Foundation Pile Permit Issued For Chicago Fire Stadium In The South Loop

Rendering of the Chicago Fire FC stadium by Gensler

The first permit has been issued by the City of Chicago to begin construction on the Chicago Fire’s new stadium in the South Loop. Assigned to the address of 1331 South Wells Street, the permit allows for piles to be driven for the stadium. More specifically, piles for vertical penetration only, for the four-story soccer stadium’s foundations. The permit came through the Chicago Data Portal on Friday, March 20 with a reported cost of $5 million. It had been pending since October 24.

The contracting team of Pepper Construction, GMA Construction, and A.L.L. Construction are recipients of the permit, the first of many more to come. This permit had been pending in the Chicago Data Portal since October 24, which isn’t a very long time. But considering how quickly the city seemed to want to allow this project to get underway, a faster permit delivery would not have been a surprise.

Chicago Fire FC stadium groundbreaking

Chicago Fire FC stadium groundbreaking, via Major League Soccer on X

The Fire held a groundbreaking ceremony for the stadium on Wednesday, March 3. Some of us dreamers hoped the piles would be permitted during the ceremony, with a police escort leading a representative from City Hall to The 78 with the fresh permit framed and ready to display on the construction fencing. Alas, there were no such dramatics. But there were fireworks, as you can see above.

Chicago Fire Stadium pile permit

Photo by Daniel Schell

Chicago Fire Stadium pile permit

Photo by Daniel Schell

Chicago Fire Stadium pile permit

Photo by Daniel Schell

Site prep kicked off in conjunction with the ceremony, and it’s been ongoing since. With piles now permitted to begin, look for the lot to get much busier very soon. Like teammates waiting to take their penalty kicks, additional permits are lining up in the Data Portal. A permit for shallow foundations has been pending since February 20, and a permit for the stadium’s superstructure hit the portal on March 17.

Chicago Fire Stadium pile permit

Photo by Daniel Schell

Chicago Fire Stadium pile permit

Photo by Daniel Schell

Chicago Fire Stadium pile permit

Photo by Daniel Schell

Rendering of Chicago Fire FC stadium by Gensler

Rendering of Chicago Fire FC stadium by Gensler

Rendering of Chicago Fire FC stadium by Gensler

Initially expected to cost $650,000,000, new reports have pushed the price tag up to $750 million. Picking up the tab will be the Chicago Fire and their owner, Joe Mansueto. They plan to host the first soccer games and other events in the spring of 2028.

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6 Comments on "Foundation Pile Permit Issued For Chicago Fire Stadium In The South Loop"

  1. I’m not too sure how long it will take for those rendered high rises to ever get built, but this will be a stadium surrounded by parking lots for years.

    Still better than a giant, weedy lot, of course…

    • They proposed, permitted, and broke ground on an entirely new stadium project in basically a year.

      Don’t gotta be a downer on the grand scheme. One of the fastest projects in recent Chicago history.

    • With residential demand what it is and now a catalyst project to provide the EAV to make the TIF solvent, I wouldn’t be surprised if the towers get built fairly quick. Maybe not, but I could see it developing quickly.

      • I am guessing that the towers north of the stadium will progress quickly once the parking podium is completed. That will still be at least a 5 year process, since the initial 2019 timeline before Covid listed at least 5 years before the first phase would complete, & that was basically the same number of towers as proposed north of the stadium.

        The parking lot to the south might exist for a decade or so as an interim use. Which is a bit of an opportunity IMO because there is time for more grandiose solutions to access at the southern end of the site from the east.

  2. Are we going to talk about that groundbreaking photo? lol

  3. I’m pleasantly surprised by the exterior. Is it me or are stadium architects in their own league (no pun intended) these days? If only they could help out their fellow architects designing apartment buildings. Anyway, this is gorgeous! What a lovely addition to Chicago. I can’t wait to attend a game there!

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