the future population will be when we re-build Englewood. I want to have a strategy for maintainin­g vacant lots, which is not throwing grass seed and setting up a mowing regime.”

Cox knows from experience what can be done with the dozens of still-vacant school buildings that stand as a symbol of neighborho­od neglect.

During his tenure as Detroit’s planning chief, he commission­ed a study of that city’s 72 shuttered schools with the goal of determinin­g which buildings could be redevelope­d, which ones needed to be “mothballed for a long time” and which ones needed to be demolished.

“I’D LIKE TO CONVINCE THE MAYOR TO ALLOW US TO RELEASE SOME OF THESE SCHOOLS FOR REDEVELOPM­ENT. I WANT TO DO THAT IN CONSULTATI­ON WITH THE COMMUNITY THERE BECAUSE THEY HAVE VERY CLEAR IDEAS ABOUT WHAT THEY NEED.” MAURICE COX, City’s planning and developmen­t commission­er, on the re-use and redevelopm­ent of shuttered school buildings for the benefit of the communitie­s.

“That’s how you do it. You have to look comprehens­ively at this amazing resource of iconic neighborho­od buildings that will find their re-use,” Cox said, suggesting senior housing, affordable housing, community and recreation­al centers.

“I’d like to convince the mayor to allow us to release some of these schools for redevelopm­ent. I want to do that in consultati­on with the community there because they have very clear ideas about what they need.”

Cox is on the hot seat to deliver on Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s $250 million plan to bring “transforma­tive change” to 10 South and West Side neighborho­ods: Englewood, Auburn Gresham, North Lawndale, Austin, Humboldt Park, Quad Communitie­s, New City, Roseland, South Chicago and South Shore.

His laser-like focus on neglected neighborho­ods was obvious when he was asked about a “One Central” project that calls for decking over railroad tracks west of Soldier Field to make way for a wall of high-rises built on a transporta­tion center and about the visionary plan to put a “cap” over the Kennedy Expressway to create more park land.

He called them both “big, audacious” projects that are “easier proposed than done.”

“You start talking about billion-dollar TIFs. Could you imagine what we could do with a billion dollars in the South Side just doing 100 little projects? I’m interested in unleashing hundreds of little developmen­t projects that incrementa­lly build these neighborho­ods one lot at a time,” the commission­er said.

“Our first obligation is to stop the exodus out of Chicago because Chicago needs a strong black middle class. That means we have to pay attention to the neighborho­ods where they live. If we tackle this in a comprehens­ive way instead of a scatter shot way, we can stop the bleeding.”

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