Plan Commission Approves Retail Building At 67 East Oak Street

Rendering of 67 E Oak St by Myefski Architects

Plans for a new retail building were approved by the Plan Commission earlier this month. Located at 67 East Oak Street, the mid-block structure will replace an existing five-story building along the city’s highest-value retail corridor. The effort is being led by a local LLC along with the design firm Myefski Architects.

Site context map of 67 E Oak St by Myefski Architects

View of existing building via Sun Times

According to the Sun-Times, the developer originally explored remodeling the existing 12-tenant building before deciding to demolish it and start fresh. The move is in line with what has been happening along the corridor, with two-story new construction spaces aimed at a single tenant or brand, similar to the buildings on either side.

Floor plans of 67 E Oak St by Myefski Architects

Set to rise 35 feet in height, the building’s overall design will be relatively simple and feature an all-glass front façade framed by a thin black metal edge. Inside will be 5,960 square feet of space with a statement staircase to the second floor, an elevator, restrooms, and a small trash enclosure in the rear.

Section of 67 E Oak St by Myefski Architects

To ensure bird safety, the glass will include a slight etched pattern for visibility. The small building is expected to cost around $8.1 million to construct as a white box, meaning the future tenant will build out its own interior. Once all approvals are received, the team hopes to begin demolition at the start of 2026, with a targeted completion date of September 2027.

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8 Comments on "Plan Commission Approves Retail Building At 67 East Oak Street"

  1. I do not understand the economics of tearing down an existing multi-use building to replace it with a short single use one. How does this work!?

    • It would likely cost a pretty penny to rehab the existing building to bring it up to modern standards and make it appealing for tenants. It’s much easier to lock in a single tenant long term than trying to round up a dozen (or so). This move as a no brainer.

  2. Joseph J Korom Jr | December 1, 2025 at 11:26 am | Reply

    The building is fine just as it is. Don’t do this.

  3. They evidently believe they can make more money with a large double height flagship retail space than a bunch of smaller retail/boutique/office spaces. If the existing building sat partially empty for years because they can’t find smaller retail to fill this expensive street, it might be the better solution, even property tax-wise.

  4. Oak Street is becoming an anonymous glassfaced street wall of boredom

  5. As others have noted, this is a reduction in density and shouldn’t be celebrated.

    There is a literal skyscraper, 1000 Lake Shore Plaza (55 stories), on the same block less than half a block away. And they are building a two-story? Absurd.

  6. A real downgrade both for the parcel and the block as a whole. These two-level single tenant stores are barely different than what can be found at Old Orchard Mall or Oakbrook. They just line a real street in this case.

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