|
The Buck Stops Here by Barry Pearce |
|
|
SBS stresses quality in prime Bucktown project
As a
home buyer, try calling the CEO at most development companies, and the
only satisfaction youre likely to get is the knowledge that youve
given a secretary her share of laughs for the week. At SBS Development,
the CEO is the self-professed getter-done guy, who is not
above making service calls, or for that matter, cleaning a new unit before
buyers move in. If
I get a call, within hours or worst-case scenario, a day
I have a man on the job fixing the problem, says Steve Weitzman,
CEO of SBS Development, builder of the Claremont, a new 10-unit condo
building in Bucktown. In the last 30 days before delivering each
unit, my son and I finish the job by cleaning it ourselves because as
you clean, you also see the things that are wrong and correct them. And Weitzman
says his goal is always for nothing to be wrong. I
go to a closing and theres no punch list, Weitzman says. I
walk the building with colored dots, and wherever I want something fixed,
I put dots. Then my son walks through and goes over everything and then
the architect. Unless theres a chandelier coming from Italy and
it hasnt arrived yet, we go to the closing without a punch list. Weitzman
says he modeled his approach to building after the developer who built
his home in Northbrook. The legendary developers work became a running
joke for suburban property inspectors who challenged each other to find
a single flaw in one of his homes. I
said, thats the kind of developer I want to be, Weitzman says.
I taught my kids to treat every development as if it were their
own home. The Claremont,
Weitzmans latest project, will be home to 10 condo buyers in Bucktown,
at 1671 N. Claremont. The building has seven two-bedroom two-bath single-level
units and three duplexes with three bedrooms and 2.5 baths. The homes
are priced from $299,900 to $599,900, with covered parking spots available
for $15,000 and uncovered spots for $10,000. As you
might expect from someone who sounds almost manic about quality and service,
Weitzman doesnt skimp on finishes. Standard features at the Claremont
are considered upgrades at many developments, according to Weitzman. The
units include 1¼-inch granite kitchen counters, GE Profile stainless
steel appliances, full-sized washers and dryers, 42-inch maple cabinets,
white oak floors and a choice of fixtures from the likes of Kohler, Grohe
and Moen. The
developers brought a suburban feel to the city, with wide floor plans
and a high level of standards that would normally be upgrades, says
Eric Plotkin, the Coldwell Banker Lakeview agent selling the Claremont
with Matt Garrison. Thats one thing that surprised me when
I started working with SBS Development. A lot of builders wont even
put a vent in without charging an extra $500. The Claremont
will have a common roof deck, and the duplexes have private roof decks
in addition to balconies. The
units have extensive balconies that bring the outside into units; its
like downtown is right there, you can reach out and touch it, says
Robert Katz, the architect who designed the Claremont and works full-time
for SBS. Katz
says he created a higher level of intimacy in the four-story brick and
limestone building by providing two distinct entrances one on Wabansia
and one on Claremont to service two different sets of units. The
site allowed for this sort of configuration and for extra-wide condos. The
typical lot in Chicago is 25 feet wide, which gives you an exposure of
19 feet in width, Katz says. We designed these to be wider,
22 feet on Wabansia and 24 feet wide on Claremont, with wider expanses
of glass. The Great room concept, with an open kitchen / living / dining
area, and wider expanses of glass, creates a much more open, larger feel
than you can get on a typical lot. The site
is the former home of the Puerto Rican Cultural Center. SBS worked with
the center in a creative arrangement that proves developers arent
always at odds with community groups. Weitzman paid a fixed price for
the property, cut the center in for 15 percent of each condo he sells
and developed a new $1.3 million facility for the center in Humboldt Park. That
arrangement gave the center a more accessible location for its clientele
and gave SBS a rare parcel in prime Bucktown, a chic enclave thats
been highly developed during the last decade. Its
the last nice, large project going on in Bucktown east of Western,
says Scott Weitzman, Steves son and the president of SBS. The
whole area is flourishing with new construction. Its close to public
transportation, close to the expressway. The restaurants in the area are
some of the best in the country. There are a lot of dog-friendly parks.
But you still will get a little more here for the money than you would
in Lincoln Park or Lakeview. Ryan
Weitzman, Scotts brother and a recent college graduate, already
is an integral part of the SBS team, Steve says. He serves as secretary
and treasurer of the company and according to his father, has an uncanny
knack for assessing property and running the numbers on a potential project.
A hands-on family approach has been key to the developers success,
according to Scott. On
a three- to four-unit building, it takes most builders eight months to
a year (to finish construction), Scott says. Were averaging
four to six months. When you do things yourself, you have more control.
It definitely gets done quicker, and the finished product is incomparable
to any other in the area. The on-site sales trailer, 1671 N. Claremont, is open weekdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., and on Saturdays and Sundays from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. First occupancy at the project is expected in early winter. |