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Jefferson
Tower offers 1st-time buyers |
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by Dan Schuyler
Not according
to Jameson Development, LLC, which is crafting an unusual niche for what
it says is a burgeoning breed of residential buyer. The companys
latest development, Jefferson Tower, a 24-story highrise at 200 N. Jefferson,
has entry-level units. All are one-bedrooms with or without dens
ranging from 623 to 1,072 square feet and priced from $204,800
to the $370s, affordable for the downtown market. But check
out the model, located across the street from the building site, at 217
N. Jefferson, and you might think youre in a much pricier building
full of three-bedrooms. All of
the units have private balconies with glass doors and kitchens with slate
flooring, granite counters and stainless steel appliances. The master
baths are marble, entry foyers and living rooms feature hardwood floors.
Most units have gas fireplaces, and every condo includes a state-of-the-art
integrated data, voice, and video communications system. Building
amenities include a secured lobby with a 24-hour attendant, first floor
retail, a fitness center, a community room with a kitchen, a sundeck,
a receiving room, bicycle storage and individual storage lockers. Consider
the fact that at press time, prices included not only these amenities
and finishes but also a parking spot valued at $29,800, and Jefferson
Tower starts to look like a new breed of building. Jefferson
Tower offers a high-end entry-level product, says Charles Huzenis,
a partner in Jameson Development, L.L.C. We feel that economic conditions
over the past 10 years have created an ever-growing demand for this type
of residence. And this
type of buyer someone who, though not a millionaire and purchasing
his or her first home, wants an upscale dwelling. The highrise, 198 units
in a 24-story tower, is designed to give them that and a building
whose exterior is as thoughtful as its floor plans. We
intend for the building to have a clean slick exterior with strong vertical
lines, says architect Patrick Borzenski, whose firm, Loewenberg
& Associates, Inc., designed Jefferson Tower. The columns really
stand out, and they continue through the base and down to the street,
creating a lean look and not the appearance of a tower plopped on a base. The location
of Jefferson Tower in the Fulton River District is perhaps as significant
as the marketing philosophy that dictated its configuration. The neighborhood
is bounded by the Chicago River, Kinzie, Halsted and Randolph Streets.
From a redevelopment standpoint it is one of the citys newer
neighborhoods, having been reborn from old railroad and manufacturing
land in the mid-90s. You
always need hooks to get a neighborhood started, says Huzenis. In
the Fulton River District the true original anchors were the river and
the East Bank Club. Those
hooks eventually turned some heads, and Jameson, headed by
Charles and his brother Harry Huzenis, developed a number of loft buildings
in the area, including China Club Lofts, Clinton Street Lofts and Randolph
Place. The neighborhood began to flourish as other developers followed
suit with such projects as Fulton Station, RiverBend and Kinzie Park,
to name a few. The Fulton
River District received formal recognition in 2000 in the form of its
own community organization, the Fulton River District Association, organized
to support and improve a neighborhood that boasts an influx of some 4,000
residents in recent years. Those
who work downtown will continue to gravitate to this vibrant neighborhood,
says Huzenis, who points to the proximity to the Loop, the expressways
and public transportation. And need I mention the short walking
distances to the Merchandise Mart, the East Bank Club, Greektown, and
Randolph Streets Restaurant Row? With
new developments popping up throughout the area, the Fulton River District
is beginning to take on an architectural flavor of its own. The
old loft feeling is still there to some degree, says Borzenski,
but the neighborhood is in a state of flux now, and it is rapidly
finding its own identity. Jefferson
Tower certainly will be a significant part of that emerging identity.
Its a very simple structure, says Borzenski. We
use lots of glass, and that gives an open airy feeling to the interiors
and allows the columns to give the building a strong vertical look. The architect
also points out that the building is very street friendly,
with the pre-cast reddish-brown granite of the base contrasting with the
lighter earth tones of the tower. We have pulled the building footprint
off one of the corners, adds Borzenski, and this gives something
back to the pedestrians. The Jefferson
Tower sales center is located directly across the street from the construction
site, at 217 N. Jefferson, and contains a full-size contemporary model
designed by Nancy Kovacevich, of Riha Design Group. At press time, approximately 20 percent of the units had been spoken for, according to Jody Williams, vice president of marketing for Jameson Realty Group, the exclusive marketing agent for Jefferson Tower. |