2005 PROJECT SPOTLIGHT
A look at six projects impacting local communities.
Lindsey Walker
Published: Heartland Real Estate Business - COVER STORY, DECEMBER
2004
With the new year approaching, Heartland Real Estate Business
has searched the Midwest for significant upcoming developments in
2005. With projects ranging from high-rise towers to
state-of-the-art research facilities, developers across the
Midwest have big plans for the coming year.
Trump International Hotel & Tower
Real estate mogul Donald Trump is
bringing his ?bigger is better? mantra to the Midwest with his
90-story Trump International Hotel & Tower in Chicago.
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Trump International Hotel & Tower,
Chicago.
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Originally planned to be the tallest
building in the world, The Trump Organization?s tower was scaled
back after the attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001. However,
the 1,110-feet-tall skyscraper will still make quite an impression
on the Chicago skyline when it is completed in 2007.
Designed by Adrian Smith of Chicago-based
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and being built by Bovis Lend Lease?s
Chicago office, the 2.6 million-square-foot building will feature
a modern stainless steel and glass curtain wall fa?de. The tower
will offer 472 luxury residential condominiums and 286 five-star
hotel condominiums ranging in price from $636,000 to $16 million.
Although the original design called for approximately 1.3 million
square feet of office space, Trump abandoned the idea earlier this
year to instead add more condominium units.
?Our sales went so well ? not only were
the prices we were receiving higher than expected, but the
absorption rate, the speed of sales, was so strong ? that we were
able to increase the multifamily and hotel components,? explains
Russell Flicker, an executive vice president of the Trump
Organization. After 1 year of sales, the Hotel & Tower is
approximately 75 percent sold.
Located along the Chicago River at 401 N.
Wabash Avenue ? the former site of the Chicago Sun-Times Building
? the tower will provide its residents with such amenities as a
60,000-square-foot health-and-fitness spa, a 24-hour concierge,
more than 90,000 square feet of boutique shopping and dining,
20,000 square feet of conference and meeting space, two ballrooms,
1,000 indoor parking spaces, a 1.2-acre riverfront park and a
three-tiered riverwalk.
?Part of what makes Chicago particularly
unique is its interaction and appropriate use of all the
waterfront,? Flicker says. ?We tried to take advantage of that by
getting a site that is both on the Chicago River and has a direct
view of the lake. That?s what makes our site particularly
exciting.?
Currently in the demolition stage, the
tower is set to be under construction in the first quarter of
2005.
303 Broadway at Queen
City Square
Upon its completion in late 2005, 303
Broadway at Queen City Square will be downtown Cincinnati?s first
new office building in 14 years.
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303 Broadway at Queen City Square,
Cincinnati
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?It will be the only true Class A office
building in downtown Cincinnati,? says Charlie Thomas, vice
president of real estate development for Cincinnati-based Eagle
Realty Group, the project?s developer. ?With a highly efficient
floorplate design, an optimal size of 22,500 square feet per floor
and new requirements for today?s telecommunications and Internet
systems, 303 Broadway will offer superior building technologies
unavailable elsewhere in downtown Cincinnati.?
The 180,000-square-foot building is the
first phase of the 1 million-square-foot Queen City Square
development. The second phase will include a 37-story office tower
with first floor retail.
Located at the corner of 3rd Street and
Broadway, in the core office quadrant of the central business
district, 303 Broadway has a presence unrivaled in Cincinnati,
with views overlooking the Cincinnati Reds ballpark and the Ohio
River. The $62.5 million project features office space on eight
floors and an underground 650-space parking garage.
?303 Broadway will have downtown
Cincinnati?s most generous parking ratio, at 3.6 spaces per 1,000
square feet,? Thomas says.
Gyo Obata of St. Louis-based HOK
(Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum) is leading the design team, and New
York-based Turner Construction is the general contractor.
Interdisciplinary
Research Complex at the University of Wisconsin
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Interdisciplinary Research Complex
at the University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Wisconsin.
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Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum (HOK) is the
design architect for the new Interdisciplinary Research Complex at
the University of Wisconsin Medical School (IRC), which will break
ground in Madison, Wisconsin, in 2005. The complex will be the
third and final component of the University?s HealthStar
initiative, a program launched in 1996 to construct new health
sciences research and education facilities on the University?s
west end, according to Todd Halamka, a design principal with HOK
Chicago.
?The new facility will foster
interdisciplinary research within health sciences and across the
entire campus,? he says. ?It will promote translational
(laboratory-to-clinic) research and will provide efficient core
support.?
Comprised of three five-story laboratory
towers that will span 700,900 square feet upon completion in 2010,
the IRC will radiate from the existing Clinical Services Center
and will link to the hospital at different levels through a series
of connections. Inside the towers, the project will include
one-story laboratories and support and office space, as well as a
series of two-story lounges and pathways meant to create an
interactive environment. The development will also feature garden
space in between the buildings.
?Framed by a mass of existing buildings ?
some of which were built 25 years ago and constructed with diverse
materials ? the IRC is designed to unite the complex visually,?
Halamka says. ?Kasota stone, glass and brick ? distilled from some
of the adjacent structures ? form the principle fa?de materials.
The employment of low- and high-rise building massing integrates
the new facility both to adjacent buildings and the pedestrian
experience.?
Broken down into two phases, the $135
million, 437,600-square-foot first phase ? which calls for the
creation of more than 160,000 square feet of laboratory space;
84,600 square feet of imaging space; 63,000 square feet for a
vivarium; and 14,000 square feet for the study of gross anatomy ?
will be complete in 2008. A future phase encompassing another
263,300 square feet is in the development stage. It will include
an advanced biomedical laboratory and increased vivarium space.
When completed, the project?s total cost will be $265 million.
The IRC will fill a much needed void at
the university, which, according to a recent assessment of the
medical school by the Liaison Committee for Medical Education,
needs at least another 200,000 square feet of space to meet future
demands, Halamka says.
Besides providing the campus with this
essential space, the complex also will help to bridge the gap
between research and clinical practice. ?The building?s proximity
to the existing Clinical Sciences Center will foster the exchange
of information between research scientists working in the IRC and
clinicians treating patients in the hospital,? he says. ?The new
facility will accelerate the speed of innovative imaging and
laboratory research to clinical bedside application ? encouraging
the rapid movement of new knowledge on fundamental aspects of
disease processes to the greater community.?
340 on the Park
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340 on the Park, Chicago.
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Chicago-based LR Development Company, in
a joint venture with Chicago-based Magellan Development Group and
Chicago-based NNP Residential & Development, has found the perfect
combination for its new high-rise condominium development in
Chicago?s Lakeshore East neighborhood ? forward-thinking design,
unbeatable views and an unparalleled location.
?It is certainly the old real estate
adage that ?location, location, location? is everything, and this
building has that covered every way that you can look,? says Tom
Weeks, president of LR. ?Add to that 340 on the Park is being
planned to be the first residential tower in Chicago to meet LEED
standards for environmental design, and its views are the best
possible.?
Located at 340 E. Randolph, the 62-story,
approximately 1 million-square-foot building fronts historic Grant
Park to the south, Lake Michigan to the east and sits across from
Millennium Park. To the north, the condominiums overlook a
newly-built 6-acre park, Navy Pier and the city?s skyline.
?This building has front-facing views
that overlook Buckingham Fountain and one of the most spectacular
urban views perhaps in the country, and certainly in Chicago,?
Weeks says. ?It also has rear and side views that would be
exceptional at the front of any other building.?
Set to begin construction within 2
months, 340 on the Park will include 328 one-, two-, and
three-bedroom condominiums ranging in size from 1,186 to 3,414
square feet. The property will also contain 16 fully customizable
penthouse homes, between 2,360 and 5,489 square feet. There will
be more than 4,000 square feet of retail space available on the
ground level and a six-story, 206,790-square-foot garage will be
located below street level. The residences also will feature an
amenity level ? with a fitness center, 25-yard lap pool, winter
garden with over-sized glass doors and a clubroom ? in the middle
levels of the building.
?We?ve actually taken the amenity floor,
which in many buildings is somewhere down in the basement, and put
it on the 25th floor, overlooking some of the best views that the
building has to offer,? Weeks says. ?We?re taking what otherwise
would be a very valuable residential space and committing to a
meaningful and important amenity floor ? all on a floor with
spectacular 360 degree views.?
To obtain LEED certification, LR will be
incorporating several design features to improve energy efficiency
and indoor air quality as well as minimize the building's impact
on the environment. Features allowing the building to achieve a 20
percent reduction in energy costs include a curtain wall exterior
skin with tinted low-E glass to reduce solar heat gain.
Environmentally sustainable features include using rapidly
renewable resources such as bamboo flooring and installing a
rainwater collection system to be used for landscape irrigation.
The property?s centralized location, within a half mile of public
transportation, also complies with LEED certification standards.
While 340 on the Park has only recently
begun publicly advertising and marketing, the building is
approaching 150 contracts.
?We think [that] is exceptional
acceptance of the project,? he says. ?It?s been received very,
very well.?
The $300 million project was designed by
Chicago-based Solomon Cordwell Buenz & Associates, in conjunction
with Synthesis Architecture and Design, LR?s design division, and
is being built by the Chicago office of Bovis Lend Lease. Delivery
is expected in early 2007; Completion is set for a year later.
?With everything that is going on in the
Loop, for anyone who wants to experience Chicago at its best,
there couldn?t be a better location,? Weeks says. ?We?ve taken
everything we?ve learned from both our past successe, and,
perhaps, mistakes. And we have put a lot of thought into
correcting and planning to create the best residential living
experience possible.?
Schaumburg Convention
Center and Hotel
The Schaumburg Convention Center and
Hotel ? an idea that has been in development since the mid-1980s ?
is underway in Schaumburg, Illinois. Once the brainchild of five
northwest Illinois municipalities ? Schaumburg, Elk Grove Village,
Hoffman Estates, Palatine and Rolling Meadows ? the project
originally was to be funded by the State of Illinois and those
five communities. However, due to the lack of available state
funding at the time, the project was dropped ? but not forgotten.
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Schaumburg Convention Center and
Hotel, Schaumburg, Illinois.
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In 1999, more than 10 years later, the
Village of Schaumburg once again pursued the project and purchased
45 acres of land located on the corner of Interstate 90 (The
Northwest Tollway) and Meacham Road in Schaumburg.
?The Village was in a financial position
where we had some general obligation bonds that we were retiring,
and there was some revenue that was going to become available for
us to use,? says Brian Townsend, assistant village manager for The
Village of Schaumburg. ?The parcel that we purchased for the
project was really the last large tract of land available in the
Woodfield area for a project of this size. The Village board
realized that if they didn?t do it now, it was not going to
happen.?
The $13 million site is now the future
home to a 17-story, 419,000-square-foot Marriott/Renaissance hotel
and an adjacent 316,000-square-foot convention center.
Being built by Chicago-based Walsh
Construction, the Schaumburg Convention Center and Hotel will
feature 500 guest rooms, a 28,000-square-foot grand ballroom,
20,000 square feet of meeting rooms, a 200-seat restaurant, a
75-seat caf? a lobby bar, a winter garden atrium, an indoor
swimming pool and a health club. The complex will also include
1,670 parking spaces. A future phase calls for a 2,400-seat
performing arts center.
?The project itself is unique because of
what it includes and where it is located, and the spectacular
design will be an icon for the Schaumburg area,? Townsend says.
?The project will be successful because it is the largest hotel
and convention facility in the Woodfield area. It will help to
attract additional visitors to the community and strengthen the
hospitality segment of the economy.?
John Portman & Associates is providing
architectural services for the $239 million project, which is set
for completion in June 2006.
Target Distribution
Center
The I-39 Logistics Corridor is booming,
and Minneapolis-based Target Corporation has taken notice. The
company recently purchased 119 acres of land in the corridor?s
largest industrial park ? the 425-acre Park 88 ? where it is now
building its 1.5 million-square-foot Chicago distribution center.
Located at 1111 Macom Drive just north of
the four-way Peace Road interchange at I-88 in DeKalb, Illinois,
the new $100 million project is being built by Chicago-based Walsh
Construction. Delivery is set for fall 2005, and the center is
expected to be fully operational by January 2006.
The park?s strategic location is what
attracted Target to this site, according to Mark Goode, principal
at Riverwoods, Illinois-based Venture One Real Estate. With access
to Interstate 88, the growth in Chicago and a significant labor
pool (DeKalb is home to North Illinois University, which has a
logistics division), Park 88 has a lot to offer users.
?Interstate 88 runs East-West from
downtown Chicago, and in this location, [Target] believes that
they will be in the center line for future growth of Chicago. They
feel that they are in the path of development.? Goode says. ?Plus,
this location allows users to have virtually traffic-free delivery
to all Midwestern markets.?
Developed by Venture One, along with St.
Louis-based Claycorp, Inc. and DeKalb Associates, Park 88 is
located 50 miles west of Chicago and 129 miles southwest of
Milwaukee. The development, once complete, will be a central part
of the I-39 Logistics Corridor, which covers 10,000 square miles
from Janesville, Wisconsin, on the north to Bloomington, Illinois,
on the south, and 65 miles from Sycamore, Illinois, on the east to
Sterling, Illinois, on the west.
?From Park 88?s perspective, this
transaction has allowed us to get our infrastructure completed.
We?re building our main road through the park and we will have
five pad-ready sites from 160,000 to 750,000 square feet, so we
can immediately start building for people who need fast delivery,?
Goode says. ?We think this will lead to us being able to do
commercial development, in terms of hotels and service stations,
in the park.?
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