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The game's not over yet. This is a major part of Rahm's legacy, I don't think he would let it just slip though his fingers.
I'm sure David Reifman will be up late tonight and tomorrow night trying to get more public benefit out of the two megaprojects. Or Sterling Bay and Related already have some concessions ready to go that can be unveiled tomorrow. There's still a chance it could get approved by Wednesday. Right now the vote is only delayed until Wednesday morning before the full City Council meets, so it could still pass if a deal is cut. Failing that, it would be great to be a fly on the wall in that conversation between Lightfoot and Emanuel. So far it appears Lightfoot is pro-development but wants to make sure everything is squeaky clean with these two projects given the involvement of Danny Solis and Ed Burke. Ideally pay-to-play gets replaced with play-all-you-want-for-free. |
Ordinances for TIF passed. Done.
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full council voting RIGHT NOW
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I'm assuming "approved"?
Why does this project get far less fanfare than Lincoln Yards? |
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Because it's not sandwiched between wealthy north side neighborhoods. |
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And to me the 78 is way more important imo This https://suntimesmedia.files.wordpres...g?w=1024&h=683 vs https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/ft6l...ortheast.0.jpg A rendering of The 78, a mixed-use development slated for a vacant 62-acre riverfront site between Chicago’s South Loop and Chinatown. Related Midwest https://chicago.curbed.com/2019/4/10...e-city-council City Council approves $2B in TIF money for Lincoln Yards, The 78 The votes represent the final legislative hurdle for the transformative megadevelopments By Jay Koziarz Apr 10, 2019, 11:47am CDT On Wednesday morning City Hall approved up to $2 billion in tax increment financing (TIF) to support the massive Lincoln Yards and The 78 megadevelopments. .. The TIF measures would essentially freeze real estate taxes for both vacant sites at their current levels and reimburse the developers for fronting the costs of infrastructure improvements with the incremental tax revenue generated by the completed projects over the next two decades. Developer Sterling Bay’s Lincoln Yards plan calls for as much as for $1.3 billion in TIF spending to cover the cost of new bridges over the Chicago River, an extension of the 606 trail, and a realignment of the Elston-Armitage-Ashland intersection. Related Midwest’s The 78 is seeking $700 million to relocate Metra rail tracks, build new roads, and construct a new CTA Red Line subway station. When complete, the 14.5 million-square-foot Lincoln Yards development would bring new office towers, 6,000 residential units, and 21 acres of parkspace to 55 acres of formerly industrial riverfront land between Lincoln Park and Bucktown. On the river’s south branch, The 78 calls for 13 million square feet of buildings supporting 10,000 residential units, 24,000 on-site jobs, and a university-affiliated innovation center. ... |
^ I agree that the 78 is more important. Plus I'm thrilled about a new red line station.
I actually think that 78 will be a sleeper hit. |
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The 78 was always going to have a big mixed-use development on it, back in the Rezko days, back with Goldberg's master plan for River City in the 1970s, and even in the 1920s when the river was being straightened this site was supposed to be an extension of downtown. The 78 is just the culmination of something decades in the making. Even Dearborn Park residents have always known that something big would eventually go here once the planets aligned. Also, the 78's site is "out of sight, out of mind" - to Dearborn Parkers, Chinatown residents, and South Loop residents, this site exists on the other side of big infrastructural walls. It's not part of their neighborhoods. Finally, and this is something that only matters to urban planners and us forumers: The 78 is just a better-planned development. It will have a proper connective street grid, a CTA subway station and probably water taxis and new bus routes to link it into downtown, which is directly adjacent (only a mile to Union Station). Given the design and location, it could actually function as a true transit-oriented neighborhood, so it will not cause the traffic armageddon that Lincoln Yards will. |
Yes!! Build baby, Build!!!!:cheers:
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agree, ardecila
once it gets going it could have a lot of gravitational pull and attract a lot of the residential need and office overflow lincoln yards always seems out of place up there |
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Are these the final building designs or just general massings?
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is it possible for a supertall to be built in the 78? it would definitely balance the skyline. i am not sure what the zoning is for this site.
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Just general massings |
Last I read, The 78 is zoned to 950'. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
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Careful with that drooling. No buildings have even been sketched yet. And what economic forces could possibly ever justify a supertall in this location?
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