Chicago Sun-Times

FROM HOSPITAL TO HOSPITALIT­Y

Redevelopm­ent of storied old Cook County Hospital slated to open in July with hotels, offices, museum

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

The long-neglected old black-and-white floor tile is no longer covered in grit and dirt, now cleaned and polished to a sheen. The water leaks are gone. A drop ceiling has been removed to reveal ornamental plaster and crown molding.

Some of the old surgical halls — their seats rusted over or covered in graffiti just last year — have been repurposed into hotel rooms, with wallpaper featuring the Chicago skyline and other Chicago-centric art.

Developers gave a virtual tour Friday of the old Cook County Hospital, the grand building at 1835 W. Harrison St., given a major face-lift to house two hotels, a dining area, medical offices and a museum to pay tribute to the century-old hospital’s “tremendous medical history.”

Ald. Walter Burnett (27th), who was born in the West Side hospital nearly 57 years ago, said he’s glad the opening is in July, and not just because his birthday falls in the following month.

“I’m looking to have a birthday party here at Cook County Hospital — hopefully you all can join me,” Burnett said.

The two Hyatt-brand hotels within the renovated Cook County Hospital are slated to open in July with a food hall in the building slated to open soon after, developers said during the virtual tour on Friday.

The renovated former hospital will feature 75,000 square feet of medical office space, which will be occupied by the county’s medical system as well as a Hyatt House, which is meant for extended stays, and a regular Hyatt Place hotel.

The combined hotels offer 210 suites between them, and the developers hope to open them July 1. By the end of July, the medical office spaces will be occupied. The area will now be known as Harrison Square.

There will also be a day care center and a museum on the first floor that “pays recognitio­n to the tremendous medical history here in Cook County,” said 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.

Over a year ago, the Murphy Developmen­t Group was 70% through the demolition phase, the insides of the building covered in the usual dust and debris that comes with making something old new again.

On Friday, the dust of constructi­on was largely gone, although a few tarps remained on chairs and ladders sat under lights.

“This is so exciting for the community,” Burnett said. “One of the great things about this developmen­t is that they had an African American partner — not as a contractor — an African American partner, two African American partners as part owners of this hotel and helped to develop it, so that’s exciting.

“But not only that, they hired a lot of people from the community, and we look forward to them hiring a lot of people to work here from the community, so this is exciting for our neighborho­od, it’s exciting for the city of Chicago.”

Little was said about the coronaviru­s pandemic that has debilitate­d the hospitalit­y industry. The developers created a grant program for vendors who were “particular­ly hurt or injured by the pandemic,” Murphy said. That will cover all startup costs necessary to get people back on their feet.

When asked about concerns that the pandemic could affect business, Murphy said in a statement that “our business is more tied to serving patients and families that are moving forward with elective procedures at both Rush and U of I, which commenced approximat­ely two weeks ago.”

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 performed some of the first surgical repairs of fractures in its operating rooms.

The building was constructe­d at the turn of the century and is more than 100 years old. Before the renovation, it was shuttered for about 17 years, “abandoned and deteriorat­ed to a level that no one thought could be turned around,” Murphy said.

Dirt, graffiti and neglect marked the old building when the Chicago Sun-Times toured it in early 2019. Much of it was gutted, though its high ceilings remained.

Plans for a dining room and bar and lounge on the second floor are now largely complete, and those who visit the building will soon be able to play pool, sit in front of a sleek fireplace and watch TV or hang out at an “extensive bar area,” Murphy said.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES; PROVIDED ?? The old Cook County Hospital (top, in an undated photo) and an artists’ rendering (above) of the newly renovated hospital.
SUN-TIMES FILES; PROVIDED The old Cook County Hospital (top, in an undated photo) and an artists’ rendering (above) of the newly renovated hospital.
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 ?? SCREEN SHOT ?? John Murphy gives a virtual tour of a hotel room that will be available starting in July. Murphy stands in front of what once was a viewing area for one of Cook County Hospital’s surgery halls.
SCREEN SHOT John Murphy gives a virtual tour of a hotel room that will be available starting in July. Murphy stands in front of what once was a viewing area for one of Cook County Hospital’s surgery halls.

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