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August
5, 2005 The tower is well
underway at the corner of Dearborn and Oak on the former site of the Scholl
College of Podiatric Medicine, in the Gold Coast. Developer William
Smith, of Smithfield Properties, is a fan of contemporary architecture,
and his recent collaboration with architects Booth Hansen has been especially
productive. The new 30 W. Oak
development is in one way, a direct heir of the Chicago School, with the
buildings skeleton proudly displayed in the deign by Booth Hansen.
But the emphasis here is insistently horizontal despite the towers
24-story height, and there is no distinguishable base or cap. This highrise
is simply of a piece, an effect thats accentuated by a curvilinear
façade. Its not
a contextual building in that it doesnt look like the buildings
around it, said Charlie Stetson, principal at Booth Hansen. But,
Stetson explained, It interacts very well with the location based
on the fact that the south part of the building is curved and opens up
views to the south
The idea was to maximize glass on the south side. The main living areas
in most of the units are located on buildings south side, and bedrooms
and closets are on the north ends of the units. The condos have two to
four bedrooms and 2.5 to 4.5 baths. Units feature granite countertops,
Sub-Zero refrigerators, marble-tiled baths with marble counters, frameless
glass shower doors, Grohe faucets, eight-foot solid-core doors, Baldwin
hardware, floor-to-ceiling windows and Castec shades. Prices for the condos
ranged from the $630s to $3 million in July. The building has 24-hour
door staff, 10-foot ceiling heights, a fitness facility, storage rooms,
bike storage and a year-round heating and cooling system. Spaces in the
heated indoor garage are priced from $50,000 to $85,000. Most of 30 W. Oak
has only two units per floor. Large 18-by-24-foot terraces provide what
are essentially added rooms outside the homes, Stetson said. The terraces
jut out on the east and west sides of the building and are surrounded
by glass railings. The east side of the building offers a view directly
down Oak Street to Oak Street Beach. First occupancy scheduled for late summer 2006. |