WIN: Closed in 2013, Emmett Elementary Will Reopen After Adaptive Reuse as Community Center. (Chicago 7 2014)

“The Aspire Center community hub at the site of a former elementary school on the West Side is in the final stretch of construction ahead of its summer 2025 opening.

“The Aspire Center is a joint venture by the Westside Health Authority and Austin Coming Together to redevelop Emmet Elementary into a workforce training center at 5500 W. Madison St. Both organizations will have offices in the three-story, 85,000-square-foot building alongside the Cook County Public Defender, manufacturing workforce development organization Jane Addams Resource Corporation and BMO Harris Bank.

“Emmett Elementary was among 50 CPS schools closed in 2013 as part of a cost-saving plan by then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel. As the vacant school sat for years, a 2016 plan to turn it into a medical facility garnered mixed reception from neighbors, Austin Weekly News reported.

“The Westside Health Authority bought the school property in 2018, indicating a desire to keep the site community-centered. That same year, Austin Coming Together created its Quality Of Line Plan that included plans for redevelopment of the school. The Aspire Center began construction in May 2023.

“Of the $40.8 million supporting construction of the Aspire Center so far, $22.3 million came from city and state funding, including $12.25 million in tax-increment financing funds; $10.4 million in tax credits and equity from the Chicago Development Fund; and $8.12 million in philanthropic support. With an estimated cost of $44 million for the initial opening phase of the building’s first and second floors, developers said they expect to meet the $3 million budget gap by the summer.

“‘This whole project has really been about the community reclaiming its historic assets,’ said Darnell Shields, executive director of Austin Coming Together.

“The repurposing of items from Emmet Elementary is present throughout the Aspire Center. Auditorium seating is being used as hallway seating, lockers have been transformed into benches and the original gymnasium flooring is serving as wall decor. The school’s original oak trim, hardwood floors, terrazzo stairs, exposed brick and built-in cabinetry have also been preserved and the building’s facade and cornice ornamental molding largely restored.” (Liptrot, Block Club Chicago, 2/4/25)

Read the full story at Block Club Chicago

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