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-   -   CHICAGO | Riverline | 8 Towers | 600FT - 500FT(X2) - 380FT(X2) - 242FT(X2) - 300FT~ (https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/showthread.php?t=221826)

Randomguy34 Sep 27, 2021 8:15 PM

I was looking at Sloopin's article on The Reed and realized there's one last undeveloped lot between Alta Grand Central and the future 40 story building. I highlighted in red the lot, there should be just enough room to squeeze in another highrise: http://www.sloopin.com/2021/09/check...velopment.html

https://i.imgur.com/ufI3LVql.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/nLqAYwGl.jpg

Suburban Shadow Sep 27, 2021 9:11 PM

Pd 1298
 
Where would updated plans for PD 1298 be?

This development was originally supposed to have 5 high rises.

I can only find the the original information from 2015.

https://gisapps.chicago.gov/gisimage...pds/PD1298.pdf

I was looking for the plans that Sloopin might have seen that only show 4.

Randomguy34 Sep 27, 2021 9:22 PM

^ That is the most up to date version of the PD. There are documents from a few months ago showing the changes in The Reed's design. If they do move forward with submitting a change to remove a highrise, the PD will have new documents to reflect the change

Mr Downtown Sep 28, 2021 3:02 AM

That's part of Area C. Here's a colorized version I made of the PD site plan:

https://i.imgur.com/gRThQnp.jpg

Randomguy34 Sep 28, 2021 4:08 AM

^ Subarea C in the PD corresponds to the 40 story highrise listed in Sloopin's diagram. The empty lot in red is a part of the same underlying DX-7 zoning that Alta Grand Central shares

SamInTheLoop Oct 1, 2021 7:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ardecila (Post 9394074)
CMK seems to be in a "one project at a time" mode right now. They probably have reduced staff from their peak 10-15 years ago. And they've been focused on overseas development (Turks & Caicos) just as much as Chicago. I don't think Colin wants the headaches of juggling multiple Chicago projects at once. Right now their next project seems to be 1400 S Wabash, so that will proibably keep them busy for the next 1-2 years at least...

I know several years ago they were planning a large townhouse development for the riverfront site, but the townhouse market hasn't been super robust for years. They're probably waiting for that market to improve, so they can sell a super-premium product (like the townhouses on South Water St by the old Spire site). The sale of the north half of Riverline to Lendlease probably gave CMK enough financial cushion to sit on the south half for years, if need be. A lot depends on The 78 too - if Related can make something big happen there once the new road opens, then CMK will probably look to jump in too even if they need to reconsider their townhouse plans.

I just went on a boat ride yesterday with friends and was thinking how the South Branch still seems just as barren as when I took an architecture cruise in 3rd grade, 20 years ago. There are several new buildings visible from the river, but all set back by a block. The only real improvement fronting the river itself is the Riverline park.



That version with the townhomes you're referencing still included the 3 highrises, right? If I recall, 2 at around 20 stories and one at maybe 35 or so.

ardecila Oct 3, 2021 7:47 PM

I don't know, I only saw it briefly and at the time it did not include highrises. But that was years ago, I do not know their latest plans for the site...

Obviously I would prefer a version without townhomes (except maybe as liner units), everything north of ~18th along the river is part of downtown and should be developed accordingly. If developers want to build townhomes further south on the Bridgeport or Pilsen waterfronts that's perfectly appropriate - actually there are some in the little pocket of Bridgeport around the Jeanne Gang boathouse.

SolarWind Oct 4, 2021 10:29 PM

The Reed at Southbank - 234 W Polk
 
September 27, 2021






SolarWind Oct 15, 2021 2:54 AM

The Reed at Southbank - 234 W Polk
 
October 13, 2021






SIGSEGV Oct 17, 2021 3:25 AM

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/pw...-no?authuser=0

thegoatman Oct 17, 2021 3:49 AM

Question for everybody, what is the general consensus on this riverside project so far? You guys like the riverwalk/park, the buildings, or just the general infill?

SIGSEGV Oct 17, 2021 3:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thegoatman (Post 9425822)
Question for everybody, what is the general consensus on this riverside project so far? You guys like the riverwalk/park, the buildings, or just the general infill?

I love that riverwalk. Not that many people seem to know about it yet but that's alright by me!

Klippenstein Oct 20, 2021 9:16 PM

10/19
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...d97c306a_b.jpg

gebs Oct 21, 2021 2:26 PM

https://i.imgur.com/b19908Uh.jpg

It's going to look pretty tall here next to its neighbors. And it'll obscure a lot of River City so it will eventually become something you discover on river / walking tours.

SolarWind Nov 1, 2021 10:31 PM

The Reed at Southbank - 234 W Polk
 
October 25, 2021






left of center Nov 2, 2021 6:24 PM

Very exciting to see the canyonization of the south branch continue. At this far south, and right up on the river bank, the Reed will be pretty prominent.

Thanks for the pics, Solar!

colemonkee Nov 2, 2021 10:05 PM

River City looks like it could use a power washing.

SolarWind Nov 23, 2021 1:56 AM

The Reed at Southbank - 234 W Polk
 
November 22, 2021






SolarWind Dec 9, 2021 11:00 PM

December 7, 2021










The Pimp Dec 14, 2021 3:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by colemonkee (Post 9440869)
River City looks like it could use a power washing.

Agreed!

Drcastro Dec 14, 2021 11:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by colemonkee (Post 9440869)
River City looks like it could use a power washing.

That’s just what exposed concrete looks like after a while. One reason I’m not a big fan of it. Has anyone ever seen the results of power washing it? Does it even work?

the urban politician Dec 17, 2021 2:27 PM

Walking in the central Loop, you always see an odd and abrupt end to the density looking southward when you are west of State St (due to Crapborn Park). Recently I noticed that you are beginning to see the Riverline project visually extend the cityscape southward from that vantage point, which is refreshing

Chisouthside Dec 17, 2021 2:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9479446)
Walking in the central Loop, you always see an odd and abrupt end to the density looking southward when you are west of State St (due to Crapborn Park). Recently I noticed that you are beginning to see the Riverline project visually extend the cityscape southward from that vantage point, which is refreshing

Especially from Wacker.

left of center Dec 17, 2021 7:42 PM

Not much that can be done with the Wacker view however. The river bends eastwards south of 290 and the view corridor is dominated by lowrise industrial/warehousing, railyards and other uses that aren't going anywhere anytime soon (ala the huge USPS facility). Short of building a highrise where the Carrier Annex is on the OPO property, that vantage will remain an open view corridor for a long time.

Dearborn Park, on the other hand, can be ultimately remedied. Just a matter of time as land values continue to climb.

thegoatman Dec 17, 2021 7:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by left of center (Post 9480021)

Dearborn Park, on the other hand, can be ultimately remedied. Just a matter of time as land values continue to climb.

I hope. Dearborn Park sits on a real estate goldmine and is too valuable for some car centric 2 story townhomes.

left of center Dec 17, 2021 8:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thegoatman (Post 9480027)
I hope. Dearborn Park sits on a real estate goldmine and is too valuable for some car centric 2 story townhomes.

Agreed. The worst part isn't merely the low density nature of much of this development (outside of a few condo buildings in DPI along State and Polk), but the inward suburban-esque gated community nature of it all, with limited access to the rest of the city.

This development is aging, and as time goes on, the cost of rehabbing/remodeling/maintenance will make selling look a lot more attractive to the owners.

Give it a decade or two.

LouisVanDerWright Dec 18, 2021 5:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9479446)
Walking in the central Loop, you always see an odd and abrupt end to the density looking southward when you are west of State St (due to Crapborn Park). Recently I noticed that you are beginning to see the Riverline project visually extend the cityscape southward from that vantage point, which is refreshing

Interestingly I often make a similar observation of my 19 mo olds bum checks. There's often a red rashy area on the South side of his downtown known as "crap-burn park" if he hasn't been wiped recently enough.

the urban politician Dec 18, 2021 3:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by left of center (Post 9480057)
Agreed. The worst part isn't merely the low density nature of much of this development (outside of a few condo buildings in DPI along State and Polk), but the inward suburban-esque gated community nature of it all, with limited access to the rest of the city.

This development is aging, and as time goes on, the cost of rehabbing/remodeling/maintenance will make selling look a lot more attractive to the owners.

Give it a decade or two.

Yes......the owners will slowly die off.....the buildings will age and rot......they will be forced to sell!!

Buahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!

rivernorthlurker Dec 19, 2021 5:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9480708)
Yes......the owners will slowly die off.....the buildings will age and rot......they will be forced to sell!!

Buahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!

Reminds me of a scene from Seinfeld :yes:

Quote:

ELAINE: Plan B? There is no plan B!

KRAMER: (holds up some small white sachets) I took these out of every single garment in the store.

ELAINE: What?!

KRAMER: They're desiccants. See, they absorb moisture. These clothes won't last five years without 'em!

harryc Dec 20, 2021 3:47 AM

Dec 18







ardecila Dec 20, 2021 3:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9480708)
Yes......the owners will slowly die off.....the buildings will age and rot......they will be forced to sell!!

Buahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!

I dunno, DP1 seems pretty solidly built, brick buildings. They have maintenance needs like any other building but they're definitely faring better than anything wood-framed from the same time period.

I do hope they can ultimately do something with the Dearborn Station parking lot. Seems like a nice spot for 2-3 restaurants that can open onto a park terrace. It would probably require an alteration to the PD though since it still is locking in the parking requirements from the 1980s.

Chi-Sky21 Dec 20, 2021 3:26 PM

Now that is a cool fence cover....would love to get my hands on that!

SIGSEGV Dec 31, 2021 5:59 AM

Crappy phone pic from today

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/pw...-no?authuser=0

bhawk66 Dec 31, 2021 8:19 PM

Crappy? That shot's killer. What a great view that you don't get to see everyday. Thanks.

Note to Colemonkee: Agreed. River City needs a bath in a big way. Lol. Wtf? Get it together. Brutalism. Gotta love it.

left of center Dec 31, 2021 8:49 PM

It would be amazing to have that railyard decked over and developed some day. With the amount of vacant land still available in the central area however, it probably won't happen in my lifetime. A man can dream, though... :cool:

Kngkyle Dec 31, 2021 9:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by left of center (Post 9490370)
It would be amazing to have that railyard decked over and developed some day. With the amount of vacant land still available in the central area however, it probably won't happen in my lifetime. A man can dream, though... :cool:

Once Riverline, The 78, and the area around OPO are built out the numbers for decking this over will start to make sense. Maybe in 15-20 years. North of Roosevelt will come first, if they can figure out what to do with that electric substation.

SIGSEGV Jan 1, 2022 12:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kngkyle (Post 9490398)
Once Riverline, The 78, and the area around OPO are built out the numbers for decking this over will start to make sense. Maybe in 15-20 years. North of Roosevelt will come first, if they can figure out what to do with that electric substation.

I wonder what the interior looks like... maybe it can be a museum or something?

Drcastro Jan 1, 2022 5:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SIGSEGV (Post 9490504)
I wonder what the interior looks like... maybe it can be a museum or something?

I think you are referring to the Union Station Powerhouse with the two stacks on the right edge of that picture above? The electrical substation is that mess of outdoor electrical equipment that appears just below the Willis Tower in that picture.

I agree, the powerhouse has a great Battersea Power Station feel to it. If it is ever decommissioned, I hope it can be saved.

chicubs111 Jan 1, 2022 1:31 PM

Actually it wouldn't be to bad if they could deck it over and make a large park . I know I know we all want more tall buildings built over it but seems like downtown could use another sizebale park (something smaller than grant park but larger than just a scattered pocket park ..something akin to Bryant park in NYC).

pilsenarch Jan 1, 2022 2:58 PM

^ like Crescent Park in the 78! ohh, oops, forgot... can't have that and a casino too...

left of center Jan 1, 2022 4:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chicubs111 (Post 9490626)
Actually it wouldn't be to bad if they could deck it over and make a large park . I know I know we all want more tall buildings built over it but seems like downtown could use another sizebale park (something smaller than grant park but larger than just a scattered pocket park ..something akin to Bryant park in NYC).

A park would be absolutely fine, as long as the utility/rail uses are somehow buried. Not that I don't like seeing railyards and infrastructure, they just don't belong out in the open anywhere near downtown and along such a prime spot on the river.

SIGSEGV Jan 2, 2022 12:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Drcastro (Post 9490574)
I think you are referring to the Union Station Powerhouse with the two stacks on the right edge of that picture above? The electrical substation is that mess of outdoor electrical equipment that appears just below the Willis Tower in that picture.

I agree, the powerhouse has a great Battersea Power Station feel to it. If it is ever decommissioned, I hope it can be saved.

Right yeah, I forgot there was a substation there and interpreted it as power station. I think the Union Station Power House has already been decommissioned?
https://preservationchicago.org/2020...n-power-house/

Drcastro Jan 2, 2022 1:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SIGSEGV (Post 9490943)
Right yeah, I forgot there was a substation there and interpreted it as power station. I think the Union Station Power House has already been decommissioned?
https://preservationchicago.org/2020...n-power-house/

Thanks. I should have guessed. Too bad it’s in such a difficult spot.

Mr Downtown Jan 2, 2022 6:11 PM

Preservation Chicago and others keep beating the drum for preservation of the Union Station steam plant, but it's not clear what could actually be saved. Unlike a powerhouse, it's not a concrete frame in which generators were installed. It's a big boiler around which some catwalks and a brick skin was placed—and that skin would at this point have to be completely replaced. So you spend $millions to take down all those bricks, remove all the useless boiler stuff, construct a new frame with actual floors and stairs and elevators, and then lay all the bricks again. That's not preservation; it's taxidermy.

Klippenstein Jan 2, 2022 6:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr Downtown (Post 9491281)
Preservation Chicago and others keep beating the drum for preservation of the Union Station steam plant, but it's not clear what could actually be saved. Unlike a powerhouse, it's not a concrete frame in which generators were installed. It's a big boiler around which some catwalks and a brick skin was placed—and that skin would at this point have to be completely replaced. So you spend $millions to take down all those bricks, remove all the useless boiler stuff, construct a new frame with actual floors and stairs and elevators, and then lay all the bricks again. That's not preservation; it's taxidermy.

Why would all the bricks need to be replaced? From their website, Preservation Chicago was saying there was an interested party who would turn it into a data center.

A train/railroad museum would be cool. Do we have one in Chicago? The 78 Casino proposal talked about incorporating a museum, they are located at the former site of a giant rail yard and their observation tower is inspired by a rail bridge. Seems like it might be a perfect match.

harryc Jan 2, 2022 7:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Klippenstein (Post 9491288)
Why would all the bricks need to be replaced? From their website, Preservation Chicago was saying there was an interested party who would turn it into a data center.

A train/railroad museum would be cool. Do we have one in Chicago? The 78 Casino proposal talked about incorporating a museum, they are located at the former site of a giant rail yard and their observation tower is inspired by a rail bridge. Seems like it might be a perfect match.

Not in Chicago - but pretty close - Union Ill.


Ill Railway Museum - a few more shots

A smaller museum - next to active and busy tracks would be pretty cool.

Bonsai Tree Jan 2, 2022 8:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr Downtown (Post 9491281)
Preservation Chicago and others keep beating the drum for preservation of the Union Station steam plant, but it's not clear what could actually be saved. Unlike a powerhouse, it's not a concrete frame in which generators were installed. It's a big boiler around which some catwalks and a brick skin was placed—and that skin would at this point have to be completely replaced. So you spend $millions to take down all those bricks, remove all the useless boiler stuff, construct a new frame with actual floors and stairs and elevators, and then lay all the bricks again. That's not preservation; it's taxidermy.

And? Most of the notable structures in Europe are taxidermy then. By your logic, I guess they weren't worthy of preservation after they got bombed to oblivion during the war.

Mr Downtown Jan 2, 2022 11:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bonsai Tree (Post 9491356)
And? Most of the notable structures in Europe are taxidermy then.

Well, some of the things done in Dresden in the 2000s are most curious, but that was a deliberate decision to try to rebuild the Altstadt as best they could, for reasons of urbanism and also as a counterpoint to the decades of socialist towers in the park. Warsaw made the same decision, but 50 years earlier, when they built buildings with the same function as the old. Dresden starts to approach stage-set design by putting a modern convention center and hotel behind four-meter-wide marktbauen.

"Data center" is a pipe dream, although Related did look at the property hoping that could work. Remember, this "building" has no interior floors; just catwalks and piping around the boilers. So if you've built a new skeleton and put on a new skin, what exactly have you preserved? The idea of an industrial structure?

Klippenstein Jan 16, 2022 5:08 AM

Today 1/15
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...a4271987_b.jpg

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...c4644589_b.jpg

Jibba Jan 18, 2022 5:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr Downtown (Post 9491457)
"Data center" is a pipe dream, although Related did look at the property hoping that could work. Remember, this "building" has no interior floors; just catwalks and piping around the boilers. So if you've built a new skeleton and put on a new skin, what exactly have you preserved? The idea of an industrial structure?

I suppose part of preservation is exactly that: preserving the idea of something, as represented by the something. The question for me being: Is the present something sufficiently materially similar to the original something? The desired qualia of the viewer of the structure can be the same if the visual presentation of the contemporary thing is close enough to the original (whatever is sufficient to trigger the contemplation of history, culture, etc.). I don't know what portion of new vs. original material marks the transition out of "close enough" for me (nor do I similarly have a resolution to Theseus' paradox), or what level of quality of ersatz material is convincing enough.

If they were to use modern materials in a paint-by-numbers recreation, to the extent that the building lies in that uncanny valley of resemblance, the experience gets corrupted for me; there's dissonance when the present structure is perceived to be too far removed from what I believe to be its original appearance (hence why I like something like anastylosis best). Which now has me thinking about the value of authenticity in historic preservation: Does something still have value as a historical emblem if it only visually signals or alludes to the thing and isn't the thing itself? Was that what you were touching on in your "... idea of an industrial structure"?

For me, the steam plant is right on the cusp of being worth preserving. I like the visibility it has from many distances, vantage points, modes of transportation... that it can be seen by many, even incidentally. It has solemnity without feeling austere; there's a grounding quality to it. And I love how that feeling foregrounds my perception of the skyline from the SW. If enough people feel that way and could all agree to allocate resources (in the form of tax dollars or whatever) to the maintenance of the structure, then there's a case for preservation. I don't see a case for forcing the hand of a private land-owner.


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