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‘Huge’ Wrigleyville Development Moves Forward, Kills Hotel (PHOTOS)

After being approved initially in 2010, the Addison Park on Clark development will bring roughly 170 apartments and almost 400 parking spaces across the street from Wrigley Field.

 

Developers behind Addison Park on Clark, a mixed-use development on the corner of Addison and Clark streets, say the project is moving forward after being approved in 2010—this time without a hotel.

Ald. Tom Tunney’s (44th) Chief of Staff Bennett Lawson said developers with M&R Development presented their new plan for the corner site at the latest Community Directed Development Council meeting, which now includes 170 rental units, 380 underground parking spaces and tons of retail space.

The biggest change at the meeting—which was closed to the media—was the hotel that formerly took up half the space.

“We had approved the plan in 2009, and it was quite a long process with the CDDC and the individual neighborhood groups,” Lawson said. “It was something like 135 rental units, 137 hotel rooms, over 145,000-square-feet of retail space and 400 parking spots. … But given the market at the time, the project was stalled and they came back unable to secure a hotel partner.”

The developer dodged a complete foreclosure on the property in June when he refinanced the site with a $9.1 million loan, Chicago Real Estate Daily reports. President of developing partner Preferred Equities, Ltd. Steven Shultz was in talks with Hyatt Hotels Corp. at the time.

With the Ricketts family recently announcing plans to construct a boutique Sheraton Hotel across the street from Wrigley Field where the current McDonald’s stands, developer Tony Rossi says maybe another one wouldn’t be a good choice.

"The hotel is a particularly difficult industry," Rossi told DNAinfo Chicago. "There's probably not enough (market) for two hotels across the street from each other."

Lawson said XSport Fitness, the health club chain interested in leasing space at Addison Park on Clark since its inception, would most likely fill space on the third and fourth floors where the hotel once was slated to go. That’s combined with other retailers eager to fill the new development like 7-Eleven and CVS, Lawson said.

“We’re going to try not to add a lot of liquor to there,” Lawson said. “… One of the best things (from the old plans) was the hotel. Do we really need more residential units there? Probably not. It’s a huge block of redevelopment that took two years to approve initially. They started with a 24-story high-rise, and they whittled it down to keep in line with the character of the community.”


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Lawson said the bones of the structure will remain practically the same as what was approved in 2009, meaning at its tallest point, the building will be 91-feet tall. In addition, because the owners are reportedly unwilling to sell, the Sports World store and automotive repair shop on the corner of Clark and Addison are not part of the development.

Because there will be an amendment to the planned development to include more apartments rather than a hotel, the process could be drawn out another nine months before the permitting process can begin, Lawson said. That is expected to happen around next winter, followed by at least an 18-month construction phase.

And Lawson says residents concerned with rowdy college grads moving to the neighborhood to be a part of the Chicago Cubs action need not worry.

“Given the price points they’re talking about for these apartments, that’s less of a concern,” he said. “They’re building a product that’s closer to what you’d find in River North or Streeterville. I know this issue has come up in the past, but that’s something, given the price point, that’s less of a concern for the community.”

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Related Topics: 44th ward, Addison Park on Clark, M&R Development, Wrigley Field, and Wrigleyville

Gunnery Sgt Hartman

10:15 am on Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Here's the thing though - how many people are going to agree to a price point that high in that area? I don't see someone plunking down high six figures to live on a block that's noisy, gridlocked and rowdy much of the year.

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Andy Ambrosius

6:17 pm on Tuesday, January 29, 2013

I was thinking the same thing. The developer seems confident in his coice, so I guess we'll have to see. I, for one, wouldn't fork up a ton to live on that corner. To noisy.

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The Truth

11:42 am on Monday, February 4, 2013

They had a big sign for years in that vacant lot on Broadway where there were supposed homes to be built over the Dominick's that burned down, it read "Condo's from $500K to $1 million". It's still a parking lot and the sign is gone. The Dominicks was never re-built either.

gerald spencer

8:00 pm on Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The Ricketts are now confident that they own the entire Wrigleyville area. The lenthiest interview, so far, given on WTTW, has their representative saying, "The residents had their say in the past, for all those years," no more, "{their buildings cannot support the highgrade bill boards the Ricketts need to make their millions, so the landmark agreement dies right here." He goes on to continue to claim a permanent 2000+ added jobs to the area, but only a fool could believe that. He also claims that no part of the infrastruture at the ball park is revenue generating, like having restrooms. I never heard such crap. He went on to say that the Cubs are the best deal that any major city has ever had from any entity at any time, ever! The Cubs are fine, the idea of a ball park is fine but not a new Cellular Field in the midst of a neighborhood, the Ricketts have shown their true color and that is The Color of Money.

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Garry Albrecht

10:11 am on Saturday, February 2, 2013

I have submitted 3 more photos of the Addison development. Sports World will not be touched while the parking lot, and Starbucks will be effected on Addison Street and the storefronts south of Sports World on Clark Street.

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Andy Ambrosius

3:31 pm on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Thanks! Love it when people add photos to the stories. It helps me out a lot.

Robert Salm

10:44 am on Sunday, February 3, 2013

My problem with this whole development, or really any new Wrigley Field renovation plan that's been proposed is the excessive number of parking stalls. Yeah, yeah, the City mandates this or that, but the alderman has the power to reduce or even eliminate the City's ancillary parking requirements in the building code to accommodate only one stall per residential unit. You give, in this case, ourside developers or the Ricketts family the right to start dotting the neighborhood with 500-, 1000-, 3000-stall parking structures (usually under the guise of "renovation,") and you might as well say goodbye to the current traffic plan within a six-block area of Wrigley Field. Clark Street and Addison will become almost unnavigable. Built in to the current Rickett's renovation plans is the allowance for them to add as many as 20% of Wrigley Field's capacity for cars. That's a potential 8,000 new cars being allowed to crowd city streets twice per day/night during an event.

In my mind, developers should be free to build just about any structure they want. That specific area could use something nice. But the huge amount of on-site and ancillary parking that current building codes require needs to be curtailed so that pedestrians, mass transit and bikes still rule the road.

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Lee Crandell

4:20 pm on Saturday, March 30, 2013

Completely agree. You might want to sign this petition on the matter: http://www.change.org/petitions/alderman-tom-tunney-chicago-cubs-don-t-turn-lakeview-into-a-parking-lot?utm_campaign=action_box&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=share_petition

Forcing developers to build parking not only puts more cars on local roads and makes traffic worse, but it also amounts to a massive subsidy for driving (exactly the wrong direction we should be aiming for).

Geri Gidley

9:58 am on Monday, February 4, 2013

Like any overpriced apt....when they can't rent it, they let 3 or 4 people rent it as roomates...and that's where the problems begin...good luck with that!

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The Truth

11:47 am on Monday, February 4, 2013

^ True. Watch this rental market collapse too. And when those 30/40-somethings don't get along as "roommates" after watching a TV show where this all seems to work out fine, they don't even live out a 12-month lease and it's rented again to Section 8 for "guaranteed payment". This is fun watching this all unwind.

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