![]() |
Quote:
Only problem (and it's a massive one) with that (this also applies to all these developers that have these grand Fulton Market, River West, Goose Island, etc office plans) is these are not focal points for transit (regional and city)....I'm not talking about the odd cta line, or a few bus routes. I'm talking about a focal point/nexus of transit lines/modes. Those guys are overpaying for office use, and will need to switch to residential/mixed use/hotel at some point, by and large. For the most part, niche office only in those locales.......the center of gravity for future net new office addition in not just the city of Chicago, but now clearly the entire region, will be within walking distance of the commuter stations - it's where all expressways and train lines (including the cta lines) in the city and suburbs, and bus routes, etc - (and dedicated bike lanes - for that matter) come together and why that's where you put your office..... |
Quote:
I'd even go much further than to state not exclusively. New construction is a super stratified group at the top of Class A.......Class A probably comprises 40%+ of all office inventory in downtown Chicago.........I see almost no reason why a top notch renovation project into functionally modern office space couldn't be designated A (or, if there's some technical reason why not - couldn't get similar rents to avg Class A space)..... |
Quote:
Your'e dead wrong on the prospects for adaptive reuse to office. What exactly do you think Sterling Bay has in mind for it?! Uh, can you say Merchandise Mart? Think about that building - it's floor plate size/shape, and the incredible evolution that has happened within (and will continue to over the next couple years) over the last few years. Do you sense any similarity with Post Office and its prospects? Large suburban and out of town corporations, technology co's, etc are fighting each other to take up what little available space remains in the Mart. Granted, the capital expenditures will be greater at the Post Office, but there is simply no better economic use/plan than to convert to very large floorplate office space, and I have a feeling - just a little inkling - that Sterling Bay will be able to pull this one off......everything they've done over the last 5-6 years has prepared them for this moment, this project - by far their largest and most ambitious yet..... |
Quote:
Also, give me a break - you and I both know that while the north and south ends of the post office could potentially be converted to office/hospitality (see my original post for reference), the main, middle third is not at all an apples to apples comparison with the Merchandise Mart - what worked there is not at all guaranteed to work for the bulk of this building. The Mart has been in operation since even before it became the interior design hub of the country, let alone now as a tech incubator. The Post office has been vacant since 1991-93. Big difference. |
^ I saw something about Sterling Bay being a sponsor for Friends of the Parks, but if that's what you're talking about (even if some of their execs are against the Lucas - perhaps they are - I have no idea), this isn't a conflict of interest (interests are aligned - the city wants the post office redeveloped - badly, and Sterling Bay wants to redevelop it - badly. That the city and Sterling Bay potentially disagree on some other looming issue would not be a factor that knocks them off the top of the list of potential post office post-seizure acquirers/redevelopers, particularly as they are arguably (or perhaps even inarguably) the best/most directly-qualified. This is not to say that the mayor or underlings won't speak with party on this other issue, and try to persuade them, or what not......but it's certainly no deal-breaker, by any stretch.....
Everyone knows the project will be a challenge - everyone has known that for some time. Everyone also knows it will be capital-intensive. My point with the Merchandise Mart comparison stands very well, however - think of it in terms of demand for a structure of this massive size and shape - you have a proven demand source out there for it - and that is adaptive reuse to modern office in a historic structure......it's the only use I can see that has a solid fighting chance of being both economically successful, and also completely re-energizing the entire corner of the Loop (or whatever you want to call this area - near sw loop, etc.).........show me another use - any other use where there is some sort of proven demand model for a structure of this size/shape that can accomplish both goals from above......? All ears..... |
Quote:
I would not be so convinced that it's going to 1) drag out as long as you suspect, and 2) most definitely, that it will drag out longer than this cycle.... On 1, the law is so clearly on the side of the city here (realize that a well-funded legal team can delay, obstruct etc nevertheless)....that my bet is it moves faster than you believe it's likely to On 2, I think we have another 3, possibly 4 years left in this cycle, outside chance of 5........it's definitely going to surprise many folks, I'm assuming potentially yourself as well, with its eventual longevity..... |
Post Office owner says city move could kill deal with New York investor
Quote:
|
Tough shit Davis, you had your chance and you blew it. Next.
|
From the I'll Believe It When I See It Department
The owner of the Old Post Office is in advanced talks with a New York investor that's interested in developing the long-vacant building, but the city's push to seize the property could kill the deal, a representative of the property told a city panel today.Story from Crain's |
^ Nope, wrong department I'm afraid. It's straight from the "Bullshit" department, actually.
No turning back, no addition time, no nothing here. (Solis seemed to be opening the window for that, but I have a feeling he may have gotten a sharp foot in the nuts from Emanuel - or will be getting one soon, because any such window needs to be slammed shut immediately)......time's up for Davies. |
If Davies wants to keep this, he better provide a little proof that they're in talks with someone - otherwise I call bullshit.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I don't necessarily believe Davies here, but I also have a few percentage points of "you never know" in me right now. |
Quote:
In short this is another round of bullshit from a bullshit artist. The city is going to issue the RFP, select someone, then ED the building. Bye Davies. |
The 'New York Investor' could always just buy it off of the city and not have to work with Davis at all, if they were really that interested in the building. I can't imagine Davis actually brings anything worthwhile to the table other than the deed (for now).
|
^ Exactly.....I'd say Davies brings less than nothing to the table.....because any partner would have to work with Davies.....and that is next-to impossible......
|
Quote:
Isn't it funny when you realize how cheap so many billionaires actually are? |
Quote:
The City's concern has to be there will be a point of no return where the building becomes in such disrepair that it will have to be demolished. I think that's what Davies has been hoping for all along. |
The building was set up to handle massive amounts of shipping and packages, yes?
With all the talk of how hard it will be to adapt the building to other uses, I never understood why UPS, FedEx and Amazon don't want it. |
Quote:
|
Set aside the multi-story bit... the Old Post Office is right at the center of Chicagoland's expressway network, which means each and every truck would have to sit through hours of thick traffic to reach the building, even though the majority of Chicagoland residents don't live in the city.
Those shipping companies have been doing the exact opposite, locating off 294 or 355 where cross-country trucks can whiz right in and out, and smaller trucks can take packages further into the city. |
Quote:
|
How would demolition be possible with the deed restrictions?
|
Quote:
Also, can you imagine the demo costs associated with taking something this large down? Let alone with an active freeway passing through it? I think this would be easily the largest building by SF ever demololished. This building contains about as much floor space as 2/3 of on of the original WTC towers. Very few structures of that size are ever built and even fewer destroyed. |
Quote:
the potential here is big. i can't see a scenario where the entire structure is torn down wholesale. |
The next owner still takes the property subject to any recorded deed restrictions or protective covenants.
|
^Correct. When the US Post Office sold the building, it was sold with restrictions that protect portions of the exterior and interior of the building and subject any modifications to a historic review. The north office block facing Van Buren, lobby, and post-master's office in particular are protected similar to if it were a city landmark.
Previous proposals have proposed demolishing or covering parts of the building. One a few years ago proposed removing the top 4 or 5 floors of the central portion, leaving the south and north tower blocks. Another few recently carved large atria into the building and obscured much of the east elevation behind new construction. But at this point, I'm pretty sure that demolishing the entire building is not an option for any future owner. |
^^^ Even those studies chopping out light courts look silly in light of the recent trends in office space downtown. It used to be a puzzle how to revive this building, but the answer has revealed itself: leave it be and lease it out as gigantic floor plate office space for tech companies and corporate giants. The only disadvantage of this building is that it is more removed from the River North tech nexus. But what it lacks in that regard it supplants with far superior access to freeways and metra. I have a feeling this will be redeveloped (probably by Sterling Bay) as office only and will fill with a much more corporate relocation from the suburbs oriented mix of tenants than Merch Mart and it's tech draw. That is good because it means Merch Mart will have more room for tech companies and relocating companies from the suburbs have an even better option more convient to their current workforce. Just more lube for the torrent of companies from the burbs. That is something Rahm loves and you bet this will get done as a result.
Quote:
The only good thing Davies did was get obscene levels of density approved for the site. Hopefully Sterling Bay takes over, fills up the existing building, and then does their best to utilize that massive entitlement. |
Quote:
1. Office furniture is trending towards less privacy and more collaboration, with lower or non-existent cubicle walls and translucent or transparent partitions. This allows more light to penetrate the interior of the building. 2. The amount of space dedicated to each employee is shrinking in favor of more open/shared/collaborative space 3. Managers are expected to have a desk on the floor with the rest of employees rather than in an office 4. For those who do get an office, the notion of taking up windows to make window offices for managers and executives is becoming passe in many industries. Beyond that, improvements in lighting technology (moving from fluorescent to LED fixtures) allows more pleasant, natural feeling light with better color rendering and less flicker, so even spaces where natural light doesn't reach are better than they used to be. That said, the Post Office has some seriously enormous floor plates, over four times that of 1k Fulton, and even bigger than Merch Mart. But if it works there, it can probably work here too. Sterling Bay has experience with this sort of thing, so I agree with you all: if anyone can pull it off, it's probably them. Any ideas what other developers besides Sterling Bay are likely to submit RFPs? The 5 story building along Harrison is not ugly; it seems like a well maintained loft style buiding. It is far from distinctive in Chicago, but I still hate to see well-built old buildings like this bite the dust. Its floor plates would be much more conducive to residential, but then again, it's not that big so you wouldn't get too many units out of it. If there are entitlements for ridiculous density, maybe they will need as big of a blank slate as possible in order to meet the site's full potential. |
Story on deal to buy the Post Office
http://www.chicagobusiness.com/reale...in-post-office |
Quote:
|
That didn't take long
Delete
|
Quote:
|
just saw this:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/britis...lans-1.3484648 I think that a similar approach could be done for the Chicago Post Office, leave the big floor plates for office/retail, and put residential on top, almost like a city within a city |
^^^Nope, residential makes absolutely no sense in any capacity in this building. I don't know why anyone would think otherwise, it's already been discussed ad nauseum that office is the only logical use for floorplates this large. This is a merch mart clone, would you suggest they should kick Motorola out and fill the upper floors with residential there?
|
But there's just not that much demand for that kind of office space. Even the Mart is no more than 15 percent tech offices, and none of those are in windowless spaces.
Setting aside the Van Buren building, you can really only use the first 30 feet of the perimeter for residential—and only the first 80 feet of the perimeter for office. The workroom building is 344 by 652 feet! You could put colocation rack space in the center, but I don't know if there's that much server space required in the entire state of Illinois. That's why I feel like you'd have to demolish the center of the top 8-10 floors and create some kind of atrium, winter garden, or light court. It could be large enough and amenity-filled enough to have residential units face it, or a little less generous and faced with office windows. Probably a combination. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
And even 15% of the Merchandise Mart is 600K sqft; given that it's only been converting to tech tenants for a few years, it seems like there is significant demand (especially given the success of other large-floorplate office conversions like 600W Chicago, 1000W Fulton, and the River Center). I'm not saying it'd be easy or necessarily the fastest to lease up, but it doesn't seem implausible that the building could be reused without cutting huge light wells into it. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Even if they were really conservative in calculating the foundations for the post office, you probably could only support 4-5 additional stories. To go higher than that, you'd have to put down new piers and caissons, which means not only going down through the old building but also avoiding the highway and railroad tracks underneath. |
Casinos and outlet malls don't need windows.
|
Quote:
Additionally, they don't have to lease out the entire building at once since the structure already exists. It's not like new construction where you need to justify construction of the superstructure, you can lease it out and do TI as you find the tenants. |
Quote:
|
Why not tear out the guts of some of the building and just do what they did on the Michigan, Monroe, Wabash block for the Legacy and build a tower or two on the inside? Seems like that could work just as well as trying to do some hamfisted/forced attempt to shove offices into an industrial sized floor plate.
|
Someday I hope they push the Metra Rock Island terminus a little farther south and demolish the Chicago Stock exchange viaduct over Congress. It would open up the Congres Blvd Vista and allow a new tower to be built over the new Metra terminus on Congress.
Demolish the eastern side of the post office and just leave the larger annex portion of the building to renovate. |
Quote:
When that happens, Metra should buy the trading floor and turn it into a ticket hall, maybe with a new glassy facade like the tollway oases. http://i68.tinypic.com/2qxrdz4.jpg |
The building is too large it will stay around in the planning stages for a while.
|
Quote:
|
This is for premium viewers, but here is an article in today's edition of Crains about the New York firm that is under contract to buy the Old Post Office.
They seem like the right kind of firm to do this deal, if they can close on it as planned. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 8:44 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.