Search Articles


NEWS
01.08.2010
Hairpin as Linchpin
Long vacant commercial building in Chicago to be redeveloped as arts space and housing
A dilapidated flatiron building that has stymied development in Logan Square will soon be turned into affordable housing, an arts center, and retail.
Ryan LaFollette

Chicago’s Logan Square neighborhood has long been dubbed, fairly or not, the new Wicker Park or Bucktown, after its truly gentrified neighbors down the Milwaukee Avenue corridor. The north end of Logan Square’s commercial and retail corridor, however, has long been blighted by the vacant (with the exception of a Payless Shoe store) Morris B. Sachs flatiron building, anchoring one of Chicago’s iconic six-corners intersections at Milwaukee and Kimball Avenue.


The Building, which lies on a triangular lot, is currently vacant but for a payless on the ground floor.
 
 

Any debate regarding the most appropriate use of the Sach’s building may be put to rest. The city’s Community Development Commission has approved Brinshore Development’s proposal to redevelop the space into the Hairpin Lofts and Logan Square Community Arts Center.

The planned redevelopment, partially financed by Tax Increment Financing dollars, will consist of 28 new residential loft units, 25 of which will be affordable to households earning 30 to 60 percent of the area median income. Earlier proposals called for twice the number of affordable units. The winning proposal opts for fewer apartments and greater community space, in what the developer hopes will become a more vibrant and dynamic streetscape, accessible day and night.

Adam Natenshon, vice president at Brinshore, sees the Arts Center as a multipurpose venue. "It will provide a flexible art space for the community that may serve moms and kids, seniors, yoga classes during the day and serve as a venue for music, dance, theater or spoken word at night," he said.

Brinshore chose Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, who according to Natenshon are well-versed in historical preservation, having worked on the restoration of other flatiron buildings. The second floor will be home to the 7,000 square foot Arts Center and outdoor patio deck, with the apartments on the upper floors. The ground floor will be devoted to four market rate retail spaces.

The building borders on a residential neighborhood, and hopes are high that its redevelopment will help revitalize the entire area.

The development should significantly improve the corridor, as commercial and retail activity is currently weighted to the more vibrant southern end, near the main entrance to the CTA’s Logan Square subway station. Situated prominently at the center of the north end of the neighborhood, accessible by several major bus routes and two subway stations, Brinshore believes Hairpin Lofts and the Arts Center will help activate the neighborhood while adding to the area’s affordable housing stock.

Ryan LaFollette
Links
ARCHIVE
Search by:
Displaying items 1 - 10 of 1653
09.01.2010
The British architect had wide-ranging influence both at home and abroad
08.31.2010
With a few nifty tricks, AECOM turns a stiff office building...
08.30.2010
Pollution-eating pavers are self-cleaning, too, keeping down cleaning costs while clearing...
08.27.2010
The building blocks of life, and everything else, turn out to...
08.26.2010
Olafur Eliasson and Henning Larsen team up for a multifaceted, multifunctional...
08.26.2010
Grast by Vamos Architects
08.25.2010
As office retrofit expands, Julie Snow loses commission to 4240 Architecture
08.25.2010
There is a balance between brilliant and boring in NYC parks,...
08.24.2010
One of New York City's oldest real estate families talks about...
08.24.2010
Frances Anderton remembers her first tour guide of LA, the godfather...