With fewer office workers and some major retailers closed, what’s next for downtown Chicago? – Chicago Tribune*

Meeting those challenges could mean changes that reshape the face of downtown, according to real estate experts, researchers and neighborhood groups. Old office buildings could be converted into housing. Michigan Avenue is looking beyond retail to more experiential options. Local businesses might have more chances to expand downtown.
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CTC alumnus
4 years ago

despair and decay

The Paraclete
4 years ago

The next thing for downtown is a community center for teens and young adults. It will be wildly successful.

debtsor
4 years ago

This article is pure propaganda and wishful thinking: merely re-imagining the loop in residential and retail ‘experiences’ will solve the downtown Chicago’s woes. The article doesn’t even address vaccine mandates or the frustration with the city for encouraging ‘mostly peaceful’ protests all last year. The city was on life support between March and August but that second round of rioting put the city into a death spiral. Most people I know have abandoned Chicago, refuse to get back on crowded trains, and have no desire to return to 45 minute commutes – each way – to sit at a cube… Read more »

Last edited 4 years ago by debtsor
marko
4 years ago
Reply to  debtsor

I see you blame Lori but would any other of the 16 Demonrats that ran for mayor done anything differently? They all take their marching orders from above. That’s the Demonrat’s biggest strength, they stand firm, together, unwavering from the narrative no matter wrong, destructive or asanine it is. The only way to remove them is to vote them out but judging by my braindead IL neighbors that appears hopeless. That only leaves voting with your feet.

debtsor
4 years ago
Reply to  marko

Maybe those 16 other candidates would have done things differently. I can almost certainly say that Rahm would have done things differently for sure if he were still here. I bet he’s happy as a clam to avoid being mayor during covid, what good luck that man has. But these are hypotheticals. In the real world the buck stops with the mayor – Lori Lightfoot. And by all measures, she’s been a complete failure. I could list 100 or more decisions she’s made that made Chicago worse off by any objective or subjective measure. Her doubling-down on bad ideas over… Read more »

Freddy
4 years ago

For starters more pawn shops/wig stores/resale shops/used catalytic converters stores (a bunch converters were just stolen in Rockford) /pot stores/$1.25 stores due to inflation/broken store window repair shops/graffiti classes/and plywood stores-lot and lots of plywood.
https://www.mystateline.com/video/multiple-catalytic-converters-stolen-from-barbara-olson-center-of-hope/7397302/

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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