Glazing nears top of residential tower at 633 S. LaSalle Street in South Loop

633 S LaSalle Street633 S LaSalle Street. Rendering by FitzGerald

Glazing has neared the top on the exterior of a residential tower at 633 S LaSalle Street in the Chicago’s South Loop. Comprising 358 beds — a combination of apartments and co-living units — the 18-story tower is a joint development from Q Investment Partners of Singapore and Chicago’s Melrose Ascension Capital.

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

FitzGerald is the design architect. General contractor Clark Construction broke ground here in 2023, with Adjustable Concrete serving as the concrete contractor. They celebrated topping-out of the tower in March of this year. Their goal is to have 633 South LaSalle ready for its first move-ins in 2025.

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 S LaSalle Street

Photo by Daniel Schell

633 South LaSalle residents will have a myriad of public transit options available to them. There are eight CTA bus routes within a five-minute walk, including the #2 Hyde Park Express, #6 Jackson Park Express, 22 Clark, 24 Wentworth, 29 State, 36 Broadway, 62 Archer, and 146 Inner Lake Shore/Michigan Ave routes. The CTA’s LaSalle Blue Line subway station, the LaSalle/Van Buren Green/Brown/Orange/Purple elevated platform, and Harrison Red Line subway station are all with a three-block walk. Metra’s LaSalle Street station is less than two blocks to the north.

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5 Comments on "Glazing nears top of residential tower at 633 S. LaSalle Street in South Loop"

  1. What an awesome infill!

  2. Amazing that the co-living units survived the change in developers .

    How many co-living beds are planned ?

    What is the apartment breakdown ?

    • Daniel Schell | May 25, 2024 at 9:24 am | Reply

      Hi George. 358 is the expected number of beds. I don’t know the apartment breakdown….Daniel

  3. The horizontal shadow lines are a nice touch. While a flat facade often works on a high-rise, the slight articulation helps it fit better into its context.

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