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Its
easy to get jaded reviewing new residential construction in Chicago. Development,
like most fields, is dominated by mediocrity, and most of what gets built
is at best unremarkable. What a surprise, then, in naming Chicagos
best new homes to find ourselves struggling in a number of categories
not because candidates were scarce but because there were too many from
which to choose.
As the boom
in new construction grew during the 90s, money was plentiful, and
even second-rate projects often sold out before they were completed. Lenders
since have become more discerning, tightening the money supply and in
many cases raising the number of units a builder must sell before construction
can start.
This has
been something of a weed out process, and while some developers now struggle
to sell the last of their units, others with the right product, price
and location are seeing swift sales. Fewer new developments have come
online during the last year as builders concentrated on existing inventory,
but buyers have an array of interesting projects to peruse, especially
when it comes to condos.
In the category
of best mid-rise condo, chose Metropolitan Developments Rainbo Village,
as much for the scope of the two-acre development and its likely impact
on the neighborhood as for the forward-looking design of its new construction
loft and condo buildings. But we might as easily have chosen
Belgravia Groups the Apex, 859 W. Erie, a 54-unit project whose
sharp angles and creative balconies will be a welcome addition to a neighborhood
thats seen its share of cookie-cutter condos. Or RCR|DCs Case
Study 2004: River North, a seven-story condo building at 156 W. Superior
that will have a dramatic glass façade, airy units and an expressed
structural steel frame.
Lofts had
all but disappeared from the market during the last few years, but beautiful
units with the classic exposed brick and beams and open floor plans of
the best lofts are available at projects like 333 S. Desplaines and Printers
Row Lofts. Others such as the Phoenix at Uptown Square and the Edge have
been creative in incorporating loft rehabs into new construction and uniting
disparate elements in cohesive developments.
Choosing
in the townhouse and single-family categories was much easier because
so much less product is available. JDL Developments Columbia Place
townhomes display a high level of standards, and the developer has made
the most of its sites in the Paulina corridor. RCR|DC has responded to
neighborhood needs with its Bridgeport Commons project, and has provided
something increasingly rare in Chicago detached houses that non-millionaires
can afford.
In making
our selections, the editorial staff considered everything from location
and floor plans to amenities, architecture and pricing, imagining that
we were buyers of new construction. We chose projects that scored well
in every category and so represented the best available housing. Our choices
admittedly are subjective, but we think that the following projects would
at least be good starting points for anyone in the market for a new home.
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Paramount
Lofts
Chicago’s best new loft
The
original Graham, Anderson, Probst and White building at 130 S. Ashland
exudes the sort of class and grandeur that was de rigueur in old
department stores, and the redesign of the 1925 W. A. Wieboldt and
Company Midwest store highlights the buildings history while
adding some creative avant-garde elements.
Paramount Lofts
will feature two glass-walled atriums in its center to provide light
and air to interior units. A window model allows buyers
to browse a Paramount unit from the sidewalk through one of 11 oversized
street-level windows, an idea inspired by the buildings former
use. The showy sales center has 20-foot ceiling heights, wall murals
by Brian Bonebrake and dramatic original artwork by the renowned
Zhou brothers.
At press time,
Ashland Developer Group, LLC had sold more 120 of the 207 units
at the project. The six-story terra cotta and brick structure, which
was last used by Kranston Studios 15 years ago, will get two additional
stories in the makeover, for 44 penthouses on the seventh and eighth
floors. Nearly 50,000 square feet of commercial space will be developed
on the ground floor.
Several tiers
of smaller lofts will have balconies facing the landscaped courtyards,
according to architect Todd Main, of Bauhs Dring & Main, Ltd.
The units have large picture windows, high ceilings, private balconies,
hardwood floors and exposed concrete piers. Prices range from the
$180s for remaining one-bedrooms and from the $220s for two-bedrooms,
while two-bedrooms with dens start in the $320s. First occupancy
is scheduled for fall of 05.
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Skybridge
Chicago’s best new highrise
Developers
Bill Moran, of Moran and Associates, and Howard Weiner, of Dearborn
Development Corp., made design a priority at Skybridge, which they
see as the western gateway to the Loop. The builders sought to avoid
dropping a giant curtain of a building on the edge of the neighborhood,
an area of low-rise lofts. Instead, architect Ralph Johnson, of
Perkins & Will, broke up the structure, which feels like three
buildings in one, artfully connected by a glass cutout and a steel
sculptural bridge that caps the 39-story tower like
a giant overhanging trellis.
We wanted
to break the scale up into a series of communities or neighborhoods,
like a hilltop village in the sky, so we have these kinds of erosions,
both vertical and horizontal cuts, to scale the building down into
communities, Johnson said.
A series of
glass-enclosed walkways connect what look like two distinct towers
and provide a transparent look at the life of the building and the
skyline beyond it. The large mass of the six-story base is a little
imposing, but Johnson softened its street-level effect with a glass
front for the ground-floor Dominicks and checkered panes of
blue glass that hide parking levels.
The cutting-edge
design was recognized by the American Institute of Architects, which
awarded its 2003 Distinguished Building Award to Skybridge.
Skybridge offers
14 floor plans with one to three bedrooms and one to 2.5 baths.
Standard features include Canac cabinets, Corian or granite counters,
GE appliances, ceramic tile baths and Jacuzzi tubs. Prices range
from the $250s to the mid-$800s, and parking is priced from $30,000.
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Columbia
Place
Chicago’s best new townhouse
The
Paulina corridor, like many industrial areas that find themselves
short on industry, has turned the corner into residential development,
becoming one of the hottest strips for new housing on the North
Side. One reason for the locations popularity is that it sits
on the edge of Lincoln Park and Lakeview, two of the most popular
neighborhoods in the city, but offers better prices than projects
east of Ashland, a block away.
JDL Development
grabbed a rare opportunity when it bought out Columbia Graphics
and put several properties together to form Columbia Place, 2640
N. Paulina, a large site that includes one parcel in West DePaul
and another in Lakeview.
Designed by
architects Pappageorge Haymes, the 32 rowhomes that comprise the
South Homes, feel like single-families, though they are attached.
With 3,600 to 4,400 square feet, they have the space and open floor
plans of single-families, and façade variations in color,
design and fenestration create the impression of detached houses.
Its difficult in this area to find a single-family for less
than $1 million, but the South Homes at Columbia Place offer an
alternative that starts in the $810s. The North Homes, where 48
townhouses and 16 duplexes form a quadrangle, have a more affordable
price point, with duplexes starting in the $530s and townhouses
in the $590s.
Standards for
construction and finishes are high at both the South and North Homes,
with Jenn-Air stainless steel appliances, granite counters, red
oak floors in living areas, marble master baths and maple, alder
or oak kitchen cabinets. In addition to the homes yards and
private wood decks or terraces, buyers have easy access to a new
two-acre city park, just southwest of the North Homes, on Hermitage.
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Rainbo
Village
Chicago’s best new mid-rise
Metropolitan
Development Enterprises inherited a number of advantages when it
bought the site of the former Rainbo roller rink, at 4836 N. Clark,
in Uptown. Sites as large as this one more than two acres
are hard to come by in neighborhoods as dense as Uptown,
and the expansive grounds of St. Boniface Cemetery across the street
will give residents a quiet buffer of green in an otherwise bustling
location.
Still, it would
have been easy to bang out the kind of cookie-cutter faux Victorian
units that have scarred so many Chicago neighborhoods during the
last decade. Instead Metropolitan and architects Pappageorge Haymes
have created a tasteful site plan that includes a variety of units,
an open courtyard and 15,000 square feet of sorely needed street-level
retail on a sparse stretch of Clark.
The condo buildings
mix brick, metal and glass for a contemporary look that will change
the profile of a key stretch of Clark. The metal banding expressed
through the canopies, balconies and decorative panels creates a
horizontal emphasis and unity in front, while the brick adds warmth.
Glass that starts at floor level and rises about nine feet in the
front loft buildings will flood the condos with light
and turn a friendly face to the neighborhood. The 88 loft-like units
in the two buildings fronting Clark also have exposed concrete ceilings,
exposed ductwork and track lighting, while the more traditional
condos inside the courtyard will have dry walled ceilings and concealed
ducts.
At press time,
remaining condos started in the $230s, and 15 townhouses were priced
from the upper $500s to the upper $600s.
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Bridgeport
Commons
Chicagos best new single-family home
Few
developers are building single-family homes in the city today because
theres less risk and more money in other types of product.
Developer Bob Ranquist, of RCR|DC, however, currently has three
single-family home projects underway with a variety of price points
and locations.
RCR|DCs
new Bridgeport Commons development, 430 W. 37th, wins in the smallest
of our categories, best new single-family, for providing comparatively
affordable detached houses for families and taking neighborhood
context into account. The 23 homes range from the $390s to the mid-$500s
by no means cheap, but more affordable than new condos in
many parts of the city.
Architects Morgante
Wilson took their design cues from Bridgeport when designing these
traditional homes. They reflect the Arts and Crafts tradition
and are really like two-story bungalows, says John Potter,
of Morgante Wilson. Theyre flexible spaces very oriented
toward families.
The homes have
2,000 to 4,000 square feet, three to five bedrooms and 2.5 to 3.5
baths. There are five different styles, most on three levels and
all with two-car attached garages. They are, as Ranquist says, almost
suburban in style, with iron spot brick and limestone detailing,
stucco, front bay projections, wooden garage doors and private yards.
Like a number
of RCR|DCs projects, Bridgeport Commons offers floor plans
that are wider and more squared than typical single-family layouts.
The 36-foot-wide lots are about 70 feet deep, which allowed the
architects to put bedrooms and other elements side by side in highly
functional floor plans.
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