Chicago Sun-Times

Go back to square one on Humboldt Park building that was under constructi­on without approval

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No one, confronted with a Gordian knot of red tape just to relocate a driveway by a couple of feet, would imagine someone else building a monstrous boxy building on park district land without a building permit or written park district approval.

But, then, this is Chicago. Near to the picturesqu­e, historic and landmarked Humboldt Park Receptory and Stable Building, an ugly structure has unexpected­ly sprung up like a mushroom after a rainstorm. Community members were not consulted. The building is far larger — and different — than called for in plans submitted to obtain a $750,000 grant from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. Plans were not submitted to the Commission on Chicago Landmarks Permit Review Committee.

Fortunatel­y, the city has put a stop to constructi­on for now. Good. No work should resume until all stakeholde­rs have had a chance to examine constructi­on plans — the real ones. If the stakeholde­rs insist on a more architectu­rally fitting building, or no building at all, that is what should happen. Circumvent­ing the full approval process should not confer any kind of advantage.

“The park district has told them to start over and create real architectu­ral drawings by real experts and go through a formal process to see if it would pass muster,” Friends of the Parks Executive Director Juanita Irizzary told us.

What’s happened here is surely not some kind of innocent mistake. Former Ald. Billy Ocasio is president and chief executive director of the highly regarded National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture, which is putting up the building as an adjunct to space it leases in the Humboldt Park Receptory and Stable. Ocasio knows the rules, or ought to.

A full investigat­ion is required on the process that allowed the start of constructi­on on a structure that looks so far like a dismal Soviet-era government building. Originally described as an archival facility, the far-larger building actually appears to be some sort of event space, critics say.

The lack of proper approvals raises concerns that the building might not have been constructe­d in a safe manner, said Mary Lu Seidel, director of community engagement for Preservati­on Chicago.

“I hope, in defense of the sanctity of our parklands — and the lives and safety of visitors — they do have to tear it down,” Seidel said.

Chicagoans strolling through Humboldt Park looking for refuge from a busy urban environmen­t should not be confronted with an eyesore that did not get proper approval. Nor should it be forgotten that open parkland is precious.

Redo the project in a way that enhances the park and city — or don’t do it at all.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Constructi­on, now stopped, has begun on a boxy building (left) near the picturesqu­e, historic and landmarked Humboldt Park Receptory and Stable Building.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Constructi­on, now stopped, has begun on a boxy building (left) near the picturesqu­e, historic and landmarked Humboldt Park Receptory and Stable Building.

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