“City government officials, real estate owners, architects and planners have lately linked arms around a common concern: The Loop’s LaSalle Street corridor needs help. The campaign probably leaves some Chicagoans wondering what all the fuss is about.
“What makes LaSalle so special? Aren’t the bankers and traders down there doing fine? Yes, most are probably fine, but they aren’t there in the middle of the Loop anymore.
“Northern Trust is still based on LaSalle, but it has moved a lot of its staff to 333 S. Wabash Ave. BMO Harris and Bank of America have vacated the street for glass curtain-walled modernism in West Loop towers that bear their names. People who used to congregate and shout orders at the Chicago Board of Trade now do business elsewhere, in home offices or firm-specific trading floors that can be anywhere.
“They have left behind a LaSalle that can seem sleepy even on bright weekday afternoons. The pandemic blitzed the street and remains a deadening factor as many people are holdouts in the great back-to-the-office push.
“Market analysts put the office vacancy rate around LaSalle at 26%, the highest of downtown submarkets, with retail vacancies of about 36%.
“Or, as the city prefers to see it, maybe 1,000 new homes, 300 of them for people with low to moderate incomes. With its LaSalle Street Reimagined initiative, the city is offering money to landlords to support renovations, especially those that diversify downtown housing.
“An array of subsidies is available, but a lot of discussions will center on tax increment financing subsidies from property tax payments. The street includes the LaSalle Central TIF district, which has long been one of the city’s biggest ‘mad money pots.’ At the end of 2021, the account had almost $197 million.
“Samir Mayekar, Lightfoot’s deputy mayor for economic and neighborhood development, said landlords and lenders, who in a few cases might end up controlling properties, are eager for the city’s help. Redevelopment plans, due by Dec. 23, could serve the interests of both historic preservation and affordable housing, he said.
“Michael Reschke, chairman of Prime Group, is the downtown developer responsible for the best news LaSalle has had in some time. His tripartite deal puts Google in the Thompson Center, state government’s former base at LaSalle and Randolph Street, and moves 1,800 state workers to 115 S. LaSalle, the old home of BMO Harris. Google is expected to bring several thousand employees to the Loop but hasn’t put a number on the influx yet.
“The move shows office use will remain an economic driver in the area, Reschke said. Still, he said he supports Lightfoot’s plan to end the office ‘monoculture.’ Reschke owns 111 W. Monroe St., next to the state’s new home, and he’s considering converting the top half of it to apartments. ‘That’s the best residential market in the city,’ he said. (Roeder, Chicago Sun-Times, 10/3/22)
Read the full story at Chicago Sun-Times
Renewing LaSalle Street a matter of keeping up with the neighbors; City officials are offering landlords money if they come up with new ideas for buildings that have lost their allure amid downtown’s expansion, David Roeder, Chicago Sun-Times, 10/3/22
City solicits proposals for La Salle Street renewal; The Lightfoot administration is offering tax incentives to developers who want to change the “monoculture” of office buildings by converting some to residential use, David Roeder, Chicago Sun-Times, 9/26/22
Envisioning Chicago’s Financial District as a New Residential Neighborhood, Lightfoot Offers Developers Subsidies, Heather Cherone, WTTW Chicago, 9/26/22
Revitalizing LaSalle Street: Lightfoot Offers Up TIF Money To Convert Vacant Offices Into Housing; LaSalle Street’s vacancy rates are higher than any other part of Downtown. Can a plan to bring 1,000 new units — 30 percent of them affordable — change that?, Melody Mercado, Block Club Chicago, 9/29/22
City announces LaSalle Street Reimagined; The city-led initiative looks to revitalize the corridor, Lukas Kugler, Urbanize Chicago, 10/7/22
LaSalle Street Reimagined