Facade Work Continues for ‘The Sally’ in Uptown

The Sally. Rendering by Booth Hansen

Facade work can be seen progressing for the second phase of ‘The Sally,’ a mixed-use development project in Uptown, located at 1131-1135 W Winona Street. Developed by Cedar St. Companies, the project comprises two five-story buildings that collectively offer 180 residential units, including 37 affordable housing units. The unit sizes will range from studios to two-bedroom apartments.

1135 W Winona Street. Photo by Jack Crawford

1135 W Winona Street. Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Rendering by Booth Hansen

The first phase of ‘The Sally’ is complete and includes 64 apartment units, along with ground-floor retail space. The larger second phase, located at 1131 W Winona Street, is set to feature 116 apartments and will offer amenities like a fitness center, an indoor lounge, and a rooftop deck for residents. A sky bridge on the fourth floor will connect the two buildings.

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Rendering by Booth Hansen

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street. Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

Booth Hansen is responsible for the design, which incorporates various materials, including floor-to-ceiling windows, ACM paneling, fiber cement, and metal rain-screen paneling.

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street (left) and 1135 W Winona Street (right). Photo by Jack Crawford

Public transportation options include the Broadway & Winona intersection, served by Route 36 buses, and the Foster & Broadway intersection, where Routes 92 and 146 are accessible. Additionally, the CTA L Red Line station at Argyle is situated directly across the street from the site.

1131 W Winona Street. Photo by Jack Crawford

1131 W Winona Street. Photo by Jack Crawford

Method Construction, the general contractor for the project, expects to complete construction on 1131 W Winona Street later this year.

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9 Comments on "Facade Work Continues for ‘The Sally’ in Uptown"

  1. Is it just me or has construction slowed in this city dramatically? I mean I’m reading new york yimby and keeping up with developments in other city and its quiet here. Only a couple cranes up in the city, I was in Nashville last month and there was atleast 45+ cranes.

    • It’s not just you, Chicago became clown town with every project is delayed and takes forever to get anything approved. Everyone just want low taxes cheap housing no traffic and no new construction in their neighborhood..

      • Like everyday I used to read this website I used to see new tower proposals and other multifamily construction, now all I see daily are “renovations” and new single family homes or whatever like sheesh. NYC is constructing like 8-9 supertalls right now, the sunbelt is still building like crazy, so I know this is a Chicago specific issue.

    • Yeah it’s definitely not just you. The mayor has assembled a task force with a deadline to find ways to shorten the arduous approval process here, and it’s headed by a well respected developer. Fingers crossed it amounts to something tangible.

  2. Chicago is not going to be like Nashville or Miami. That ship has already sailed. Construction has slowed for a lot of places due to banks not lending and interest rates. Chicago is not a boomtown like it was 100 years ago. What we can hope for is to staunch the bleeding of population by good policy related to development and regulation, build on the “good bones” we have in terms of architecture, urban fabric and transit, and plan for the future challenges posed by climate change. We’re well situated for this unlike a lot of the boom cities right now, who are building their growth on car dependent sprawl.

    • I wouldn’t say Chicago is “bleeding” pop.

      Last 20 years of censys data shows stability across the board. Sure, we’re no longer in a high growth period, but we’re also not losing population like the 50s – 80s.

    • Downtown areas are booming. Some south and west side neighborhoods are losing people, but I believe the city has the most households it’s ever had. Household sizes are just smaller than they used to be.

    • “Climate change” LOL
      This should be a place for serious discussion.

  3. *Census. Damn fat fingers.

    Also, an important metric to watch: the latest census figures show Chicago is becoming more diverse and more educated over time. Good things to see when considering long term health of the populace.

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