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Rapid Development by Dan Schuyler |
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Sussex touts lakefront condos while charting new W. Loop office
The catchy
verse from the song Sidewalks of New York might have been the corporate
mantra for the Starbucks empire in its early days, and in the world of
real estate, its a tune Sussex & Reilly co-founder Sean Conlon
began humming, Chicago-style, a very few years ago. Thats
when Conlon opened the first office of Sussex & Reilly now
Sussex & Reilly Century 21 with six people in Roscoe Village.
Conlon, however, has added his own verse and it goes something like this:
Once youve seen Starbucks arrive, youre too late. In Roscoe
Village a Starbucks has arrived, across the street from Sussex, along
with a breathtaking boom in new condominiums, upscale restaurants and
trendy boutiques that followed the opening of the brokerage, at 2044 W.
Roscoe. There
is no Starbucks yet on the 1100 block of West Lake Street, where Conlon
and partner Liz Scheffler plan to open a fourth Sussex office this summer,
but that suits them just fine. Part
of the plan for our company over the next five years includes the establishment
of offices in areas where there is a natural progression of businesses
and real estate development and in locations which presently are underserved
by our profession, Scheffler says. The West and South Loop
areas fall into both categories. The firm
has leased 7,000 square feet of ground floor space in a completely rehabbed
former warehouse turned chic loft, at 1101 W. Lake. The West Loop office
will start off with a staff of 20 salespeople, and the capacity for nearly
100. The firms other offices, in Lakeview (Roscoe Village), Lincoln
Park, and Lincoln Square collectively house 100 residential sales personnel
and 12 commercial agents. While
development has boomed in central neighborhoods such as the West Loop
and South Loop, Realtors have neglected the area, a gap Sussex hopes to
fill, according to Conlon. There
is enormous market inconsistency, Conlon says. Developers
are darting in and out, doing a project and leaving. There is no cohesiveness.
We want to go there and serve these needs. The area is fraught with cutting
edge spaces and locations. While
Conlon sees a major opportunity for resales in the emerging South Loop
and West Loop areas, Sussex & Reilly also has gained a reputation
for marketing new construction in established lakefront neighborhoods.
Conlon describes two projects the firm currently is selling as real
gems with exquisite finish work. That
according to Conlon, is the trademark of brothers Pete and Mike Walsh,
who started Walsh Development eight years ago. The detail-oriented approach
seems to be serving them well. At press time, only one unit remained for
sale at Walshs new condo building at 3601 N. Southport. The two-bedroom
duplex on the third floor includes a den and is priced at $469,000. Designed
by architects Pappageorge Haymes, the project took just over a year to
go from concept to completion. The ten-unit building, which Pete Walsh
says was designed to appeal to both contemporary and traditional tastes,
is the first U.S. location for Austrian coffee and pastry firm Julius
Meinl, which has opened a large café on the ground floor. A newer
Walsh project, at 802 W. Wolfram, also sits on a corner site that allowed
for creative design. The building,
designed by the Vari architectural firm, includes two ground-floor duplexes
with private entrances. The upper floors each house two units and a foyer,
accessed by a semi-private elevator, and unit interiors also have private
foyers in a unique double foyer configuration. The development
will be completed by mid-summer. Prices range from the $520s to the $640s
including garage parking, and the units range from 1,900 to 2,600 square
feet. What
sets our company and our projects apart from others is our rapt attention
to quality and detail, Walsh says. All of the units in both
buildings have fireplaces, terraces, and an abundance of natural light.
All of the top floor units have an unobstructed view of the city. We provide
quality finishes and high-end appliances
lots of stainless, marble
and granite. At press
time, five of the ten condos at the Wolfram project had been sold. As
for the future plans of Walsh Development, Walsh points out that he spent
twelve years with Amoco Oil before becoming an entrepreneur, so
I have been known to think big. As have
Conlon and Scheffler, of Sussex & Reilly. When they met in 2001, Sussex
was in its second year of operation, and Scheffler headed up the Century
21 United Group, with six offices in Lake County and two in DuPage. Both
companies were looking for opportunities to expand, and in January of
last year they combined to form Sussex & Reilly Century 21. The
merger gave us a very solid base, Scheffler says. It combined
the suburban residential market with Sussex & Reillys development
expertise and the higher priced Chicago market. One important facet of
our future plans includes the opening of North Shore locations, thereby
closing the geographical gap between the Chicago-based offices and the
north suburban operation. Internally, we think we have the most seamless real estate operation in the area, Scheffler says. Certainly we are the most advanced technologically. All of our people carry wireless PDAs (personal digital assistants), connecting them to the Internet and to our centralized scheduling system. Everyone in the company knows what everyone else is doing at all times These are energetic, dedicated, highly motivated people. |