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Deciding
on this years New Homes awards was both extremely difficult and
unusually easy. The category of new highrises, for example, includes more
than 20 new luxury towers spread from the South Loop to the Near North
Side, all with long lists of amenities and features to recommend them.
Last year at this time, only half as many highrises were on the market.
At the very high end are buildings like 840 N. Lake Shore, by LR Development,
where prices start at $1.4 million and reach to around $9 million. The
77-unit boutique allows buyers to fully customize their space and offers
a prime Streeterville location with stunning views from the edge of a
park.
Do these features make 840 N. Lake Shore the best new highrise in the
city? They probably do for some buyers, but not for the majority, who
cant afford a parking spot in the building. In choosing the best
new highrise our editorial staff tried to balance things like amenities,
views and location with pricing and investment value. Our selection, 1111
S. Wabash is comparatively in an emerging location, but with a strong
range of amenities in a solid building one buyers can get into
for under $200,000.
Other categories were simple because of a lack of product. New lofts,
which flooded the market for several years in the late 90s, eclipsing
all other types of construction, have slowed to a trickle. Few major loft
conversions are underway, and they increasingly tend to be in unwieldy
buildings or located in peripheral locations.
Single-family houses are in even shorter supply. Apart from small scattered
development, onesies and twosies as builders say, there are
virtually no developments of unattached housing with 10 or more units.
A quick look at pricing explains this trend. The low end in new single-families
is around half a million dollars, and prices closer to $1 million are
more common. Given the high costs of labor and land, builders dont
think its worth their while to build a more affordable single-family
house and most dont think single-families are worthwhile
at any price.
In terms of location, our selections are skewed toward the city center,
which reflects building patterns in the city. The Loop and its surrounding
neighborhoods have become hot, with concentric rings of development expanding
from downtown. Several of our selections for the best new homes of 2001
are located in the West Loop and several others in the South Loop. These
areas promise continued expansion, though perhaps at a slower rate in
the coming years, and above-average appreciation for homeowners.
In making our selections, the editorial staff considered everything from
location and floor plans to amenities, architecture and pricing, imagining
that we were buyers of new construction. We chose projects that seemed
to score well in every category and so represented the best available
housing. Our choices are admittedly subjective, but we think that the
following projects at least would be good starting points for anyone in
the market for a new home.
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The
Metro
Chicago’s best new mid-rise
New mid-rises
have become interchangeable in the city during the last 10 years
and nowhere more so than in the West Loop. Once a bastion of loft
conversions, the neighborhood is now host to countless nondescript
red brick mid-rises.
The Metro, 1200 W. Monroe, may not be cutting edge – in fact, its
design is retro – but it is different and creative and for this
we are thankful. The 136-unit art nouveau condo building by Oculus
Development borrows its inspiration from the Metro, the nickname
of Paris’s famous Metropolitan Subway System. The condo development’s
dramatic curved corner entrance will have a metal and glass canopy
with a design inspired by the French transit system. The stylized
“M” planned as the building’s insignia also is patterned after the
ones on the Metro in Paris.
The architecture firm of Larson & Darby added other art nouveau
touches, including glass entryway columns, a two-story glass atrium,
recessed 40-foot-long terraces or balconies and curvilinear floor
plans. A sort of scalloped roofline provides architectural interest
from the ground and adds character to the penthouse interiors.
Units, which have one to three bedrooms and one or two baths, are
priced from the $180s to more than $500,000. Condo features include
angled entrances, nine-foot ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows,
gas fireplaces, hardwood floors, Frigidaire appliances and balconies.
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Loftominium
World
Chicago’s best new loft
A few years
ago, Chicago was overrun with loft developments, but the supply
has run short and developers have increasingly turned to second-rate
buildings to convert. Thats why Loftominium World, American
Invscos offering of seven loft buildings totaling 311 units,
presents a rare opportunity for buyers.
The buildings, six in the West Loop and one in the South Loop, were
rented as high-end apartments until Invsco bought the portfolio.
The lofts are not freshly converted, so mechanicals and appliances
are not brand new, but they were rehabbed fairly recently. Most
important, they were rehabbed at a time when hard lofts,
with exposed brick and beams, hardwood floors and open spaces, were
still the standard.
No two of the units at Loftominium World are alike; these lofts
are the antithesis of cookie cutter. Features in most include fireplaces,
hardwood floors, exposed brick, track lighting, high ceilings, built-in
dishwashers, Euro-style kitchens, large windows, central air conditioning
and washer / dryer hookups. One building has a giant brick arch
that resembles a Roman ruin and another has a colorful lobby featuring
curved glass block. Such whimsical touches are everywhere.
Prices at Loftominium World start at $229,500, and sales for all
seven buildings are handled from the main sales center, at Morgan
Town Lofts, 22 N. Morgan. The Loftominium World buildings are: Heartbreak
Lofts, 17 N. Loomis; Hale Lofts, 14 N. Peoria; Warehouse Lofts,
312 N. May; Union Park Lofts, 1327 W. Washington; 11th Street Lofts,
1020 S. Wabash; Morgan Town Lofts, 22 N. Morgan; and Acorn Lofts,
1017 W. Washington.
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Aberdeen
Terrace
Chicago’s best new townhouse
Given the sheer
number of townhouses built in Chicago during the last three decades,
the homogeneity and lack of innovation among such projects is startling.
Aberdeen Terrace, a 29-unit project at 18 S. Aberdeen, not only
has a distinctive modern aesthetic, it also breaks the mold of the
standard (useless) townhouse courtyard.
The unusual design by Landon Bone Architects will allow buyers to
make use of space most townhouse projects surrender to an ugly,
utilitarian driveway. Visitors will access units through the raised
terrace level, entering through a gate and up a set of stairs on
the end of the courtyard. The homes are influenced by Frank Lloyd
Wrights Prairie School, with clean lines, roof overhangs and
large windows.
The units by Dubin Residential have two or three bedrooms plus dens
and family rooms, two-car garages and three baths. At press time,
prices started
in the $470s.
Aberdeen Terrace will be welcome in the West Loop, where only a
few townhouse developments have entered the market, most with faux
traditional designs. Instead of looking down the equivalent of an
alley as they pass the site, pedestrians will be drawn to the landscaped
mezzanine level, just above. And loft and condo owners who like
the West Loop will be able to take advantage of a project that offers
more space and privacy than most in the neighborhood.
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1111
S. Wabash
Chicago’s best new highrise
It will not
be hard to find a highrise more luxurious than 1111 S. Wabash, or
one with better views, amenities or pricing. But in a crowded market,
this 34-story tower by the Gammonley Group strikes an impressive
balance in each of these categories.
Architects Perkins, Pryde, Kennedy & Steevensz and Fujikawa
Johnson & Associates designed 28 different floor plans for the
247-unit building. Some of the condos have more than 250 square
feet of outdoor space, others are duplexed and some corner units
have impressive views and lighting as well as creative layouts.
The L-shaped building is designed to have six corner units per floor,
maximizing light and views of both the lake and city. Units do not
start until the sixth floor, so even the least expensive condos
have decent views.
The building will include a 24-hour doorman, a rooftop pool, a party
room, a fitness center, indoor parking, a spa / wellness center,
a salon, a dry cleaner, a valet and a business center / conference
room.
The South Loop is still an emerging location for highrises, but
that means that 1111 S. Wabash can offer prices that are in many
cases half of what they would be in the Gold Coast. Convertibles
in the highrise start in the $190s. One-bedrooms with dens start
in the $220s, and two-bedrooms with dens and 2.5 baths are priced
from the $290s. At the high end, custom three-bedroom 3.5-bath penthouses
with more than 3,100 square feet and private terraces range up to
$1.8 million.
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River
City
Private Residences
Chicagos best new condo conversion
The market for
condominium conversions is not what it used to be in Chicago, partly
because so many already have been done, and partly because the rental
market is now so tight. River City, 800 S. Wells, tops the short
list of current conversions as a one-of-a-kind property.
Anyone who has seen the distinctive building from the banks of the
Chicago River will remember the serpentine concrete facades of its
two parallel towers. The futuristic-looking building was designed
by famed Chicago architect Bertrand Goldberg, who loved curvilinear
design, fish-eye windows and voluptuous buildings. His vision is
notable in Marina Citys corncob towers and in the CHAs
Hilliard Homes, but its perhaps most pronounced in River City,
which makes Marilyn Monroe look like a beanpole.
Goldberg also loved self-sufficiency, and buyers at River City can
live comfortably in the complex without ever leaving. The development
includes a full-service grocery store, party rooms, a dry cleaner,
a valet, a 24-hour doorman, indoor parking, a Ballys Sports
Club, a riverwalk, a private one-acre park and even 64 boat slips.
A special water-churning system keeps the river surface from freezing
in the private marina, so boats can be kept in slips year round.
River Road, a skylighted interior street with a 10-story
atrium, winds between the parallel buildings. The 448 units at River
City are priced from the $160s to the low $400s.
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Bucktown
1800
Chicagos best new single-family
The new single-family
house has become an endangered species in Chicago. The high cost
of land and labor and the developers imperative to fit as
many units as possible on sparse lots have made townhouses and condo
buildings much more common. Bucktown 1800 bucks the trend by offering
fully loaded single-families from the $530s to the $540s.
The units offer all the space and privacy of detached housing and
then some. C A Development has built coach houses, once a staple
in Chicago construction, above the two-car garages. These 458-square-foot
rooms, which include half baths, are envisioned as the ideal studio
or office space or as temporary quarters for returning college
graduates taking their time on the job search.
The houses have four bedrooms, 3.5 baths, English basements of about
1,000 square feet, and about 2,700 square feet of living space.
Features include master bedroom suites with cathedral ceilings and
marble vanities, two fireplaces, decks or balconies, hardwood floors,
private yards and granite counters.
If this all sounds like a lot for half a million in Bucktown, thats
because the houses are in Humboldt Park. The location, at 1821 N.
Talman, is a little west of Western, the dividing line between Bucktown
and Humboldt Park. But there is a significant amount of building
in this pocket, dubbed West Bucktown by builders, and
its less than a mile from the heart of Bucktown.
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Copyright 2001 New Homes Magazine
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