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Wrecking Wrigleyville? Hyatt proposed for Clark and Addison

By  STEVE RHODES

Updated 9:00 AM CDT, Mon, Dec 22, 2008

Clark and Addison
M & R Development

Standing eye-to-eye with Wrigley.

 

The shops and bars that make up Wrigleyville are so much a part of the DNA of the neighborhood that Chicagoans hardly think twice about the commercial mix anymore, but a developer is still honing plans that would drastically alter the familiar corner of Clark and Addison - directly across from venerable Wrigley Field.

The proposal for a  "mixed-use mega-complex" called Addison Park on Clark - which would include a Hyatt Place hotel, a health club, about 200 residential units and 500 parking spaces - has met with early resistance but is still alive in its third iteration, the Chicago Journal reported earlier this month.

"[A] committee of local residents and business owners who have thus far been critical of the size, design and potential impact of the proposed complex," the Journal reports. "Designers have been shot down twice by the community council for plans deemed too large and too dense."

The Hyatt portion of the plan appears to be shaping up as something of a linchpin to the project.

"Some residents . . . expressed interest in keeping the hotel," the Journal reports, "which could increase foot traffic during the Cubs' off-season. However, developers said the hotel would be the first element scrapped from the design for the sake of complying with size concerns."

(Can you imagine the demand for a hotel room across from Wrigley Field? They could probably charge more than a rooftop.)

Schultz has also said that he already has a signed letter of intent with CVS Pharmacy and that interest has been shown by Dominick's and Best Buy, among other retailers.

The proposal has already gone through several iterations. Last January, the Tribune described the project as "a nine-story, mixed-use development with a hotel that would stand virtually eye-to-eye with Wrigley Field," and even then developer Steven Schultz said that was scaled down from plans for a structure that would have been 25 to 30 stories high.

"Designers said they plan to continue discussions with the community," the Journal reports,"and will not apply for building and zoning permits until they have broader community approval."
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Or the alderman, this being Chicago. And on that score, Schultz is looking good.

"In my mind, people feel the site is underutilized and underdeveloped," Ald. Tom Tunney (44th) said in October, "and it's certainly not an asset to the community at large, so there needs to be development on this site."

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Comments (8)

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  • reilly3 Tuesday, Dec 23 at 9:51 AM FLAG COMMENT Nice bunker-style structure perfectly suited for Schaumburg. That is absolutely not the spot for big-box. It's best suited to smaller pedestrian-oriented businesses with close street frontage, kind of like it is right now, as originally intended. There's room for development, for sure, but if you want to maintain a shred of what makes the neighborhood special, it should fit in what what is already standing. But, when has s ... MORE >
  • prover Monday, Dec 22 at 5:40 PM FLAG COMMENT where are they gonna put IO?
  • Megan Monday, Dec 22 at 1:01 PM FLAG COMMENT Marilyn, the immediate area surrounding the ballpark is indeed called WRIGLEYVILLE. It's a subsection of Lakeview, kind of like how Andersonville is a subsection of Edgewater or Depaul is a subsection of Lincoln Park. If you don't know this, I don't think you're qualified to speak to the DNA of any neighborhood.
  • Gregg Monday, Dec 22 at 12:52 PM FLAG COMMENT I know the developers only care about money and where can they get more of it and they are not thinking that the allure of Wrigleyville is just that, neighborhood bars and restaurants not Big Box stores and cookie cutter buildings... Go build in your own backyard and see how many people still want to come over to visit you....
  • Jeff Monday, Dec 22 at 12:10 PM FLAG COMMENT Unless Best Buy is planning to bail out of the 2700 Clark store, there's no way Best Buy is going in to this development. The same goes for Dominick's, which is supposedly still planning to rebuild on Broadway the store that burned down. It sounds like some flacks for the developers are just shouting names of stores they passed that day while going to work.

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