Housing and Development

Parq Development and Luxury Living plan to build an 18-story tower that offers more housing than the site’s previous proposal by developer Newcastle Investors.
The pharmacy chain’s downtown employees will move to its Deerfield headquarters.
Ald. Julia Ramirez says community members have complained about the work being done around the massive structures. Most of the demolition has been completed, city health officials said.
The development team is looking to raise additional funds for its apartment and senior living project by offering investors a chance to own a share of site.
The pioneering quantum campus is expected to create thousands of jobs in South Chicago and generate billions in economic activity for the state.
The site is an Amazon Last Mile facility, meaning it’s the final stop in the delivery process before packages arrive at customers’ doors.
The two companies plan to host a joint grand opening event and are helping to bring better access to fresh food and financial services for Austin residents.
It took 30 years, but four blocks of Milwaukee Avenue near the Perkins-designed Schurz High School will get brown street signs honoring the architect next month.
The Chicago Housing Authority selected a new development team for its 7-acre vacant plot of land, after the project’s previous developers backed out.
The compromise ordinance would chip away at Chicago’s housing shortage, allowing homeowners to build coach houses or tiny homes and rent them out. The measure is slated for a full Council vote Thursday.
Chicago’s Zoning Board of Appeals also approved the construction of a new sports facility by the Illinois Basketball Academy.
The 22,000-seat soccer stadium would anchor The 78, a 62-acre vacant site at Roosevelt Road and Clark Street in the South Loop.
Residents, activists demand a seat at the table, transparency on redevelopment of U.S. Steel South Works site.
The opening marks the South Side’s first advanced R&D lab building that is also home to the University of Chicago Science Incubator.
But the nonprofit said it’s stifled by President Donald Trump’s “repressive” funding restrictions that “dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion.”
Celadon Partners and Blackwood Group said the developer behind the office-to-residential conversion at 105 W. Adams St. strung them along for nearly a year, only to find a new financial partner.
The couple have had 10 contracts for properties rented to Chicago Housing Authority voucher holders, including five while Darlena Williams-Burnett was an employee of the city agency.
The hotel would be the first built south of Hyde Park in more than 40 years and is part of broader efforts to revitalize Pullman.
It’s the ninth senior leader to exit the agency in the last year, as it still looks to fill the CEO role.