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CHICAGO SKYLINE EVOLUTION ON HOLD, Due to Tight Credit, Sluggish Economy!

By
Real Estate Agent with Dean's Team - Keller Williams Realty Partners Chicago IL

Hey, my Fellow Americans, Canadians, and World-ians, from wherever you may hale!

Quick, when you think of Chicago - what's the first thing that comes to mind?

Yes - Al Capone, Michael Jordan, 100 years of Bad North Side Baseball, Thick Pizza, and Boiled Hot Dogs Surrounded by Mustard and Veggies, for sure.

But what about our Downtown Chicago Skyline?

For many, no matter where they're from, our unique skyline panoramic, with the black-windowed Sears Tower and John Hancock Buildings framing the shot, and our Lake Michigan Shoreline in the foreground, elicits one quick, recognizable, "Chicago!"  (Or, if you really are a masochist - "Those Damn Cubs!")

During the past 10 years, our skyline has evolved meteorically, with dozens of new residential and commercial buildings sprouting up all over The Chicago Loop, The South Loop, River North, and nearby.

Our rapidly-evolving skyline, however, is likely to stay unchanged for the coming few years, as many high-end condo buildings sit undersold, and construction funding for others is hard to find.

Chicago real estate developers have built more than 195 high-rise buildings since 1998, according to the Emporis Building Database.  That's more high rises than even exist in downtown Detroit, St. Louis, or Milwaukee - these major cities boast 132, 106, and 83 tall buildings, at least 12 stories high, respectively.

Our decade-old housing boom will come to a long-awaited, symbolic climax when the spire atop the Trump International Hotel & Tower, on Wacker Drive at Wabash Avenue, along the Chicago River, is installed later this month.  With the spire attached, the Trump Tower will rise 1,361 feet to the river below.  It will make Chicago home to the largest skyscraper built in the U.S. since our own Sears Tower, at Adams Street and Wacker Drive, was completed 34 years ago.

But now, high-rise construction has ground to a virtual halt here.  Although downtown developers are expected to complete roughly 4,900 new condos in high rises in 2008, that number will collapse by 2010, to just over 500 units.

Even the high-fanfare Trump Tower offers little reason for Donald Trump to celebrate when his Chicago building is completed.  For a couple of years now, the developer has been stuck at the 75%-sold benchmark in that 92-story iconic building.  Typically, developer profits come from the final 20% of units sold.

How long will the construction stall last? 

That's hard to say, as it is impossible to precisely predict when the Chicago economy will once again grow with the flourish it did over the last ten years.  But two hallmark skyscrapers-in-progress have sent away construction cranes, and sit in limbo.

The Chicago Spire, at 400 N. Lake Shore Drive, is just a big hole in the ground - work has completely stopped, with the date of resumption of construction unclear. 

Work has also stopped at The Waterview Tower/Shangri-La Hotel at 111 N. Wacker Drive.  Plans call for this project to rise 1,047 feet, one foot taller than the Chrysler Building in New York City.  But now, the project sits uncompleted, work stuck on the 26th floor, with the building's steel frame exposed to the harsh Chicago elements.

Several other, smaller structures remain on hold as well, including a 16-story hotel project at 127 W. Huron Street in the River North Neighborhood.  And although work proceeds on the 82-story Aqua Tower, a residential building at 200 N. Columbus Drive, the companion 76-story mixed use residential/office tower project has been mothballed for now as well.

The expected falloff in high rise construction is not strictly a Chicago phenomenon.  Projects in major cities from New York to Los Angeles have been stalled as well.

When I was a kid, growing up in the West Rogers Park Neighborhood on the Far North Side of Chicago, our Prudential Building - 50 stories high, on Randolph Street, just east of Michigan Avenue, was the tallest building in town.  Today, this building is simply dwarfed by the dozens of other taller structures nearby.

But our city has been faced with other tough economic times before, and we have come back strong, and building, building, building!

Perhaps, soon, Chicago will be back on stride, when markets rebound.

See our post today via BlogChicagoHomes.com for more info, including a link to a staff report in today's Chicago Tribune.

DEAN & DEAN'S TEAM CHICAGO

Comments(2)

Randall Schrader
Competitive Insurance of Dundee - Dundee, FL

A lot of cities are opening little burbs down the road with NEW, but smaller micro cities out of the congestion.

Nov 03, 2008 08:46 AM
Sara Bonert
Zillow - Atlanta, GA
Real Estate Internet Marketing

I didn't realize construction on the Spire had stopped?  Last I heard the Beanie Babie guy bought the penthouse, which was listed at $40 million.  It is hard to understand where all the demand is coming from for these huge projects. With all the skyline changes though, I think it is pretty fantastic looking.  I love when the buildings change their lights for the holidays or current events. 

Nov 03, 2008 11:31 PM
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