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New Homes Magazine
October 26, 2006
Good as Gold - Luxury development heads south as ?new" locations go
high-end
by Alison Soltau
Not so long ago,
if you had several million dollars to lavish on a high-end condo in
downtown
Chicago, all, or at least
most, roads pointed to the tony
Gold Coast. The fabled
neighborhood was, and still is, the darling of many buyers of
ultra-luxury homes, offering lake and skyline views, top-flight dining,
abundant nightlife and world-class shopping on the nearby
Magnificent Mile. Not to
mention the snob appeal of a
Gold Coast address.
But developable
land is rare in the dense neighborhood, and the official
Gold Coast, bounded by
Oak Street, North Avenue, the lake and Clark Street, currently is home
to just one of the 18 or so ultra-luxury developments underway in
downtown
Chicago. Only
The Ambassador, an
upscale adaptive reuse project that has been on the market for several
years, at 1300 N. State Parkway, qualifies.
As downtown
development has boomed in recent years, high-end builders increasingly
have turned to ?new" locations. Some of these neighborhoods, such as the
Loop / New East Side, are new in the sense that until lately, they had
seen little residential development of any kind. Others, such as
River North, had seen
plenty of new housing, but not at the sort of stratospheric prices
current ultra-luxury projects are fetching.
Some of the
latest luxury locations are short on the kinds of amenities well-heeled
buyers generally want ? posh retail, fine dining, swank bars.
Ultra-luxury developments in these locations likely will be limited to
sites that command premiere views of the river, lake and skyline for
some time.
But a couple of
these neighborhoods have the kinds of infrastructure, attractions and
institutional base that could transform them into blue-chip addresses in
the coming years. Some already are well on their way.
Gold Coast
South
For years, the
River North Association,
a non-profit business group, has claimed the area between the
Chicago River and
Division Street for its members, attempting to annex the two blocks of
the
Gold Coast between Oak
and Division streets as part of
River North. The
Gold Coast, though, has
the tonier reputation, and if perceptions of neighborhood boundaries are
shifting here, it?s the
Gold Coast that?s cutting
into
River North turf.
Both
Ten East Delaware and
The Elysian Hotel and Private
residences, 11 E. Walton St., market themselves as being in
the
Gold Coast ? the Elysian
marketers going so far as to say the development sits ?in the heart of
the
Gold Coast." Never mind
that the southern boundary of the
Gold Coast is Oak Street,
and both of these projects are about a block south of there, in
River North.
The truth is,
these developments are so close to the
Gold Coast that most
buyers aren?t going to quibble, and over time, an address just south of
Oak might be generally accepted as true
Gold Coast. These
ultra-luxury developments, along with 50 E. Chestnut,
The Palmolive Building
and
The Residences at 900 sit
in an area that might be dubbed
Gold Coast South.
Some buyers no
doubt see a location south of Oak Street as better than the
Gold Coast proper because
it?s that much closer to
Mag Mile shopping. Being
on or close to Michigan Avenue always has had a luster of its own for
ultra-luxury buyers. Projects such as 50 E. Chestnut,
The Elysian and
Ten East Delaware tout
their proximity to the
Magnificent Mile, and
The Palmolive Building
and
The Residences at 900 are
making the most of Boul Mich locations, just as ultra-luxury projects
ranging from The Water Tower to The Park Tower did before them.
JMB Development
has converted office space in the
Bloomingdale?s Building
into upscale homes at
The Residences at 900,
900 N. Michigan Ave., touting the upscale retail downstairs. Residents
can shop at
Gucci and other high-end
shops in the seven-story mall located inside the building.
Draper & Kramer?s grand
art-deco high-rise,
The Palmolive Building,
159 E. Walton St., sits along Michigan Avenue, a
Louis Vuitton store
occupying ground-floor space on that side.
River North
East
Yes, it?s a silly
idea for a name, but is ?River North East" any more contrived than the
?Cathedral District?"
The Fordham Company and
friends dreamed up the
Cathedral District to
market residential development in the area between Michigan Avenue,
State Street, Ontario Street and Chicago Avenue.
This pocket of
River North (the ?Cathedral
District" is not sticking as far as we can tell) is home to a
distinct collection of new upscale towers that started with
The Fordham and
The Pinnacle. There
actually are a couple of ornate cathedrals here ?
Holy Name and
St. James ? unlike the
area around a North Side development called Cathedral Hills (no
cathedral, no hills). A number of classy old brownstones also managed to
hang on, now housing everything from offices to art collections.
And there are
several ultra-luxury developments planned or underway in the vicinity,
including
Canyon Ranch Living and
30 W. Erie, on the
western fringe of this tiny pocket. On the eastern edge of this enclave
sits the single priciest luxury high-rise development in
Chicago during 2006,
Prism Development Company?s
The Ritz-Carlton Residences,
664 N. Michigan Ave. Homes here are priced from $1.25 million to $9.2
million, and as you might have guessed, the Michigan Avenue address has
been key to the marketing effort.
?The
Ritz-Carlton waited about five years to find just the right
location," says Jane Shawkey, of sales agent
Rubloff Residential Properties.
?It had to be on the Avenue or within a block from the Avenue. The brand
is so phenomenal that it needs a phenomenal location."
A river runs
through it
If you guessed
that this story would continue heading south (we?re speaking in
geographic, not literary terms), you were right. That?s the direction
that ultra-luxury developments have moved recently, pushing toward and
fording the
Chicago River, until
recently seen as the border between blocks dominated by business (south)
and those with a more residential flavor (north).
A booming housing
market, weak demand for office space and a newfound appreciation for the
Chicago River?s aesthetic
value have spurred building along the waterway once treated as a sewer.
Developments such as
MCL?s River East,
The Enterprise Companies?
Kinzie Park and Bejco?s
River Bend started the trend (sure, there were others, but in the
interests of space we?ll only mention one more: Harry Weese?s wonderful
River Cottages). It was the all-powerful Trump name, however, that
blazed the current water trail.
The
Trump International Hotel & Tower,
401 N. Wabash Ave., has ?pushed up the desirability" of a sliver of
River North that?s better known for office buildings, says Gail Lissner
of housing analyst
Appraisal Research Counselors.
Trump Tower, where
high-end units command as much as $1,000 a square foot, is the
second-most expensive development in the downtown market.
?[Trump]
has greatly improved the marketability of existing properties, and now
there are rumors that the
IBM Building is a
potential conversion candidate," Lissner says.
Across the river
from
Trump,
Teng Associates? 89-story
Waterview Tower, 111 W.
Wacker Drive, will slant to the southeast, giving homeowners views of
the river, the lake and the skyline from its tall, slender profile. The
building will be close to Loop offices, the Theater District, State
Street retailers and ? if you like a good walk ?
Millennium Park.
Although these
riverfront sites have not been known as residential locations, they are
in the heart of downtown with stunning views that will never be blocked
by competing high-rises ? an asset that promises strong investment value
as downtown continues to grow.
South
Streeterville
The
MCL Companies tried to
call it River East, but the nondescript area immediately north of the
river and west of Lake Shore Drive never took to this name. Many
Chicagoans don?t really think of it as
Streeterville either.
The
neighborhood?s identity complex soon could get massive relief, however,
if Dublin-based
Shelbourne Development
follows through on plans for 400 North Lake Shore Drive. The Irish
developer bought the project formerly known as the
Fordham Spire from
The Fordham Company in
2006. The planned 2,000-foot building with a cutting-edge design by
renowned Spanish architect
Santiago Calatrava, would
be the tallest tower in North America and perhaps the priciest in
Chicago. The corkscrew
profile would be a beacon on the lakefront, and such a development could
have a massive effect on the surrounding area, one with lots of
developable land in the form of surface parking lots.
?If the
Spire comes in, I think
it will have a similar impact to the
Trump development [in
River North], bringing a lot of interest to the neighborhood," says Gail
Lissner, of
Appraisal Research.
Not that the
neighborhood isn?t starting to hop already. In mid-2006, the price of a
new-construction condo averaged $450 to $500-plus per square foot in
Streeterville, buoyed by
projects such as Urban R2?s 600 North Fairbanks and Sutherland
Pearsall?s 550 St. Clair, according to
Appraisal Research. Last
year, the median price for attached housing in
Streeterville was
$372,500, well above the citywide median of $285,000, according to the
Chicago Association of Realtors.
Greater Loop,
Newer East Side
Steps toward the
city?s goal of creating a 24-hour downtown, the theater district and
most of all, the development of
Millennium Park have
inspired a mini high-rise boom south of the river. Mesa Development?s
The Heritage at Millennium Park,
130 N. Garland Court, was the first of this wave and proved well-heeled
home buyers would cross the river, given a good enough reason.
When
The Heritage came on the
market,
Millennium Park was still
under construction and despite its inclusion in the project?s name, the
park was in many ways, an intangible. Now that Chicagoans can buy homes
with views of Frank Gehry?s striking
Jay Pritzker Pavilion and
Anish Kapoor?s luminous
Cloud Gate sculpture,
living near
Millennium Park has
gained its own cachet.
Other
ultra-luxury projects on or near the park include Palladian
Development?s
Mandarin Oriental Tower,
215 N. Michigan Ave. and Walsh Investors and Mesa Development?s
The Legacy at Millennium Park,
60 E. Monroe St. Nearby projects with lower price points also are
building the greater Loop?s residential base, both new high-rises such
as
Modern Momentum and
conversions in former office buildings, such as 55 E. Monroe,
Metropolitan Tower and
Metropolis.
Magellan Development Group?s
large
Lakeshore East community,
immediately north of
Millennium Park in an
area some call the New East Side, has been very successful largely
because of its lake, river and park views ? and the scale of the
project. This mixed-use community includes a school, rentals, hotels and
commercial components that will provide residents with some built-in
retail and conveniences in an area that still feels business-heavy and
institutional.
Lakeshore East includes
LR Development?s luxury
340 on the Park high-rise
and
Magellan Development?s
Parkhomes,
Aqua and
Chandler projects.
John Jacoby, a
partner in a Loop law firm, bought a two-bedroom condo in this area, at
The Legacy at Millennium Park,
overlooking sculptor Jaume Plensa?s
Crown Fountain partly
because of its proximity to the park.
?I can see myself
using the park facilities for morning workouts," Jacoby says.
Views are key in
the Loop, which is still short on residential amenities, especially
after hours, and you should be ready to pay top dollar for them. A
typical unit on the east side of a building with clear views of Grant
Park tends to be priced from $550 to $650 a square foot. A similar unit
in the same building facing west would cost around $300 a square foot,
according to
Appraisal Research Counselors.
As the
residential development boom moves south, Loop prices are heading north.
The average sales price of a Loop condo was $355,802 during the first
eight months of 2006, up 25 percent from the same period in 2004,
according to figures from the
Multiple Listing Service of Northern
Illinois compiled by
Jameson Realty Group.
The North
South Loop
When condo buyers
at
The Enterprise Companies?
high-rise,
One Museum Park, 1215 S.
Prairie Ave., move into their new homes they?ll have front-row seats at
a world-class show. The expansive glass windows of
One Museum Park gaze out
on a panoramic view that takes in
Soldier Field, the
stately Museum Campus, Lake Michigan and
Millennium Park.
Enterprise took a gamble
asking buyers to fork out as much as $500 a square foot for units when
sales opened at
One Museum Park in early
2005. The high prices made this tower the first ? and so far only ?
ultra-luxury development in the
South Loop. The prices of
high-end homes at
One Museum Park have kept
pace with the ultra-luxury market, and today the going rate for one of
the top condos is about $600 a square foot.
The
South Loop, bounded
roughly by Van Buren Street, Cermak Road, the river and the lake, may
have postcard looks and proximity to the Loop, the Museum Campus and
Soldier Field, but the
evolving neighborhood can?t compete with
River North or the
Gold Coast for nightlife
and fine dining. Restaurateurs have been slow to arrive in the
South Loop despite the
frenetic pace of residential development. The neighborhood dominated new
home sales in the downtown market in the second quarter of 2006, with a
24 percent market share, according to
Appraisal Research, but
most of the new condos built here have been sold at more moderate
prices.
South Loop development
continues to push toward and even beyond Cermak Road, and one reason
that
One Museum Park was able
to fetch ultra-luxury prices was that this part of the neighborhood ? a
place someone less concerned about confusing readers might call the
North
South Loop ? is
comparatively settled. Building in and around
Central Station has added
thousands of new residents, and new restaurants such as
Opera,
Gioco and
Zapatista ? clustered at
13th and Wabash ? are making the area feel more like a true
neighborhood.
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