Chicago's Best
New Homes of 1999
New Homes ranks the
best projects in the city,
from houses to highrises
It’s time
once again for our choices of Chicago’s best new homes. Each year, our
editorial staff visits dozens of new developments, pours over piles of
brochures and floor plans and conducts interviews with countless
developers and architects to find Chicago’s best projects.
This year the
competition was especially stiff. The category of new highrises, for
example, would have been all but empty a few years ago. Today, more than a
dozen new highrises are under construction or are pre-selling condos. The
number of loft projects has declined since last year, but the number of
units is still large. Large-scale developments such as the Clinton Complex
and Dearborn Tower continue to raise the bar for size and amenities in
loft buildings.
One category
that is in short supply is single-family houses. In the city, this
phenomenon is largely a factor of costs in a booming real estate market.
Between the prices of land, labor and materials, it has become difficult
to find a new detached house for less than $300,000 – $400,000 to $1
million is the norm. Building a small to mid-sized condo building or
townhouses is a much safer proposition for most developers than tackling a
couple of high-end single-families on prime city lots.
Townhouses
too have become a casualty of rising prices. The $200,000 townhouse is
nearly non-existent, while plenty are priced above $300,000. New
townhouses are more common than single-families, but they generally suffer
from poor design and the developer’s imperative to get as many units as
possible onto the available land. The problem had become so rampant in
certain neighborhoods that new city ordinances now mandate a minimum
amount of green space and limit density in townhouse developments.
In
each of these categories, as well as in conversion of existing buildings
to condominium ownership, New Homes acted as a potential home buyer, reviewing the available
product. After looking at floor plans, pricing, amenities, architecture,
location and other elements of new developments, our editorial staff
selected the projects we thought represented the best available housing.
The selections are admittedly subjective, but we think these projects
would be at least good starting points for anyone in the market for a new
home.
| Chicagos
Best New Loft |
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Project:
Metropolis
Address: 1935 N.
Fairfield
Developer: Bill Senne
Architect: FitzGerald
Associates
Prices: $140s - $280s
Occupancy:
2001
If you’re looking for a doorman, a concierge or a fine
restaurant in your building, Metropolis is not the project for
you. Then again, if those things are priories, you’re not
shopping for a real loft, but Loft Lite. Metropolis represents a
return to true loft aesthetics, a refreshing departure from the
sanitized downtown buildings billing themselves as lofts these
days.
The
project, designed by FitzGerald Associates, includes two adjoining
buildings, one heavy timber, one concrete construction. The units
have hardwood floors, exposed beams and ductwork, exposed brick
and fireplaces. The partial-height walls, oversized windows and
ceiling heights that rise more than 14 feet provide a feeling of
space in even the smallest units, which after all, was once the
essence of loft living.
Developer
Bill Senne and architect FitzGerald Associates are no strangers to
loft construction. They have come up with interesting floor plans,
including some angled layouts, some three-bedrooms and a
1,449-square-foot duplex with a private patio. The original façade
on the Washtenaw building was not salvageable, but FitzGerald has
crafted a new one using modern materials and maintaining the large
window openings that dominate the Fairfield side. |
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| Chicagos Best New
Highrise |
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Project:
Park Place
Address: 600 N.
Kingsbury
Developer: Stonegate
Development
Architect: Solomon
Cordwell Buenz & Associates
Prices: From $190s
Occupancy: 2001
At 18 stories,
Park Place is not exactly a soaring thing, but it’s certainly
proud – more than we can say for the conservative designs behind
most new residential highrises in the city. How refreshing to see
creative, thoughtful floor plans that don’t resemble every other
floor plan drawn in the last five years. And how nice to see a
building that responds to its environment with originality.
A
curvilinear design on the building’s “river homes” interacts
with the flow of the river yards away, and two-story atriums
promise spectacular views and light. The floor plans have angled
and curved walls that create interesting spaces, while open living
/ dining / kitchen layouts maintain functionality and openness.
The tower’s V-shape and narrow floor plate guarantee terrific
light and layouts for all of the units.
A
7th floor terrace level includes a pool and Jacuzzi, a health club
and spacious private terraces. The building also will have a
24-hour doorman, dry cleaners, day care, individual storage areas
and access to boat taxis. In addition to being on the incipient
Chicago river walk, Park Place will sit on the southern edge of a
90,000-square-foot park. |
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| Chicagos Best New Low-rise |
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Project:
2300 St. Paul Condominiums
Address: 2300 W. St. Paul
Developer: Turnberry
Properties
Architect: Hartshorne &
Plunkard
Prices: $200s - $250s
Occupancy:
Fall 2000
The design of 2300
St. Paul Condominiums ensures that every buyer gets a good unit. All
of the 80 condos are two-bedroom corner units with balconies. That
guarantees more light and better views in these four mid-rises than
comparably priced units in many larger buildings. Each building has
four units of around 1,200 square feet per floor, all with two baths.
The “great rooms” are large, some more than 28-by-16, and kitchens
are open.
The
exteriors are fairly traditional – red brick accented with lighter
brick and a stone base. A strong corner element with vertical bands of
this lighter brick and an ornamental cap in each building provides
some visual interest and nicely integrates the four structures.
The
six-story buildings will be quiet and intimate, but with the amenities
buyers in this price range expect – elevators, indoor parking,
storage lockers, central heat and air conditioning. The finishes, from
Moen bathroom fixtures and marble vanities to oak flooring and granite
kitchen counters, are also high-end. |
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| Chicagos Best Condo
Conversion |
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Project:
Concord City Centre
Address: 208 W. Washington
Developer: Concord Homes
Architect: Hartshorne &
Plunkard
Prices: $130s - $770s
Occupancy:
2001
Concord City Centre,
the original Morton Building, designed by Graham, Anderson, Probst
& White, doesn’t fit neatly into the condo conversion category
because it is being converted from office space, not apartments.
Technically, it is by our definition, a loft building, but the field
of conversions has gotten so sparse that we were willing to stretch.
These
units could only be considered lofts in the strictest sense anyway,
having been formerly used for commercial purposes. The walls and
ceilings are drywalled, ductwork is concealed, bedrooms are separated
and most ceiling heights are 10 feet. They look, smell and feel like
conventional luxury condominiums. Curved wrought-iron balconies are
being added to the stately old red brick and terra cotta building in
the heart of the Loop as it makes the final transition from office
tower to residential.
The
project, along with the adjacent City Center Club, has proven that
buyers are willing to live not just downtown, but in the heart of the
financial district. Standard features at Concord City Centre include
oak floors in living areas, gas fireplaces, ceramic tile baths,
individually controlled heating and air conditioning, new windows, new
plumbing and electrical systems, and wiring for high-speed Internet
access. Building amenities include a 24-hour doorman, state-of-the-art
exercise facility, business center, individual storage lockers and
separate bicycle storage. |
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| Chicagos Best
Single-Family |
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Project:
Wellington Park
Address: 1701 W.
Wellington
Developer: Orion
Development Group, Enterprise Development
Architect: Berger
Architects
Prices: From $750s
Occupancy:
2001
Brand new
single-family houses are hard to find in the city market, new
houses that don’t look like they were designed in 19th century
France or England, near impossible. Jack Berger, who has referred
to his style as “a poor boy’s Richard Meier,” has built
notable exceptions on the local scene. Berger’s homes, with
their white facades, clean lines and rectilinear patterns, have
made tiny River West an island of modernism.
The
design of Wellington Park, a 114-unit development of townhouses on
the seven-acre former site of Appleton Electric, in Lakeview,
reflects his penchant for modern design. The facades feature flat
white panels and face brick, with strong vertical lines. The
interiors display the same simple elegance. The ground floor
includes attached two-car parking and a family room over a sizable
basement. The first floor is split between a large “great
room” open to the kitchen, and a living / dining room with a
balcony. The third floor contains a massive master bedroom and two
smaller bedrooms, and the fourth floor penthouse opens onto a
spacious, wrap-around roof deck.
Buyers
can tailor the homes to suit their needs and tastes, but four
bedrooms, 3.5 baths and large roof decks are standard. The
development is landscaped throughout and built around a central
private park. |
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| Chicagos Best New
Townhome |
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Project:
St. John’s Park
Address: 850 N. Ogden
Developer: Rezmar
Development
Architect: Pappageorge
Haymes
Prices: $360s - $500s
Occupancy:
2001
The proliferation
of townhouses in neighborhoods throughout Chicago inspired the
city to impose tougher standards for green space and design on
these projects. St. John’s Park, an 82-unit townhouse
development on the Near Northwest Side, shows how effective the
new rules can be. The community is designed around a park with
more 12,300 square feet of grass in the center of the development.
The homes also have private yards and there is landscaping
throughout the project.
The
homes have two or three bedrooms, 2.5 baths, balconies, private
front yards, roof decks and one- or two-car garages. With prices
starting in the $360s, they are not the cheap alternative
townhouses used to be. But with square footage ranging from 2,193
to more than 2,800 square feet, they show that townhouses still
offer the best value on price-per-square-foot of any housing type.
The
larger townhouse model on site is the Asbury, a three-bedroom,
2.5-bath unit with more than 2,500 square feet. The house has a
two-car garage, fireplace, kitchen island, master bath with
separate shower and double vanity. The finishes are high-end,
including angled hardwood floors, granite counters, ceramic
bathroom flooring and recessed lighting. |
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