Two Months Of Demolition At 168 North Clinton In The West Loop

168 North Clinton demolition progressThe north façade of 168 North Clinton laid bare.

The loft timber office building at 168 North Clinton Street in the West Loop was permitted for demolition on January 22nd. Once they had gutted the interiors and prepped the site, demo contractor Atlas Industries walked us through the building in April, just a couple weeks before tearing into the structure. In May, demolition began in earnest.

Our next visit was on May 8th; demolition had just begun on the top floor of the north façade, which allows Atlas to utilize the surface parking lot on the southwest corner of Clinton and Lake Streets. We’ve been back twice since, with work continuing to eat away at the same facade. A wood pile of reusable timber beams and the first pallets of bricks for salvage have been sorted and set aside. For safety and in the consideration of the tight quarters, it has been and will be a slow process, with the entirety of demolition work expected to take three months.

168 North Clinton demolition progress

One corner missing from the east façade, June 23, 2026. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

The first floor was the old Post Office space. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Timber beams in the foreground and background. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

The start of demolition, photographed on May 8, 2026. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Our second demo visit, June 3, 2026. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

The first collection of bricks and timber, June 3, 2026. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Timber pile. Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

168 North Clinton demolition progress

Photo by Daniel Schell

If there are plans for the site, they have yet to be made known.

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12 Comments on "Two Months Of Demolition At 168 North Clinton In The West Loop"

  1. Ridiculous

  2. Is saving the bricks and beams meant to make us think tearing down a sound and useful historical building for no clear reason is a good thing? How long will we have a gravel hole in the city?

    • My point exactly, why in the hell would you tear down a perfectly great building. To put another POS building with no real substance.

  3. so sad to see this guy go… but I know this just means they are clearing the way for something that will be at least twice as big in the end..

  4. Joseph J Korom Jr | June 25, 2026 at 11:29 am | Reply

    The destruction of this building was shameful. It was handsome. It was functional. It was historic. It was a neighborhood landmark. It was…it was…standing.

    • Agreed. Too bad they couldn’t build on one of the many surface parking lot parcels available in the vicinity.

  5. Historical buildings are like stray cats: love them all but sadly can’t save them all.

  6. Sad, yes a beautiful building! I worked at Wacker and Washington and went to the post office there one day and loved what I seen inside and out. From that day I would take my mail from home and drop it there just to see it again. What a shame!

    • Jerry Wysocki | June 26, 2026 at 10:01 am | Reply

      Seems like another “search and destroy mission” to rid the city of its durable iconic and still useful architectural gems. A building like this had great potential to be converted within to serve any useful purpose. At least they are apparently recycling its useful lumber and bricks.

  7. Richard M Daley | June 25, 2026 at 9:22 pm | Reply

    Nothing lasts forever

  8. Appalling

  9. William preston | July 3, 2026 at 6:00 pm | Reply

    I hate seeing this beautiful historic city turned into Houston-on-the-lake.

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