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The borders of Bronzeville
are debatable. The nucleus of the historic area is bounded roughly by
31st, 39th, State and the lake, though some carry the boundaries as far
south as 51st, including the neighborhoods of Grand Boulevard, Douglas
and North Kenwood-Oakland. Bronzeville allegedly got its name from an
editor of the Chicago Bee newspaper. Back then, it was the home of the
lush boulevard now known as King Drive, august greystones and homegrown
businesses. Celebrities from Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong to Richard
Wright and Ida B. Wells once called Bronzeville home. The giants of jazz
and blues played in myriad clubs along 47th Street, which in its heyday
was one of the greatest entertainment strips in the country. Outlaws family
moved from the South Side when he was young and his memories of the area
were vague, but he remained fascinated by the historic community, its
beautiful buildings and lush parks, its prominent role in African American
history and culture. As a commander with
the Chicago Fire Department years later, Outlaw returned to Bronzeville
as firefighters battled frequent blazes in the abandoned buildings that
dotted its streets. Regrettably,
I saw a lot of these kinds of buildings go up in flame, many of them destroyed
by people scavenging them, Outlaw says. If a building had
a fire and there was not proper security, people could go in and wreak
havoc, take the oak trim and anything else of value.
The citys attempt
at improvement was to trade blighted blocks for vast tracts
of public housing including Stateway Gardens and the Robert Taylor
Homes which concentrated the poor in crowded highrises walled off
by the Dan Ryan Expressway. Outlaw was disheartened
by what he saw but that didnt diminish his interest in the South
Side or in the magnificent buildings gutted by fires and vandals. In 1991
he bought an abandoned building in Grand Boulevard and later, a second
property, both more than 115 years old. The first, which had been abandoned
for six years, required extensive investment and a gut rehab. Today, the historic
building has been lovingly restored, and the surrounding neighborhood
has undergone a similar transformation. The public housing highrises are
falling, to be replaced by thousands of new homes; apartments are being
converted to condominiums; and old buildings are being rehabbed.
How real are the changes? In North Kenwood-Oakland,
bounded roughly by 35th, 47th, Cottage Grove and the lake, blocks that
looked like theyd been carpet-bombed 10 years ago are now lined
with new single-family homes, some priced at more than half a million
dollars. On block after block in Bronzeville, abandoned architectural
gems are being restored and converted to condominiums. Many of these condos
sit in what a few years ago were considered the neighborhoods most
dangerous pockets, and though some streets are still edgy, developers
are selling well-priced homes as quickly as they can build them. And thats just
for starters. Developer Draper &
Kramer, which built major housing developments on the south lakefront
during a period of disinvestment, is building 490 units of market-rate
and affordable housing at Lake Park Crescent, on the former site of Chicago
Housing Authority projects at 41st and Lake Park. Directly west, the Thrush
Companies is building 137 units at Jazz on the Boulevard, on a vacant
4.5-acre parcel that runs along Drexel between 41st and 42nd. Alex Loyfman,
a property manager for AMA Realty Group of Illinois, says investors plan
to turn the famous Michigan Garden Apartments, known locally as the Rosenwald,
from a boarded-up hulk at 47th and Michigan into a condo building of more
than 300 units that recaptures the complexs original glory. The project currently
creating the most buzz in the area is probably Park Boulevard, the 37-acre
development of more than 1,300 homes thats replacing the CHAs
Stateway Gardens public housing complex. The developments main 34-acre
site will fill the giant hole left by Stateway, from 35th to Pershing
between State Street and the Metra tracks, with 880 homes. An additional
436 homes will be located nearby, along Pershing between State and Indiana.
Prices start in the $120s, and seven architectural firms were involved
in designing the six available home styles, which will be on the market
by early fall.
At Park Boulevard,
the housing mix is about one-third market-rate, one-third affordable (within
reach for buyers earning less than 120 percent of the areas median
income) and one-third CHA replacement units a now common formula. James Miller is CEO
of Stateway Associates, LLC, the developer for Park Boulevard, a team
that includes Kimball Hill Homes, Walsh Construction, Neighborhood Rejuvenation
Partners and Mesa Development. He says that the start of Park Boulevard
and the end of the Dan Ryans curtain of public housing are immense
catalysts for the area. Thats
what has everyone so excited: here you are in the middle of a city near
major institutions and transportation, and its 34 acres, Miller
says. Were integrating an area that had been isolated from
the larger community for decades and reintroducing the street grid. It
represents a transformation of the South Side. The city is moving South.
Brian Moore, asset
manager for Draper and Kramer, says the development is having a strong
impact on the area because of its scale and quality as well as because
of the way people at various income levels are integrated. Now that its
beginning to take shape, (Lake Park Crescent) will be a great boost to
the neighborhood, Moore says. The quality of the homes were
building will be a boost and for people who have been concerned in the
past about public housing coming back, we want to allay those concerns. Moore says Draper
and Kramer has maintained high standards for leasing and designed the
development so that the public housing units will be indistinguishable
from the market-rate homes. The project sits on a premier site at 41st
and Lake Park and has been planned with a three-acre crescent-shaped park
as well as a bridge that will provide direct access to the lake.
This is for
new construction of comparable quality (to North Side developments), and
youre a couple of blocks from the lake, Chase says. Nearby
you have Hyde Park and great retail, public transportation is readily
available, and presently theres very low density, but its
an area where prices are accelerating rapidly. The same sort of income
mix has worked with varying degrees of success on the North Side at projects
like North Town Village, which integrated CHA replacement, affordable
and market-rate units on the edge of Cabrini-Green. That project had the
advantage of sitting on the edge of the Gold Coast and some of the most
precious real estate in the country during a real estate boom. The major
new South Side developments will test how well a similar formula works
south of Cermak in a market that while still healthy is softer than it
was a few years ago. Residents of the mid-South
have mixed feelings both about the potential for displacement as property
values rise, and about the CHA units being scattered in the community.
CHA residents are
perhaps the most concerned of all. Though many of the highrises being
torn down had significant vacancy rates, the new housing does not offer
one-for-one replacement and its generally not built until long after
the towers are demolished. Meanwhile CHA residents must shift to other
projects or try their luck with private landlords using Section 8 vouchers.
Pledges from the housing authority that everyone who abides by his lease
will be entitled to return to a new or rehabbed unit are viewed warily.
While some CHA residents
worry about being moved out of the area, new residents are migrating to
the South Side from all over the city and suburbs.
That attitude on the
part of builders and brokers represents a major shift after decades in
which the citys largest developers ignored the South Side. What changed? Rising commute times,
an improved cityscape and a stellar economy fed a citywide real estate
boom during the 90s, as Chicago saw its first population gain since
World War II. Lakefront land costs north of Cermak soared to new heights
while large tracts of land lay undeveloped to the south. Not only was
land cheap and available, it also sat among some of the citys best
beaches, parks and grassy boulevards, lined with beautiful greystones
and Victorian mansions that had grown dilapidated. Some parts of Bronzeville
had been so devastated by drugs and gang activity, that the city bought
up much of the real estate, its fate guided by a local Conservation Community
Council. A Parade of Homes sponsored by the city during the mid-90s
in North Kenwood-Oakland brought new exposure to the area and was another
important catalyst for development.
I had lived
on the North Side for seven years before moving down here, says
DeGrasse. I was renting, and I wanted to live north, but for $200,000
you could only get something that needed to be torn down. At 41st and King,
however, DeGrasse and her husband found a rehabbed three-bedroom condo
with two baths, hardwood floors and 2,000 square feet of space priced
in the $150s. Of course, that was then. Today, Bronzeville prices are
still affordable compared to the North Side, but theyve been rising
steadily. One-bedroom condos
with 1.5 baths at Morhyne Development Companys St. Lawrence on the
Park project, 5050 S. St. Lawrence, start in the $190s. Two-bedrooms with
two baths start in the $290s, and a four-bedroom with four baths is priced
from the $420s. The units have the sorts of high-end finishes oak
floors in living areas, recessed lighting, granite counters that
are common in North Side developments but were hard to find in Bronzeville
10 years ago. I live in the
neighborhood too, so Im watching it all, and it feels good to see
things improving, property values inching up, DeGrasse says. Residents of neighborhoods
farther north, especially the South Loop and West Loop, have been prime
buyers of new Bronzeville homes. After pioneering those new
neighborhoods, carved from former railroad land, warehouses, junkyards
and flophouses on the edge of downtown, theyve built up significant
equity. Now they want to cash out and find more space in a traditional
neighborhood. Because the South
Loop has pushed as far as Cermak (2200 S.), Bronzeville would seem an
obvious choice for its residents, many of whom move up and out after getting
married or having a first child. A couple of miles south and theyre
in quieter, more affordable streets but still close to the Loop.
Bill McConnel and
his wife, Lisa, moved from the South Loop into a home at Berkeley Pointe,
by developer Jerome Wade, several years ago with their son, Cody, the
main reason the couple traded their South Loop townhouse for a North Kenwood
single-family. I like this
area better, and where its heading, Lisa says. We were
right on Clark, and its not as residential. Here I dont mind
Cody going out and playing on the block. A kid can run
around without you having to worry about traffic, Bill adds. As an interracial
couple Bill is white and Lisa is African American they say
theyve been comfortable in North Kenwood. Most people in the
neighborhood have been very welcoming, says Bill, who works in insurance
sales and does much of his job from home. What Im
wondering about is restaurants and commercial and whats coming on
43rd, Lisa says. Its perhaps the biggest complaint of new
homeowners in the area. Ironically, it also was the biggest complaint
for many of them in the South Loop, which only recently has seen an influx
of grocery stores, restaurants, coffee shops and other amenities. Commercial
strips from 35th to 47th streets remain mostly shabby, with high vacancies
and boarded-up storefronts or low-grade commercial tenants, such as fast
food restaurants and dollar stores. Hyde Park, which now
has a Borders Books & Music, Starbucks and a variety of good shops
and restaurants, is the closest and best option for many mid-South consumers.
In the other direction, theres Chinatown and the South Loop. In
between theres a shocking lack of enterprise. A city committee is
devoted to bringing commercial development to the blocks between Roosevelt
and 47th. Commercial always lags behind residential development, but the
influx of new residential construction and the redevelopment of public
housing should make the neighborhood more attractive to retailers. And that can only
add value to the historic Bronzeville buildings Louis Outlaw bought in
the early 90s. Not that hes worried. This was a fabulous investment, Outlaw says. Theres a great dynamic here, as there is throughout the city a lot of restoration work, new construction and the city spending a lot of money. I remember when we had these highrises over there, 10 or 12 years ago, that were dominated by gangs. Now, theres a great effort to restore neighborhoods.
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