The Permit Review Committee, a subcommittee of the Commission on Chicago Landmarks, has approved the mixed-use development proposed at 210 N Aberdeen Street in the West Loop. Consisting of an irregularly-shaped site, the property consists of an empty lot at the intersection of W Lake Street and N Aberdeen Street, the historic Arthur Harris Building along N Aberdeen Street located in the Fulton-Randolph Market Historic District, and a few one-story masonry buildings behind Arthur Harris fronting N May Street. LG Development Group is the developer behind the proposal.
Originally a 24-story tower rising 308 feet, the revised proposed mixed-use development will rise 19 floors, reaching 238 feet. Designed by NORR, the tower will hold retail space at the ground floor, with 414 residential units in the structure above. The unit mix will consist of approximately 50 percent one-bedrooms, 30 percent studios, and 20 percent two- and three-bedroom apartments. Additionally, 20 percent of the residences will be designated as affordable as per the affordable housing requirements and 102 parking spaces will be provided.
The Arthur Harris Building, originally from 1904, is located at the namesake 210 N Aberdeen Street and will be modified and rehabilitated as part of the overall development. Located in the Fulton-Randolph Market District, the contributing structure is poised to become retail space fronting N Aberdeen Street.
The renovation plan looks to demolish a later addition from the 1950s on the interior of the site whose cross gabled roof is perpendicular to the gable roof of the original portion along the street. The front elevation will be restored and will undergo masonry repairs, window replacement, and the insertion of a retail storefront at the center of the front facade. The original bowstring trusses will also be restored. A non-historic brick addition on the southern elevation will be demolished and replaced with a new glass connector that serves as a division between the new and old portions of the overall scheme.
The design of the remaining development features a three-story podium that holds retail, residential entry, loading, parking, and amenity spaces. The podium will anchor the corner of W Lake Street and N Aberdeen Street and maintain the street wall on all frontages. The residential lobby will set back to create relief at the sidewalk and a small plaza, while holding back from the Arthur Harris structure. The residential tower portion sets back from the street and is a thinner massing, moving around the site around the landmark district boundary, creating a stepped form horizontally.
The tower massing is articulated to provide three distinct components both in height and materiality. The center mass is clad in masonry and is lower in height. The northern and southern wings are both finished in a glass and metal panel curtain wall, with the northern portion rising above the other two components. Inset balconies are included within the tower massings.
On the ground floor, retail space will hold the corner at W Lake Street and N Aberdeen Street as well as occupy the historic Arthur Harris structure. The residential lobby will be located in between the retail spaces along N Aberdeen Street. Parking will be accessed off of N May Street with a bicycle lounge activating that street frontage. It will offer space for bicycle parking as well as repair stations that will also be publicly accessible. Loading will be from W Lake Street.
The development will require approvals from the Alderman, the Chicago Plan Commission, the Zoning Committee, and the full Chicago City Council. The developers hope to go before the Chicago Plan Commission in June with the remaining approvals requiring an additional 2.5 months. Six months will be necessary to finalize documentation and drawings for the construction, with permitting lasting three months. With those milestones to achieve, the developers hope to break ground within 11 months or one year from now.
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For being a prime example of the Fultonization look (faux warehouse + modern black metal), this looks very nice. Wish at least one of the towers were at least 400′ so that we avoid a plateau in this part of the city, but overall very nice.
Way too long with many too many committees. It should not take 1 year. Maybe a month or two at most to get approved.