Chicago Sun-Times

City’s planning chief says South Works too big for one developer

- BY DAVID ROEDER, BUSINESS & LABOR REPORTER droeder@suntimes.com | @RoederDavi­d

The massive U.S. Steel South Works site along the lakefront, larger than downtown Chicago, is too big to turn over to a single developer and deserves a multi-phased approach that includes new industry, Chicago’s planning commission­er said Thursday.

Maurice Cox said the city’s past emphasis on finding a developer to take charge of the property and push forward a project that relies on new housing has been the wrong tactic. He said the site’s unique industrial heritage should form the basis of a new strategy for South Works.

“Imagine what would happen if there was a robust economy centered on the site. It would shift the center of gravity in the city,” Cox said on the Sun-Times’ “Fran Spielman Show” podcast.

“When some are pointing out that it’s as big as the downtown, you start to understand the absurdity of turning that over to a single developer,” Cox said.

U.S. Steel closed the South Works plant in 1992 and demolished it, leaving behind a 415-acre site along Lake Michigan roughly between 79th and 87th streets. The company has tried to find a single buyer for the land, but at least two housing-related mega-developmen­ts have collapsed.

The Chicago Tribune has reported Chicago-born rapper Common and financial backers want to put a film production and recreation complex on the property. Cox, however, said his Department of Planning and Developmen­t, which would review any zoning change for the site, has seen no viable proposal for South Works.

A spokeswoma­n for U.S. Steel declined to comment. The real estate agent for South Works, Larry Goldwasser, executive director at Cushman & Wakefield, likewise declined to comment.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Ore walls that remain on the South Works site because they were too costly to take down.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Ore walls that remain on the South Works site because they were too costly to take down.

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