CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®: Planning Phase University of Illinois at Chicago City Design Center Project Report Project Team: September 2004 – August 2005
Principal Investigator:
Brent D. Ryan
Co-Principal Investigator:
Robert Bruegmann
Writers: Robert Bruegmann, Professor and Chairperson, Department of Art History Brent D. Ryan, Co-Director, City Design Center, and Assistant Professor of Urban Planning and Policy Susanne Schnell, Senior Manager, Economic Development, Civic Committee of The Commercial Club of Chicago, and Research Assistant Professor, City Design Center Ryan Siegel, Graduate Research Assistant, City Design Center Editors: Brent D. Ryan T. Abraham Lentner, Coordinator of Technical Assistance Programs, City Design Center Designer:
Michael Brown, Graduate Research Assistant
For questions regarding this report contact: City Design Center University of Illinois at Chicago 820 W. Jackson Boulevard, Suite 330 Chicago, Illinois 60607 Phone: 312-996-4717 www.uic.edu/aa/cdc © 2006 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. Use for commercial purposes prohibited without permission. All rights reserved.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C Sanborn insurance map images in the CENTER report are of the Sanborn Mapping © 2001. DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGNfire CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER used CITY DESIGN CITYcourtesy DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER Co. CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
February 14, 2006 This Planning Phase Report produced by the City Design Center of the University of Illinois at Chicago describes the work of an incredible number of partners and volunteers who worked together during the Planning Phase to identify the Greystone housing stock in Chicago’s North Lawndale neighborhood, who delved into the history of Greystones and how this building style impacted North Lawndale, and who helped set the direction for the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®. In addition to the members of both the Historic Heritage Advisory Group and the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® Steering Team that are identified in the Planning Phase Report, many other North Lawndale residents and Greystone owners contributed their ideas and insight during the Planning Phase. The Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® Steering Team discussed and identified several different Program components that will be part of the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® Program when the Program begins. As of this date, the Program components for the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® have not been finalized and are not yet available. The Program components of the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® will become available in the early summer of 2006 when the formal public announcement is made to the North Lawndale community and the City of Chicago about the launching of the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® Program. In the meantime, and until the official public launch of the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, Inc. (NHS) does offer affordable loans for home purchase, home purchase with rehabilitation, and home improvement to all homeowners in the North Lawndale community and throughout the City of Chicago. If you are interested in receiving information about NHS’ programs, or if you are interested in purchasing a home or making home improvements at this time, please contact NHS at (800) 882-0882. If you want to be included on the contact list for the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® when the Program begins in the summer of 2006, please tell the Operator that you are interested in the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® list when you call. Sincerely,
Bruce A. Gottschall Executive Director
Jim Wheaton Deputy Director, Programs and Strategies
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Chapter 1: History of North Lawndale Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 History of North Lawndale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Historic Research Methods and Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Summary of Findings from Historical Building Research . . . . . . . 22 Architectural Evolution of Greystones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Chapter 2: Greystone Geography and Attributes Research Methods and Data Sets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Research Findings, Greystone Geography and Attributes . . . . . . 33 Chapter 3: Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® Planning Phase Background and Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Planning Phase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 Implementation Phase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Appendix A: Historic Heritage Advisory Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Appendix B: Historic Greystone Steering Team Members . . . . . . . . . . 53
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The City Design Center Greystone Initiative team gratefully acknowledges the contributions of institutional and community partners who participated in the Planning Phase of the Initiative. We would especially like to recognize the contributions of Charles Leeks, Jim Wheaton, and Darris Shaw, all of whom are with Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago; Michael Schubert, Community Development Strategies; Commissioner Jack Markowski, Chicago Department of Housing; Commissioner Sadhu Johnston, Chicago Department of Environment; Kristin Dean, Homan Square Community Center Foundation; Royce Yeater, Midwest Office of the National Trust for Historic Preservation; Jim Peters, Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois; and Russell Lewis, Chicago Historical Society. We would also like to thank Charles Shanabruch of the Historic Chicago Bungalow Association. The Metropolitan Planning Council and the Northeast Illinois Planning Commission graciously contributed valuable Presentation of UIC graduate seminar findings to North Lawndale community members, May 4, 2004.
data and technical assistance. We are especially grateful to The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and JPMorgan Chase Foundation for their generous support of planning phase activities for the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®. We would also like to thank the UIC art history and urban planning students who participated in the 2004 graduate seminar, instructed by Bob Bruegmann, Jim Peters, and Brent Ryan, that generated many valuable ideas for historic preservation in North Lawndale. This report is dedicated to the memory of Charles Shaw and Samuel Flowers.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
INTRODUCTION A Vision for North Lawndale The vision for the Greystone Initiative was first articulated by Charles Leeks, Director of the North Lawndale office of Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago. Leeks believed that any effort to enhance community pride and awareness, build community, and encourage economic development needed to begin with a survey of the community’s assets. To Leeks, one of North Lawndale’s most compelling assets was its historic heritage. This meant, on the one hand, the historic architecture, particularly a collection of institutional buildings, substantial houses and apartment buildings, and the neighborhood’s “greystone” homes. On the other hand, it also meant what Leeks called North Lawndale’s “story,” the rich historical record of people who lived in this Chicago neighborhood over the past century. A compelling vision for building on North Lawndale’s historic heritage is critical to the success of the community effort to launch a localized preservation movement and encourage participation among community stakeholders. This vision is central to the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®. This new planning and policy initiative will be launched in North Lawndale in 2006 to preserve and promote the neighborhood’s greystone homes as the basis for community economic development. The greystones of North Lawndale are limestone-faced, brick-structure residences built between A typical historic Chicago greystone in the North Lawndale neighborhood.
1890 and 1920 that contain anywhere from one to three units. They are named for the grey limestone that was used for the façades of these homes, and was ornately carved, as shown in the photograph at left.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
INTRODUCTION The Greystone Initiative Process This report describes the preparation and research performed during
dations for linking Lawndale’s architectural and cultural assets to the
2004 and 2005 to provide a foundation for the Historic Chicago
broader goals of community revitalization and historic heritage tourism.
Greystone Initiative®. Preparatory work included research into the
In 2004, a more formalized planning group was formed by Neighbor-
rich history of North Lawndale, a study of the number and types of
hood Housing Services of Chicago to create a strategic plan for the
greystone homes, the convening of special advisory committees and
Greystone Initiative. The Greystone Steering Team provided periodic
the creation of new organizations to shepherd the initiative.
guidance and feedback on research and planning activities needed to
The Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®, one of several current (2005)
operationalize the Greystone Initiative in North Lawndale.
revitalization and development priorities for North Lawndale, seeks
The Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® seeks to use one of Chica-
to instill a collective pride of place in residents. It is hoped that resi-
go’s greatest architectural and historic assets – its historic greystone
dents who are informed by a deeper appreciation of Lawndale’s past
homes – to encourage pride of place, stewardship and reinvestment,
will themselves become stewards of the community and its greystone
both in North Lawndale and the city’s older central neighborhoods.
homes, and become more actively engaged in defining and shaping its
The Greystone Initiative will promote the greystone as a means to fur-
future.
ther cultivate Lawndale’s image as a community with a unique historic
Two collaborative community-led groups emerged from this early vision
and cultural legacy. Initially launched in North Lawndale, the Initiative
for Lawndale’s revitalization. The first was an ad hoc advisory group
also seeks to stimulate the local housing market through the rehabilita-
formed in 2003 in conjunction with a year-long planning process under-
tion and preservation of its historic housing stock.
taken by the Civic Committee of The Commercial Club of Chicago, a nonprofit business organization. The Civic Committee facilitated a collaborative planning process in partnership with local organizations in North Lawndale that resulted in several recommendations for the community’s retail and housing developments. One of the advisory groups that formed during this process focused on Lawndale’s historic heritage and preservation and worked to identify a set of strategic recommen-
The City Design Center’s Role The University of Illinois at Chicago’s City Design Center, founded in 1995, is a research, service, and public education institute in the College of Architecture in the Arts. The research conducted by the City Design Center was a primary component of the strategic planning phase for the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®. Most notably, the
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
INTRODUCTION research informed a working definition of greystones that established
First, the City Design Center will lead a team of UIC architecture faculty
program guidelines and other necessary eligibility criteria for the imple-
in an effort to develop and publish a “greystone guidebook” with recom-
mentation phase. Additional research activities included an estimate of
mendations for the preservation and renovation of greystones in North
the number and distribution of greystones in North Lawndale, an assess-
Lawndale and throughout Chicago. The guidebook, which will be pub-
ment of rehabilitation needs and costs, and more accurate data on cur-
lished in two volumes, will explain and review options for various levels
rent greystone occupants.
of investment in greystone renovation, including modest energy efficiency improvements. The audience for the Guidebook will be current
Study Research Design and Questions City Design Center researchers examined the evolution of the greystone housing type. They also inventoried, mapped, and assessed North Lawndale’s greystones. Another goal of the planning phase was to create a programmatic definition of a “greystone” home. In support of the planning phase goals, the City Design Center sought to answer the following research questions: • What are the historic origins of greystones in North Lawndale? • What are the physical characteristics of greystones in North Lawndale? • How many greystones are there in North Lawndale? • What is the geographic distribution of greystones in North Lawndale?
and potential greystone owners, particularly those in North Lawndale, as well as community organizations, contractors, neighborhood investors, and other interested parties. Second, the City Design Center will lead a Greystone Evaluation project, which will document the program’s impact in its first five years of operation. It will measure the effectiveness of the Greystone Initiative in fulfilling its mission of enhancing community pride, providing highquality housing rehabilitation products and services, preserving historic housing stock in North Lawndale and other transitional communities, and promoting the greystone home as a unique housing type across Chicago. Findings from the evaluation could potentially provide data that both inform and influence national policy makers and researchers working in the field of neighborhood revitalization. The evaluation will
City Design Center’s Ongoing Role in the Implementation Phase
be a valuable source of information that could promote the Greystone
In the implementation phase of the Historic Chicago Greystone Initia-
Initiative as a replicable model as well as promote historic heritage as a
tive®, the City Design Center will continue to play a key role in two ways.
viable strategy for rebuilding economically disadvantaged areas.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE
Map of the North Lawndale community area (Aerial photo courtesy of the US Geological Survey).
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE
History of North Lawndale
Douglas Park, one of the major regional parks of Chicago, was
Robert Bruegmann and Ryan Siegel
designed originally William Le Baron Jenney in the 1870s and rede-
The North Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago has a rich cultural
signed in the early 20th Century by Jens Jensen. Douglas and Inde-
legacy and has been a witness to some of the most important aspects
pendence boulevards, also part of the west park system, with their great
of 20 Century American urban history. North Lawndale was home to
institutional structures, became the symbolic heart of the neighborhood
important individuals – including Golda Meir, Benny Goodman, Clar-
and are still, even in their greatly diminished state, among the grand-
ence Darrow and John G. Shedd. The neighborhood was also home
est streets in the city. The neighborhood also boasts one of the largest
to the workers of several nearby national manufacturing giants – like
stocks of greystones in the city of Chicago. North Lawndale and its
Sears, Roebuck & Co, Western Electric, and International Harvester. In
homes have significant historic value that, with preservation and atten-
the 1930s North Lawndale had the third largest Jewish population in the
tion, can build substantial pride of place within the community.
th
world, after New York and Warsaw.
Location
After WWII, southern African-Americans migrating to Chicago settled in
North Lawndale is located on the West Side of Chicago, approximately
North Lawndale in great numbers. North Lawndale grew to be one of
five miles west of downtown. The area known as North Lawndale is
the largest African-American communities in the nation and was at the
generally considered to be bounded on the North by Interstate 290 (500
center of the civil rights struggle in the 1960s when Dr. Martin Luther
south), the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad tracks - roughly
King, Jr. moved into an apartment in North Lawndale and, along with
Cermak Road (2300 south) - on the South, Western Avenue. (2400 west)
the Contract Buying League, fought against slumlords and racist lend-
on the East, and the Chicago & Northwestern railroad - roughly Kostner
ing practices. It was also one of the centers for Chicago blues music.
Avenue (4400 west) - on the West. North Lawndale is surrounded on
In the 1950s, Roosevelt Road, which runs east to west through the
three sides by railroad tracks and the Eisenhower Expressway to the
north section of Lawndale, was home to Cobra Records and the Copa
North, spanning 3.2 square miles (1). Surrounded by train tracks, trans-
Cabana Club, where the sounds of Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, Willie Dixon,
portation has played a crucial role in the development of North Lawn-
and Elmore James could be heard. Roosevelt Road was also one of the
dale. These tracks provided the initial impetus for growth, connected its
centers of protest and rioting after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assas-
largest industries to the regional freight transportation network, and later
sinated in 1968.
provided quick and easy commuter transit to Chicago’s Loop.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE Today two “El” lines provide fast, accessible mass transit to downtown
eventually employing over 14,000 workers (2). Many of the plant work-
at both the southern and northern edges of the neighborhood. The
ers built cottages in the Eastern portions of Lawndale. The remainder
community is similarly accessible by automobile via the Eisenhower
of North Lawndale was annexed in 1889.
Expressway and major arterials such as Roosevelt Road and Ogden Avenue, which is part of historic Route 66.
The growth of Lawndale’s commercial and residential areas followed the development of new transportation access. The construction of
History of North Lawndale
the Garfield Park elevated train line along Harrison Street during the
During much of the 19th Century, the area today known as North Lawn-
1890s spurred residential development in the northern section of North
dale was undeveloped prairie west of Chicago’s city limits. Inhabited by
Lawndale. New development in the southern portion was aided by the
Native Americans and later white settlers, a trail known as Southwest-
extension of the Douglas Park elevated train line from Western Avenue
ern Plank Road was used in the 1830s to portage canoes from the Des
to Pulaski Road in 1902 and to Cicero Avenue in 1907. The nearby
Plaines River to Lake Michigan. This road, one of the oldest in Chicago,
belt-line railroads provided efficient freight transportation and helped
became Ogden Avenue. The first sign of development came in 1863,
attract manufacturing plants to the neighborhood. Western Electric
when a settlement called Crawford appeared following the construc-
Company opened a plant in the City of Cicero just west of Lawndale in
tion of the Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy railroad. Crawford was a
1903, which at its height employed 43,000 people (3). In 1905, Sears,
residential suburb whose main inhabitants were German and Dutch. In
Roebuck & Co moved its offices and production facilities from Michigan
1869, the majority of North Lawndale west to Pulaski Road was annexed
Avenue in Chicago’s Loop to Homan Avenue and Arthington Street in
to Chicago. The area’s name was officially changed to Lawndale by
North Lawndale and grew to employ over 10,000 workers in its mail
the real estate firm Millard and Decker and subsequently subdivided
order facility (4).
in 1870. That same year the West Park Board purchased land for the
As might be expected, the first two decades of the 20th Century were
creation of Douglas Park. Lawndale, along with many other west side
characterized by a rapid pace of both residential housing construction
communities, flourished after the Chicago Fire of 1871 as people and
and population growth. The decades were also marked by successive
businesses relocated out of the city center. The McCormick Reaper
waves of immigration - first the Bohemians and Polish, then Russian
Company, which would become International Harvester, built a large
Jews. Between 1910 and 1920, the population doubled from 46,226
plant in the Lower West Side of Chicago on Western Avenue in 1871,
to 93,750. It is within these two decades of rapid expansion that the
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 10CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE greystone, generally a standard brick 2 or 3-flat adorned with a more costly and elegant limestone façade, came to prominence. The size and character of North Lawndale greystones reflect the variety and needs of the people who lived in them. There are several large single-family homes along the 2100 block of South Avers, which were built for an upperclass clientele. At the opposite end of the spectrum, there are blocks of modest one-story “shoebox” greystones in “K-Town,” the western most part of North Lawndale, between Pulaski and Kostner. However, the majority of greystones in North Lawndale were built for and inhabited by middle-class families – often people who worked in nearby factories. These buildings differ considerably from the older, larger, more lavish greystones built in other neighborhoods throughout the city for a wealthier clientele. Blocks of single-
Figure 1.1 Greystones in “K-Town”.
family, 2- and 3-flat greystones were built throughout the community by a variety of independent builders, owners, and architects. There was no dominant developer or builder with the necessary financing to develop several blocks of greystones all at once, yet all greystones possessed standard characteristics and design features because of the market demands and prevailing tastes of the time. Immigration and the building boom continued through the 1920s. By 1930, the population of North Lawndale had swelled to 112,000 people, with the Russian Jews making up the largest group at 46% of the population (5). The neighborhood became the second most densely populated area in Chicago Figure 1.2 Greystones on 2100 block of South Avers.
with 51,011 people per square mile, just behind Grand Boulevard on the South Side (6). With mounting population pressure, many large apartment
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 11
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE complexes were constructed on corner lots and along Douglas and
The population of North Lawndale dropped to approximately 100,000
Independence Boulevards throughout the 1920s and 1930s. Some of
between 1930 and 1950 (8). In part, this decline was due to the fact that
the larger apartments were subdivided and rented as kitchenette units.
some of the area’s Jewish population had moved northward to commu-
Even as larger structures were constructed, buildings were rarely taller
nities like Albany Park and Rogers Park. Beginning in the 1940s and con-
than three stories. In 1938, 41% of the dwelling units in North Lawndale
tinuing into the 1950s, blacks had begun to replace the relocated Jews.
were found in structures of four units or more; another 42% were in
Most of these newly arrived African-American families were middle-class
2- and 3-flats. Only six percent of dwelling units were in single-family
and lived near the northern boundary of North Lawndale.
residences.
This ethnic diversity of North Lawndale was short-lived, however. Whites
Lawndale was also an important institutional center. In 1938, there
fled North Lawndale in droves in the 1950s, many succumbing to racial
were 49 synagogues in North Lawndale and several large and signifi-
fears that were easily manipulated by unscrupulous realtors. Realtors
cant Jewish institutions, like the Jewish People’s Institute, and Hebrew
would use “blockbuster” scare tactics to quickly acquire the homes of
Theological College, located along Douglas Boulevard (7). Over the
white residents and then sell to African-American families at inflated
next three decades (1920-1950), many community institutions were
prices. African-Americans who could not afford to pay for conventional
established: Mt. Sinai Hospital, Herzl Junior College. Golda Meir, one of
mortgages and down payments had few options but the increasingly
the founders of Israel and that country’s fourth prime minister, first came
prevalent predatory lenders. The white population of North Lawndale
to learn about the Zionist Movement at Poale Zion, the Chicago Labor
dropped from 87,000 to less than 11,000. During the same ten-year
Zionist headquarters located at 3222 West Douglas Boulevard. The
period the African American population increased from 13,000 in 1950 to
neighborhood was well served by Douglas Park Auditorium and numer-
more than 113,000 in 1960. The whites who remained in the community
ous theaters (including the Central Park, Lawndale, Independence, 20th
mostly lived south of Cermak Road. As the incoming blacks saturated
Century, Circle, and Magnet theaters). North Lawndale was a thriving
residential areas in the community the population rose to an all-time high
commercial and residential neighborhood, with prominent Douglas
of nearly 125,000 in 1960, of whom more than 90 percent were African
Boulevard rated as one of the most desirable residential streets in the
American (9). While the racial transition occurred largely without vio-
city. While most of the institutions have left the neighborhood over the
lence, the rapidity and magnitude of resident turnover meant that many
years, their prominent buildings still shape the landscape of Douglas
of the established community institutions left with the previous residents.
Boulevard.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 12CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE As the neighborhood changed from primarily Jewish to African-Ameri-
to make repairs. The physical environment continued to deteriorate
can, many new institutions were created to meet the needs of the new
throughout the 1960s, slipping from an older working class neighbor-
residents. The West Side Federation, a coalition of West Side Churches,
hood into slum-like conditions. The more affluent African American
fought for civil rights and grass-roots community development, attracting
families began to leave the neighborhood for communities farther
national attention to Chicago’s West Side including community activists
west, such as Austin and Oak Park, leaving North Lawndale with fewer
and urbanists like Jane Jacobs, Claude Brown, and Richard Hatcher.
resources.
Important organizations to the northern civil rights struggle began in North Lawndale, such as the Contract Buyers League.
In 1968, the community’s deterioration was accelerated by the riots after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s assassination. Substantial portions
A halt to new construction in North Lawndale during the Depression and
of the retail strips along Roosevelt Road, Pulaski, Madison, and 16th
World War II and a growing population precipitated a definitive hous-
Street were destroyed or damaged by fires and looting. Many of the
ing crisis. With little undeveloped land, larger apartment units were
remaining store owners moved away either by choice or due to higher
being subdivided into tiny kitchenette units and rooming houses to meet
insurance premiums. Many banks, savings institutions, and loan and
the demand. The 1939 Works Projects Administration Block Survey
insurance firms declined to provide service to the community. A 1975
found that buildings in North Lawndale were already showing signs of
study by the Metropolitan Area Housing Alliance, a citywide coalition of
unmitigated wear and tear during the Great Depression. According to
community groups, found that North Lawndale was one of the “most
the survey, at least 11% of residential structures were found uninhabit-
severely red-lined” neighborhoods in the city (12).
able or dilapidated on nearly half of the blocks in the east side of North Lawndale (Western Avenue to Kedzie Avenue). According to a report by
North Lawndale’s major employers began leaving the community during
Harold Mayer in 1941, 91% of the residential buildings in North Lawndale
the 1960s. In 1969, International Harvester, located just south of North
were built before 1919 (10). Urban planners and city officials called for
Lawndale, closed its tractor plant, creating a net loss of 3,400 jobs.
the demolition of older, crumbling structures (11). After WWII, predatory
From 1950 to 1970, 75% of the area’s businesses and 25% of its jobs
and discriminatory lending practices often deprived apartment build-
were lost. In 1974, Sears, Roebuck & Co. moved its headquarters to
ing owners of the capital needed for repairs. Since there was a housing
downtown Chicago. The Zenith and Sunbeam factories, located in the
shortage and there were very few vacancies, there was little incentive
vicinity of North Lawndale, closed down in the 1970s as well (13). The
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 13
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE economic exodus continued in the 1980s, with the closure of the West-
In 1981, the minority-owned Pyramidwest Development Corporation
ern Electric and Sears complexes. Joblessness and economic decline
financed the construction of the federally-subsidized Lawndale Terrace,
led to building deterioration and demolition which destroyed much of
which is located at Roosevelt Road and Kedzie Avenue. The $7 million
Lawndale’s older housing stock, including many greystones. The neigh-
complex was part of the economic development corporation’s five-year
borhood bottomed out in the 1970s and 1980s. Anyone with the means
plan to bring more than 2,000 new residential units to the community. In
to move out did, creating a neighborhood of last resort. The population
addition to its housing program, Pyramidwest developed two other proj-
fell from a height of 124,937 in 1960 to 47,296 in 1990 (14). In 1985, more
ects: the Lawndale Plaza Shopping Center at Roosevelt and Kedzie, and
than half of the residents in North Lawndale paid their housing costs with
the creation of an industrial park at the former International Harvester
welfare money. Almost half of the housing units existing in 1960 in North
site at 26th Street and California Avenue.
Lawndale had been torn down by 1985 - in 1960 there were 30,243 hous-
In 1986, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago expanded its
ing units, but by 1985 there were only 16,287 housing units left (15).
services in North Lawndale with the support of Ryerson Steel and Mt.
There has been a long history of attempts to address the housing short-
Sinai Hospital. NHS employed a revolving loan fund to help finance
age and deterioration problem in North Lawndale. In 1954, the Chicago
home improvements and home purchases in North Lawndale and other
Housing Authority opened Ogden Courts, a 136-unit public housing
targeted Chicago neighborhoods. The fund provided $1.5 million in
complex in the eastern section of the community. Fourteen years later
financing annually to help home owners or buyers who faced difficulty
Kedvale Square, a privately built development located at 19th and Ked-
accessing capital in the private market. In addition, NHS channeled
vale Streets, was completed. The project was built by the Community
other sources of assistance to North Lawndale residents including loans
Renewal Foundation and financed through the Federal Housing Admin-
through the Chicago Energy Savers Fund for home energy efficiency
istration and business organizations like Sears, Roebuck, and Company.
improvements and “Community Lending” agreements that established
At 19th Street and Kostner Avenue a group of businessmen and a minor-
neighborhood lending programs at a number of local banks. These
ity-owned bank acquired property from the Coca-Cola Company in order
programs were designed to encourage reinvestment and revitalization in
to build Lawndale Manor. Completed in 1971, Lawndale Manor consisted
North Lawndale.
of three buildings containing 192 units for low-income persons.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 14CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE In the 1990s a large-scale new construction housing development called Homan Square was built on donated land previously used as parking lots for the Sears Roebuck complex. The 54-acre master plan encompassed 600 units of new housing, the redevelopment of existing office space, and the construction of a new community center. With the commercial and community spaces mainly clustered to the east of the site, the project was composed of several housing unit types: flats, row houses, single-family homes, and duplexes. The first phase focused on strictly rental units, but the second phase was mixed-tenured with both rental and owner-occupied housing. Community input was gathered and incorporated into the design. Designed by NagleHartray, the development was meant to reflect Figure 1.3. The Homan Square development was constructed in the 1990s.
the surrounding 2-flat greystones in building height, massing, color, and fenestration. The Steans Family Foundation has also been a major contributor to the redevelopment of North Lawndale. Since 1986, the Foundation has supported efforts to improve the local schools, build and renovate housing, provide job training and bring more jobs into the community. The Steans Family Foundation has given grants and loans to many local community organizations, such as Lawndale Christian Development Corporation, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, Westside Habitat for Humanity and the North Lawndale Employment Network.
Figure 1.4. 600 Block of South Trumball in the Homan Square development.
The new millennium has brought significant changes to North Lawndale’s housing market. As real estate values in other parts of the city continue to rise, the booming housing market in Chicago has begun to spread to the
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 15
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE far eastern edge of North Lawndale, around Western Avenue. Upwardly
In 2000, a Tax Increment Financing (TIF) district was designated that
mobile households are beginning to move to more affordable areas
includes large parts of North Lawndale. TIF districts allow increases
previously considered undesirable. New luxury condominiums can now
in property taxes to be reinvested in the community to encourage
(2005) be found in the eastern portion of North Lawndale with selling
economic development and revitalization. The district, named the
prices above $300,000. There were several large-scale housing devel-
Midwest TIF, is designated as a “TIF-SBIF-NIF” with three primary
opments under discussion as of mid-2005, including a Royal Imperial
uses: 1) rehabilitation of single family homes, 2) rehabilitation of
Group initiative to redevelop the former Sears Roebuck manufacturing
multi-family rental apartments by investors, and 3) small business
and warehouse buildings that will include a senior assisted living center
matching grants for exterior building improvements. Another alloca-
and new townhomes for a total of 1,200 units. Examination of market
tion from the Midwest TIF has recently been made to Liberty Square,
activity by Neighborhood Housing Services (NHS) of Chicago has
a proposed affordable multi-family housing development of 66 units.
revealed an increase in market activity and existing housing prices as
In the spring of 2004, the City approved $2.3 million in TIF subsidies
well as several examples of speculative buying and potential predatory
for the new development, which is projected to generate $14 million
lending practices.
in new tax proceeds (16).
Despite this new residential development and real estate speculation,
Recent changes in the North Lawndale real estate market com-
there are still signs in 2005 that North Lawndale is experiencing disin-
bined with a 70-year history of disinvestment in the housing stock
vestment. There is only one full service retail bank in the neighborhood,
have created an ideal opportunity for a historic preservation effort.
Community Bank of Lawndale, with only $20 million in capital. While
The Greystone Initiative seeks to preserve affordable housing for
several other banks include North Lawndale in their service area, they
the neighborhood’s current residents while also creating incentives
do not have a visible branch presence in the community. In the past five
for new residents to invest in the neighborhood’s historic housing
years, Harris Bank has become an active lender in North Lawndale and
stock. To succeed in this effort, attention must be paid to preserving
has supported a capital project for new charter school. Harris Bank also
the physical fabric and networks that currently exist, and providing
played a lead role in the creation of the Midwest TIF in Lawndale, which
opportunities for current residents to participate in the strengthening
has created a new source of redevelopment funds.
housing market.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 16CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE Historic Research Methods and Tools There are several institutional sources for general historical information about the North Lawndale. The documents and maps section of UIC’s Richard J. Daley Library contains a wealth of information for historical building research, including building permits dating back into the 19th century. The Chicago Historical Society (CHS) is also a rich source of information on builders, architects, and past tenants. The CHS provides a comprehensive guide to researching the history of residential structures through its website (17). In addition, the Chicago Public Library holds photographs, artifacts, documents and archives of information in its Lawndale Historical Collection. Other historical references that supplied the City Design Center with inforFigure 1.5. The Atereth Israel temple, currently the New St. John Church.
mation on North Lawndale include: • Chicago Local Community Factbook, Versions – 1930 – 1990 • Encyclopedia of Chicago History • North Lawndale Community Collection at the Special Neighbor hoods Archive section of the Chicago Harold Washington Library • Chicago Tribune historical archives • Jews in Chicago: From Shtetl to Suburb, by Irving Cutler (1996; University of Illinois Press: Urbana) Additional North Lawndale research was completed by the University of Illinois at Chicago, including papers completed as a part of a spring 2004 UIC Art History/Urban Planning graduate seminar on North Lawndale and data collected for the Greystone Initiative by UIC’s City Design Center, which can
Figure 1.6. The lake in Douglas Park.
be found at the Lawndale Heritage website (lawndaleheritage.org).
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 17
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE Fire Insurance maps Through the Chicago Historical Society and UIC, the City Design Center obtained copies of the Robinson and Sanborn Fire Insurance maps for North Lawndale for the years 1896, 1923, and 1950, as well as 1909 and 1918 for K-Town. These maps give us snapshots of the built environment of North Lawndale, and provide us with an understanding of the pace and location of development. Fire Insurance maps display road networks, parcel delineation, street and alley widths, as well as building footprints, heights, and placement of porches. These three dates (1896, 1923 and 1950) are crucial to understanding the evolution of housing in North Lawndale before, during, and after the “Greystone-Era”. The 1896 Fire Insurance maps reveal undeveloped areas with a few scattered houses west of Douglas Park. Land had been subdivided and streets and alleys were in place, but very few homes had been constructed. The majority of housing in North Lawndale was east of Douglas Park in 1896, with the most dominant residential housing type being the brick 1 ½ story worker cottage. By 1923, the maps show a very different picture. By this time there were very few open parcels and North Lawndale had fully matured into a densely built city neighborhood. The residential streets were lined on both sides by rows of greystones and “greystone-era” brick 2-flats that were similar to greystones. By 1923 many of the corner lots were dotted with larger multi-family apartment structures. Douglas Boulevard was populated with large apartment buildings and important institutional buildings, like the schools, synagogues, and churches. Roosevelt Road was lined with retail shops. The massive Sears complex and its labyrinth of buildings is also detailed in the 1923 fire insurance maps.
Figure 1.7. Sanborn insurance maps show the 3300 blocks of west Flournoy and Lexington in 1896 (top) and 1923 (bottom). Many of these structures are greystones (Maps courtesy of the Sanborn Mapping Company).
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 18CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE titled “North Lawndale – A Crowded City Within a City”. Mayer was a staff member of the Chicago Plan Commission. Using the 1939 WPA Chicago Land Use Survey and other observations he described the overcrowding and deterioration that was beginning in North Lawndale. He suggested better maintenance of existing buildings and rezoning to prevent further overcrowding. Another source for North Lawndale’s history from 1900-1960 is Erich Rosenthal’s “This Was North Lawndale” offprint from Jewish Social Studies 1958, which is available in the Special Collections Neighborhood Archives of Chicago Harold Washington Table 1.1. Common greystone architects, builders and owners found in Greystone-Era building permits as a result of the hotspot survey research.
Library. The North Lawndale Neighborhood Collection was originally part of
Neighborhood Collection at the Chicago Public Library
the collections of the West Side Historical Society, which formed at the Legler Branch of the Chicago Public Library in 1930. Upon the dissolu-
The Chicago Harold Washington Public Library has a North Lawn-
tion of the Historical Society in the late 1950s, its records and materials
dale neighborhood collection which contains a wealth of historical
remained at the Legler branch, where they suffered from the mistreat-
photographs, local newspaper articles, personal accounts, and
ment and depredations of unsupervised use and inadequate storage
formal city evaluations. These documents added qualitative details
facilities. To protect the materials, an agreement was struck with the
to the history found in the fire insurance maps and city building
University of Illinois-Chicago Campus for the temporary custody of the
permits (18). Some photographs date back to the 1900s. Several
collection at the University of Illinois. The materials were transferred
photos depict Douglas Boulevard, thoroughfares, and buildings in
to The Chicago Public Library’s Special Collections Division ten years
the neighborhood. Another important document is an evaluation of
later, where they were divided by community area, processed under the
North Lawndale from 1941 completed by the City of Chicago (19). In
auspices of a grant from the Dr. Scholl Foundation, and placed in the
that year, Harold H. Mayer wrote an article in Real Estate Magazine
Neighborhood History Research Collection (20).
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 19
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE City Building Permits To understand the number, distribution and context of greystones in
and the Chicago Historical Society)
North Lawndale, the City Design Center undertook a survey of selected blocks with high concentrations of greystones. This “Greystone Hot-
City Design Center researched building permits for over 400 buildings to unearth historical information about the buildings surveyed. The UIC library houses complete files of Chicago building permits from 1872 – 1954 on microfilm, as well as the Lakeside Directory of 1909, a directory that matches current addresses with historical addresses. Construction news and building permit approvals were also reported in local newspapers and building trade magazines. Magazines and newspapers that can be referenced for historical building records include:
American Contractor (1897-1916 at the Chicago Historical Society)
Landowner (1869-1877 at the Chicago Historical Society)
American Architect & Building News (1876-1938 at the UIC Daley Library, Art Institute of Chicago, and Chicago Public Library)
The Brickbuilder (1892-1916 at the Chicago Historical Society and Chicago Public Library)
Real Estate and Building Journal (1872-1897; 1905-1909 at the Chicago Historical Society)
Inland Architect (1883-1898 at the UIC Daley Library, Art Institute of Chicago, and Chicago Public Library)
spot” survey (see Chapter Two) collected building conditions and characteristics of all parcels throughout the designated blocks. The
The Economist (1888-1946 at the Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago Tribune archives
The first step in researching building permits for a particular structure is to find its address in the Address Index Card File, an index of historic Chicago building permits organized by address. For buildings built before 1909, it is necessary to use the Lakeside Directory for 1909, which matches pre-1909 addresses to those currently used. The Address Index Card File provides the ledger number, book number, and the section of the city in which the address can be found. The book number correlates loosely to the year of the permit. Index Address Card and ledger books from 1872 to 1955 are recorded on microfilm at UIC’s Daley Library Documents and Map Department. The building permits list the date of the building permit, the owner, the builder, and, occasionally, notes about the type of permit and the estimated cost of the permitted construction activities. City Directory Two kinds of city directories can be used to gather historical information about buildings and their inhabitants. First, the alphabetical directories list businesses and people alphabetically. Alphabetical
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 20CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE city directories were published from 1839-1917, 1923, and 1928-9,
Lawndale was a working-class community in the early 20th century and
while telephone directories have been published every year since
that its predominant housing stock – the greystone – was built for its
1883. Reverse directories are listed by address, not name. They are
large working class population.
very useful for researching the previous residents of a specific building. Some reverse directories list the both the inhabitant and his occupation. Reverse directories were not published with the same frequency as telephone directories (21).
WPA Block Survey The WPA Block Survey (22) offered another snapshot of North Lawndale’s buildings and people. The Survey, completed in 1939 by the Works Projects Administration under the direction of the Chicago Plan
City directories were available through the Chicago Historical Soci-
Commission, provided information aggregated to the block level. The
ety. The City Design Center looked at the reverse city directory for
survey demonstrated that as early as 1939 buildings in North Lawndale
1917. The city directories provided tenants and their occupations for a
were beginning to age and needed rehabilitation. The following infor-
building at a given address for a specific year. The City Design Center
mation was available through the survey:
looked at every fifth address on each block surveyed in the Greystone
• Average monthly rentals of all dwelling units
Hotspot Survey. Since most of the housing on these blocks were 2
• Total number of dwelling units
to 3-flats, there were numerous listings and occupations per address.
• Percent of all residential structures built in 1919 or before
In total, the City Design Center examined 82 of the 436 Greystone
• Percent of owner-occupied dwelling units
Hotspot Survey addresses (see Chapter Two) and compiled data for
• Total number of business/commercial structures
over 196 tenants and their occupations. Of the 196 tenants, over 138
• Percent of non-white households
(70.4%) held construction or other blue-collar jobs. A large contingent
• Percent of dwelling units without a toilet or bath
of construction and factory workers were most likely employed by large industrial plants throughout the community. 26 (13.2%) of the tenants held professional jobs (e.g. architects, engineers, or managers) and 15 (7.65%) tenants were involved in sales. 10 tenants were categorized as “other”, while 7 tenants had no occupational information provided. The city directory information supports the popular assertion that North
Newspaper & magazine archives Newspaper archives and architecture and building magazines provided information about greystone architects and owners. The best source for information during the greystone era was American Contractor Magazine, which provided the names for architects for 236 buildings
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 21
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE and owners for 283 buildings examined in the hotspot survey. Other
in North Lawndale during which greystones were built, they were also
relevant magazines in print during the first three decades of the 20th
not the only housing product available to the middle class. At the same
century included Inland Architect, The Economist, American Architect
time, and sometimes by the same builder, identical brick 2- and 3-flats
& Building News. The McMillan Encyclopedia of Architects was also
were built without limestone facing. They generally had the same floor
cross-referenced to find information regarding greystone architects,
plan and design, the only substantial difference being a lack of limestone
although none were well-known enough to be mentioned. While fame
on the front facade.
eluded the architects of North Lawndale’s greystones, many had very productive careers. The most prolific architect in North Lawndale during the greystone era was Perley Hale, who collaborated on the design of 39 greystones in North Lawndale. A search of the Chicago Tribune archives showed 177 articles that mention Hale, an architect who designed buildings throughout Chicago in the 1890s. The next prolific architect was T.J. Reynertson, who collaborated on 16 buildings in North Lawndale. Only six architects were known to have designed 10 or more buildings. Typically, a master builder and/or architect did not build entire blocks of greystones in North Lawndale. Instead, a number of small owners and builders created the blocks piecemeal, indicating that the stylistic uniformity of greystones reflected the styles and tastes of the time rather than the whims of a single developer. Summary of Findings from Historical Building Research
After collecting the historical information about the buildings surveyed in the “Greystone Hotspot” survey, the City Design Center drew the following conclusions: (A) There were four distinctive periods of residential housing development, each with its own characteristic housing type, in North Lawndale. First, Lawndale was dotted by large suburban homes and farmhouses built when the area was called Crawford and during the early years of Millard & Decker’s subdivision and reinvention of the area as Lawndale. The dominant middle-class housing immediately prior to the Greystone era was the worker’s cottage, which comprised a second period of housing development in the 1870s in the eastern portion of North Lawndale. The Greystone Era, the third period, started around 1890 and continued until around 1915. While some larger single family greystone homes were constructed, the majority of greystones built during this period were
Before discussing the conclusions of the historical research, it is impor-
2 and 3-flat structures. Greystones were similar to the preceding work-
tant to provide a definition of a “greystone” building. “Greystones”,
er’s cottages in that the building was usually divided into a residence for
commonly 2- or 3-flats throughout North Lawndale, are brick buildings
the owner’s family with an additional unit rented out for supplemental
with a limestone façade. While there was a relatively narrow time period
income. Most of North Lawndale was developed during this time period.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 22CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE The following two decades began the fourth period of housing develop-
(D) Greystones were built by individual owners, builders, and architects.
ment when brick 2-flat and larger brick apartment complexes were built
There was no exclusive developer or designer of greystones in North
on the larger parcels of land, corners, and any remaining vacant lots. By
Lawndale. The greystone’s ubiquitous use throughout the first two
the 1930s, most of North Lawndale had been built out.
decades of the 20th century was likely a result of economics, devel-
(B) 99% of all greystones examined in the hotspot survey that had a
opers’ tastes, material availability and cost, as well as the needs and
building permit were built between 1890 and 1915. This shows a clearly
desires of North Lawndale’s residents.
defined time period, or Greystone Era, when greystones dominated
Greystone Architectural Styles
residential housing development. The Greystone Era coincides with
While the greystones of North Lawndale were all built during a 25-year
Chicago population and building boom of the first two decades of the
time period and utilized common design elements such as limestone
20th Century. As a result, a great number of the residential structures in
façades, there were also many architectural elements that changed over
North Lawndale, with a heavy concentration between Douglas Park and
time, mirroring the broader changes in the architectural styles of Ameri-
Pulaski Road, were developed as greystones.
can housing. Early North Lawndale greystones constructed between
(C) Greystones were built for a range of families including a very large
1890 and 1905 (Figure 1.8) had Romanesque architectural features,
working class of quite modest means and a fairly affluent middle class,
utilizing rusticated limestone stone in the façade. The front porches
which was concentrated in the more expensive properties along the park
and windows were punctuated with arches. These Romanesque build-
and boulevards. According to city directories, personal accounts, and
ings were commonly adorned with Romanesque pediments, and other
government surveys, much of the neighborhood was a working-class
Romanesque features including Gothic pediments and robust cornices.
neighborhood employing many people in the factories that surrounded
Brick 2-flats built at this time without the upgraded limestone facing
the community. These multifamily greystones differed from the larger
used red brick, or occasionally sandstone, in the construction of the
greystone “mansions” built elsewhere in Chicago, such as on the Near
exterior walls.
West Side along Washington and Warren Boulevards, along Drexel and
A shift in style from Romanesque to Neo-Classical features occurred
Grand (now King) Boulevards on the South Side and along the lakefront,
gradually from 1890 to 1905, with buildings sometimes employing ele-
and on Logan and Humboldt Boulevards on the North Side.
ments of both styles. The façades of Neo-Classical greystones typically
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 23
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER ONE had smooth limestone blocks rather than the rustications of their
precursors. Pediments and cornices utilized classical elements. Rounded windows were replaced with bay and Palladian windows, while archways were replaced with classical columns. Romanesque features disappeared entirely after 1905 and the New-Classical style dominated the rest of the greystone era. Later brick-faced buildings of the Greystone Era utilized tawny brick rather than red brick in construction reflecting a conscious recollection of Roman architectural precedents. Such elements may also be seen in contemporary buildings of the time by Frank Lloyd Wright and Louis Sullivan. Neo-Classical design dominated for the final ten years (1905 -1915) of the greystone era.
Figure 1.8. Romanesque greystone (3820 West Polk) constructed in about 1896.
Figure 1.9. Neo-Classical greystones (3359 West Flournoy) constructed in 1910.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 24CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORY OF NORTH LAWNDALE Endnotes: (1) Priddy, Gladys. 1954. “Negro Ratio Grows Rapidly in North Lawndale” Chicago Daily Tribune. 19 Dec., SW14. (2) Wilson, William Julius. 1996. When Work Disappears. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. (3) Wilson 1996. (4) A good source for 20th Century demographic and narrative history for Chicago’s community areas, including North Lawndale, is the decennial editions of the Local Community Fact Book of Chicago. Each edition is published after the US Census with updated demographic and historical data. The citations are as follows: Wirth, Louis and Margaret Furez, eds. 1938. Local Community Fact Book. Chicago: Chicago Recreation Commmission. Wirth, Louis and Eleanor H. Bernert, eds. 1949. Local Community Fact Book of Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Hauser, Philip M. and Evelyn M. Kitagawa, eds. 1953. Local Community Fact Book for Chicago, 1950. Chicago: Chicago Community Inventory, University of Chicago. Kitagawa, Evelyn M. and Karl E. Taeuber, eds. 1963. Local Community Fact Book : Chicago Metropolitan Area, 1960. Chicago: Chicago Community Inventory, University of Chicago. Chicago Fact Book Consortium. 1984. Local Community Fact Book, Chicago Metropolitan Area: Based on the 1970 and 1980 Censuses. Chicago: Chicago Review Press. Chicago Fact Book Consortium. 1995. Local Community Fact Book, Chicago Metropolitan Area, 1990. Chicago: University of Illinois at Chicago. (5) Local Community Fact Book of Chicago (6) Local Community Fact Book of Chicago. (7) Local Community Fact Book of Chicago. (8) Local Community Fact Book of Chicago. (9) Seligman, Amanda. 2004. “North Lawndale” Encyclopedia of Chicago. Chicago: Chicago Historical Society. http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/ (10) McDowell, Winston. 1999. “North Lawndale Community Information” Chicago Imagebase website. Chicago: University of Illinois at Chicago College of Architecture and the Arts. http://tigger.uic.edu/depts/ahaa/imagebase/ (11) Mayer, Harold. 1941 “North Lawndale? A Crowded City Within a City”. Real Estate Magazine. 15 Nov. This article can be found in the North Lawndale Community Records, 1872-1956, Series 5 - Historical Sketches. Chicago Harold Washington Public Library: Neighborhood History Research Collection. (12) Mayer 1941.
(13) Ziemba, Stanley. 1985. “Community’s Housing in a State of Collapse” Chicago Tribune. 19 Nov. (14) Local Community Fact Book of Chicago. (15) Seligman 2004. (16) Almada, Jeanette. 2004. “City to Aid New North Lawndale Rentals” Chicago Tribune. 2 May. (17) Commission on Chicago Landmarks. 2003. Your House Has A History: A Step-by-Step Guide to Researching Your Property. City of Chicago: Department of Planning and Development. http://www.cityofchicago.org/Landmarks/. (18) A list of documents in the North Lawndale Neighborhood Archives can be found at City of Chicago Harold Washington Library website – special collections section. A list of the documents available in the archives can be found at: http://www.chipublib.org/008subject/012special/nlcc.html. (19) Mayer 1941. (20) These records are available at the Chicago Harold Washington Public Library – Neighborhood History Research Collection: North Lawndale Community Records, 1872-1956. (21) Commission on Chicago Landmarks. 2003. (22) Volume 2 of the Report of the Chicago Land Use Survey – 1939 WPA Block Survey for North Lawndale is available online at UIC’s Imagebase website: http://tigger.uic.edu/depts/ahaa/imagebase/ca/nl/index.html.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 25
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO
Greystone Geography and Attributes Brent D. Ryan and Ryan Siegel The following chapter summarizes the research methods and results of the City Design Center’s characterization of the current built environment of North Lawndale. The chapter highlights findings from the data collected and provides tables and maps to answer the three remaining research questions described in the introduction. 1. What is the distribution of greystones in North Lawndale? 2. How many greystones are there in North Lawndale? 3. What are the physical characteristics of greystones in North Lawndale? Research Methods and Datasets Greystone Hotspot Survey The first step in researching North Lawndale’s greystones was to gather data on typical greystones by examining sample areas with large numbers of greystones. Bill Neuendorf, a student in the Spring 2004 UIC
Figure 2.1 Greystone Hotspot Blocks surveyed. Hotspots had a high concentration and variety of greystones.
seminar on Lawndale, and Charles Leeks, a North Lawndale resident and member of the Greystone Steering Team, identified ten “greystone hotspot” blocks containing a high concentration of greystone buildings. The City Design Center conducted a field survey of these blocks, observing the exterior conditions of blocks and buildings from public streets. Data was recorded for every parcel on the block regardless of structure type.
Table 2.1 A total of 404 hotspot parcels were surveyed, 61% of which were occupied by greystones.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 26CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
GREYSTONE GEOGRAPHY AND ATTRIBUTES The following characteristics were collected by the City Design Center: •
Address
•
Boarded up or not boarded up status
•
Condition – based on an observation of the exterior of the building. Buildings were given one of five ratings:
Excellent: no signs of deterioration, no repairs needed, evidence of extensive maintenance
Good: no signs of serious deterioration, evidence of some maintenance, in need of small repairs (e.g. window paint, fencing upgrades)
Fair: some signs of deterioration and damage, but structural integrity appeared acceptable
Poor: extensive deterioration or evidence that structural integrity had been compromised (foundation was cracking, porch looked unsound, etc.)
Unlivable: vacant and uninhabited
•
Number of dwelling units: based on number of doorbells/ doors and/or asking residents, if available
•
Structure Type: brick construction, greystone (i.e. limestone façade), frame with woodlap, or frame with siding
•
Occupancy: vacant lot, open and vacant, vacant on the ground floor, partially occupied, occupied (based on exterior observations and discussion with residents, if possible)
• Figure 2.2. Three varieties of greystones: a typical two-flat (3323 W. Flournoy, 1910), a mansion (2102 S. Avers, 1892), and a “shoebox” (4031 W. Cullerton, 1906).
Exterior photos of sample typical buildings and street walls of multiple greystones
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 27
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO Over 400 parcels in the greystone hotspots were catalogued. Although the selected blocks were chosen for their variety of greystones, many consistent features of greystones were found in the data collected. Of the buildings surveyed, 61% (220) were “greystones,” i.e. buildings of brick construction with a greystone front. The next most common structure type was brick with a brick front (31% of structures). There were very few frame buildings and a low incidence of vacant lots along the surveyed blocks. Larger brick apartment buildings were sometimes found at the corners of hotspot blocks. According to historic building permits and county tax assessor information, these larger apartment buildings were generally built in the late or post-greystone era (after 1915). Most of the buildings on block interiors were 2-flats on standard 25-by-125 foot Chicago lots. Only 2.7% of the lots surveyed contained
Figure 2.3 A “greystone hotspot” block (3300 block of W Flournoy), the building type is projected over a Sanborn fire insurance map. The block is primarily greystones, with a few brick 2-flats interspersed and a newer apartment building at the corner. This block appears to reflect a once-typical block pattern in North Lawndale and was intact in 2005. (Sanborn map courtesy of the Sanborn Mapping Company).
buildings with more than four residential units. The greystones surveyed were almost exclusively one- to four-unit buildings. 20% (44) of the greystones were single-family structures and 75% (166) were two to three unit buildings. The typical greystone found in the survey was a two-story detached residential building with a flat, gently back-sloping roof and a limestone front façade, masonry construction and a front stair and porch. The average ground floor square footage of this type ranged from 1200 to 1800 square feet. The size and style of greystones also could vary considerably (Figure 2.2). For example the 2100 block of South Avers had two “mansion” greystones with large lots, pitched roofs, substantially larger floor areas,
Figure 2.4 Results of building permit research for the hotspot survey buildings, showing building type and number in 5 year increments, 1890-1929.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 28CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
GREYSTONE GEOGRAPHY AND ATTRIBUTES and additional architectural details. These structures were clearly designed as single-family residences. In contrast, the 4000 block of West Cullerton Avenue, in the southwestern portion of North Lawndale (K-town), was lined with one-story “shoebox” greystones. Although their floor areas were typically smaller, the architectural details and material treatments were similar to the more common 2-flat greystone seen throughout the hotspots. The City Design Center hotspot survey indicated that greystones were typically kept in better condition than other structure types. 27% of the greystones were in “excellent” condition, compared to only 13% of brick structures. Equally notable was a lack of “poor-rated” greystones—only four out of the 220 greystones surveyed (2%) were rated in “poor” condition. Since the blocks surveyed were chosen for the integrity of their Figure 2.5 Contrasting greystones and brick 2-flats: 3756 West Cermak, 1908 (left) and 3743 W. Cermak, 1912 (right). Built only a few years apart, these structures appear to differ only in their facing materials (greystone vs. brick).
housing stock, this high maintenance level was not unexpected. An important finding of the survey was the similarity of brick and greystone 2-flat structures. On some blocks, brick 2-flats were interspersed with or adjacent to greystones (Figure 2.3). In other cases a block might have greystones on one side of the street and brick 2-flats on the other. Greystones and brick 2-flats shared the same exterior architectural features and building construction except for the limestone facing of greystones. Often the brick 2-flats appeared to mirror the footprints of adjacent greystones, and building permit research revealed that brick 2-flats were often built during the same time period as the
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 29
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO greystones and were sometimes even built by the same builder and
tures were eligible, the presence of TIF funding did not explain the differ-
architect.
ence in conditions found between the greystones and the other housing
The similarity of these two housing types emphasized the importance for the Greystone Initiative to clearly define what constituted a greystone. Any operating definition would have to be easily identifiable
types.
Building conditions were judged only based on the exterior of
the building, so interior conditions could not be verified and may not have been consistent with the observed exterior conditions.
and verifiable as well as accurately reflect the diversity of this unique
NIPC Full Circle Project
historical housing type.
While the City Design Center hotspot survey provided initial insight into
The sample buildings chosen for the greystone hotspot survey were not
the greystones in North Lawndale, a more comprehensive measurement
representative of all greystones in North Lawndale, but they did commu-
of the built environment in North Lawndale was necessary. Since North
nicate the condition and characteristics of the greatest concentrations
Lawndale has nearly 10,000 parcels, the City Design Center used data
of greystone homes. The hotspots’ non-random sample of parcels in
from an ongoing public policy research project, the Full Circle Project to
North Lawndale should not be construed as a representation of build-
provide additional data on the North Lawndale built environment at this
ing conditions in the neighborhood overall: a complete survey of North
more comprehensive scale.
Lawndale would likely produce a somewhat different overall distribution
The Full Circle project (www.chicagoareahousing.org/FC/), coordinated
of greystone buildings. It should also be noted that all of the hotspot
by the Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission (NIPC), is intended to
blocks were on residential side streets. Major thoroughfares with larger
empower local residents and community-based organizations to plan the
buildings and a different built environment, such as Douglas Boulevard,
future development of their neighborhoods. Community-based organiza-
were not surveyed.
tions and local residents participate together in creating detailed maps
Several of the blocks surveyed had active block clubs that had recently
of their neighborhoods and in visioning future development. Web-based
received exterior façade improvement funds from North Lawndale’s Tax
communication and information technologies enable the data-gathering
Increment Financing (TIF) program, which may have also contributed to
and visioning phases. This neighborhood planning effort is designed to
the relatively good conditions of these blocks. However, since all struc-
inform future neighborhood development processes.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 30CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
GREYSTONE GEOGRAPHY AND ATTRIBUTES The first phase of the Full Circle project, initiated in October 2003, was to inventory current assets of selected neighborhoods throughout Chicago, one of which was North Lawndale. NIPC’s partner on the
Lawndale project, the Metropolitan Planning Council (MPC), created
Condition of building – (same as the Greystone Hotspot Survey)
a detailed inventory of land use, housing, transportation, jobs, culture,
Boarded up or Not boarded up status
recreation, natural resources and historic points, which was compiled
Vacancy information
with the help of neighborhood partners and volunteers.
Roof type
Ownership information
Given existing time and resource constraints, the City Design Center chose not to conduct a complete land use survey of North Lawndale.
As of June 2005, 51% of the lots in North Lawndale had been cataloged
Instead, the CDC partnered with two organizations involved in the Full
through the Full Circle project. This initial set of data was used to create
Circle zoning and mapping process in North Lawndale. NIPC and MPC
the comprehensive North Lawndale Geographic Information System
added several Full Circle survey questions that were specific to the
described in the next section. In December of 2005, MPC provided the
needs of the Greystone Initiative.
City Design Center with an update which cataloged 77% of all North
The full list of potential data collected by the Full Circle partners for each parcel encompassed over 50 questions, ranging from building
Lawndale properties. This updated data was used to characterize and estimate the total number of greystones in North Lawndale.
conditions and architecture, to detailed land use and assessed value.
The Full Circle data had some limitations. While some training was
For its research purposes, the City Design Center collected the follow-
given to community volunteers, answers requiring subjective decisions,
ing information:
such as the condition of building, varied from volunteer to volunteer. In addition, many logged parcels had incomplete or missing data. To
Address
Structure Type – (Brick, Greystone, Frame with stucco, Frame with other, Frame with woodlap, Other structure)
Number of Housing Units
compensate for incomplete data, the City Design Center extrapolated data from those parcels with completed questionnaires to project a total number and overall condition of greystones in North Lawndale.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 31
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO Parcel Shape File Full Circle data was mapped to a GIS shape file in ArcGIS 9.0. This GIS file contained all the parcels in North Lawndale and was kindly provided to the City Design Center by the Civic Committee. Parcel Identification Numbers (PINs) were also provided with the parcel shape files. The shape file permitted spatial analysis and geographical visualization of the Full Circle data. Tax Assessor Data In order to map the data collected by the Greystone Hotspot Survey and the Full Circle Data to the parcel shape file, a data set was required to match the addresses of the field survey data with the PINs of the parcel shape file. The Cook County Tax Assessor’s office maintains a database with both the address and PIN for all parcels in the county. UIC’s Center for Urban Economic Development (CUED) kindly contributed a data set containing Cook County Tax Assessor information to the City Design Center. The Tax Assessor’s information also provided a more complete picture of owner occupancy. The Assessor information included the “mail to” address for tax bills. Therefore, the City Design Center assumed that any building whose address matched the “mail to” address of the tax bill was an owner-occupied residence. It is important to note that this measure may have undercounted owner-occupancy because owners
Figure 2.6 Of the 4,918 parcels surveyed by Full Circle by June 2005, the City Design Center was able to match 84% to assessor data. Greystone distribution in North Lawndale was generated from this matched set.
may have their tax bill sent to another address.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 32CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
GREYSTONE GEOGRAPHY AND ATTRIBUTES Summary of Analysis Unified North Lawndale Geographic Information System
Greystone Numbers
The City Design Center matched the June 2005 Full Circle survey data
The more complete Full Circle Data that MPC supplied to the City
entries to corresponding parcel shape layers, using the Tax Assessor
Design Center in December of 2005 included structure information for
“bridge file” to map addresses to PINs. There was significant, but not
7,013 parcels in North Lawndale. The data suggest that 27.6% of all
total, overlap between the three data sources. Figure 2.4 shows a Venn
buildings in North Lawndale are greystones, indicating that there are an
Diagram of the degree of overlap of the data sets.
estimated 1,714 greystone buildings in the community.
In 2003, the Civic Committee commissioned URS-TPAP to create a
The total number of greystone buildings in North Lawndale was calcu-
parcel shape file which contained 22,442 records. This data set was
lated by applying the ratio of greystones found in the Full Circle survey
significantly larger than the CUED Tax Assessor data set because it
to the unsurveyed parcels in North Lawndale and adding the two figures
encompassed a slightly larger geography, including some parcels out-
(see Tables 2.2-2.4). The Full Circle data included information about
side of North Lawndale’s boundaries. The CUED Tax Assessor data set
the type of structure (including no structure, or a vacant lot) for 7,013
included PINs in Census Tracts in the North Lawndale Chicago Com-
parcels. 1,253 of these structures were recorded as greystones. Of the
munity Area, as well as three other Census Tracts that covered the area
9,591 parcels in North Lawndale, 7,013 had a recorded structure type,
between the north edge of North Lawndale and Interstate 290. This area
and there is currently no information about what type of structure, if any,
was included because it is commonly considered to be part of the North
can be found on the remaining 2,578 parcels. Since 17.9% (or 1,253)
Lawndale neighborhood. 95% of the CUED PINs matched the Civic
of logged parcels in the survey were greystones, the City Design Center
Committee’s parcel data set. The slight mismatch was probably due to
assumed that if the uncataloged parcels had similar ratio of greystones,
additional small differences in geography between the data sets.
then 17.9% (or 461) of those 2,578 parcels would also be greystones.
84% of the Full Circle addresses were matchable to the CUED “bridge
Adding the two figures (1,253 and 461) provides a total estimate of
file.” Addresses were converted into a common format across all data
1,714 greystone buildings in North Lawndale.
sources. However, only 43% of the CUED parcels matched the Full Circle data because the Full Circle survey was incomplete as of June 2005.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 33
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO
Figure 2.7 Distribution of parcels surveyed by Full Circle as of June 2005.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 34CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
GREYSTONE GEOGRAPHY AND ATTRIBUTES
Figure 2.8 Distribution of greystones as of June 2005. Note high concentrations of greystones in central Lawndale, north of Ogden Avenue.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 35
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO Greystone Distribution The geographic distribution of greystones surveyed as of June 2005 by the Full Circle project is shown in Figures 2.7 and 2.8. Within North Lawndale the City Design Center’s greystone geography research revealed three different eras of worker housing distributed differently across the region. The eastern portion of North Lawndale east of Douglas Park had a limited number of greystone buildings. The majority of residential structures east of Douglas Park were brick structures, which were some of the oldest buildings in North Lawndale. As noted in Chapter 1, this area was developed around the 1870s and 1880s, before the advent of greystone housing. Workers’ cottages, an older version of middle class housing, were scattered throughout this area.
Table 2.2 The December 2005 MPC Full Circle survey found 1253 greystones in North Lawndale. This indicates that 27.6% of all buildings in North Lawndale are greystones.
The largest concentration of greystone structures in North Lawndale was found between Kedzie Avenue and Pulaski Road, south of Taylor Street and North of Ogden Avenue. This area was developed during the population boom decades of the 1890s, 1900s, and 1910s. Housing was built quickly to keep pace with rapid population growth. Much of the housing was faced with readily available limestone and was constructed in dense clusters with similar features and footprints. There were some blocks where 10 to 15 greystones in a row were found. However, the majority of original, intact blocks had greystones interspersed with brick apartment buildings and other smaller brick 2 and 3 flat structures of the greystone era. Well preserved blocks had fewer vacant lots and consequently more greystones. It logically followed that
Table 2.3 A total number of 1,714 greystones was estimated for North Lawndale.
blocks dominated by intact greystone buildings had few vacant lots compared to other blocks throughout the neighborhood.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 36CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
GREYSTONE GEOGRAPHY AND ATTRIBUTES
Figure 2.9 East Lawndale was built up before the greystone era and contains brick worker’s cottages instead of greystones. 1440 S. Rockwell (left) and the 2600 block of west 15th Street (right).
Table 2.4 If the same percentage (27.6%) of currently vacant lots were once greystones, then as many as 604 greystones may have been demolished as of December 2005.
West of Pulaski Road, a transition from greystones to brick 2-flats was found. For example the 4100 block of 21st Street was lined with greystones but the 4200 block was lined with brick 2-flats constructed a decade later (see Figure 2.3). The western portion of North Lawndale was built out just after the extension of the Douglas Park
Table 2.5 66.8% of all greystones are 2-flats, while only 7.5% of greystones are single-family homes. Only 6.3% of greystones have more than 3 units.
elevated train line to Cicero Avenue in 1907, making it among the younger parts of the North Lawndale community. Because limestone façades were used less frequently in buildings of the 1910s and almost completely disappeared in the 1920s, very few greystones were found in the western part of North Lawndale. In the far western part of North Lawndale, greystones appeared to be common only in “K-Town”, north of Cermak Road.
Table 2.6 Greystones had the best average condition (good to excellent) of all structure types in North Lawndale.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 37
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER TWO
Other Greystone Characteristics The matched set of data that included the June 2005 Full Circle survey allowed the City Design Center to compare data sets. The data suggested that greystones had a high owner occupancy rate for the neighborhood, at 67% of all greystones. The data also indicated that owner-occupied buildings were in better condition than rental buildings. 76% of owner occupied buildings were rated either “excellent” or “good” compared to only 62% of rental properties. Unfortunately, 19% of the rental properties surveyed through the Full Circle project were rated “unlivable,” yet many were inhabited.
Table 2.7 Greystones also had the highest owner occupancy rate of surveyed structures in North Lawndale, according the June 2005 Full Circle and Tax Assessor data.
Conclusions The City Design Center’s greystone research provides the first-ever
The December 2005 Full Circle data provided additional information
comprehensive portrait of greystone distribution in North Lawndale.
about greystone characteristics (see Tables 2.5 and 2.6). Accord-
Greystones are found throughout North Lawndale and are an integral
ing to this data 66.8% of greystones are 2-flat buildings, and 93.8% of the greystones in North Lawndale have fewer than 5 residential units. Greystones were also found to be in better condition than other structures. 78.3% of greystones were given a rating of “excellent” or “good” by the Full Circle team, as opposed to 70.8% of brick, and 63.2% of frame structures. Greystones also had a low vacancy rate at approximately 5.8% as opposed to the 6.4% vacancy rate among brick buildings.
part of the region’s built environment. Given the high number, high architectural quality and wide distribution of greystones in North Lawndale, the potential impact of the Greystone Initiative is significant. The Greystone Initiative clearly has the potential to positively affect much of North Lawndale. With increased market interest in the neighborhood’s housing, the large numbers of expiring subsidized housing units, and the deteriorated condition of other building types, the Greystone Initiative also has the potential to be a stabilizing force in the neighborhood for economic development, the preservation of affordable housing and the strengthening of community pride in this important Chicago neighborhood.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 38CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
CHAPTER THREE
Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® - Planning Phase To this end, the Initiative seeks to promote the greystone as a means
Susanne Schnell
to further cultivate Lawndale’s image as a community with a unique Background and Context
historic and cultural legacy. Initially launched in North Lawndale,
The Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® is one of several revitalization
the Greystone Initiative also seeks to encourage improvements and
and development priorities for North Lawndale that seek to enhance a
enhancements to preserve greystones for future generations. The Initia-
collective sense of community pride among residents. The Greystone
tive will ultimately expand across what may become known as the City’s
Initiative aims to use one of Chicago’s greatest architectural and historic
“Greystone Belt,” an analogue to the better-known “Bungalow Belt” of
assets – its historic greystones – to encourage stewardship and rein-
the outer areas of Chicago.
vestment, both in North Lawndale and the city’s older central neighbor-
Two collaborative community-based planning groups grew out of this
hoods. The guiding principle underlying the Greystone Initiative was
broad vision for instilling greater pride of place and an appreciation of
first articulated by Charles Leeks, Director of the North Lawndale office
North Lawndale’s unique story. The first of these groups was formed in
of Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago. Leeks recognized that
the Fall of 2003 in conjunction with a year-long planning process coor-
residents who are informed by a deeper appreciation of Lawndale’s
dinated by the Civic Committee of The Commercial Club of Chicago, a
past will become stewards who are more actively engaged in claiming
nonprofit business organization. The Civic Committee’s planning col-
ownership of the community and defining its future. Culture, history
laborative was aimed at supporting and enhancing local organizations’
and architectural assets can be powerful tools in the hands of Lawn-
ongoing redevelopment activities and more effectively integrating each
dale residents, many of whom are increasingly aware of imminent
organization’s long-range development goals into a comprehensive
changes in their community. Most notable among these changes is the
plan. The resulting community growth plan, which reflected the collec-
rapid growth of Lawndale’s housing market, which is now beginning to
tive thinking of the participating community partners, recommended a
respond to increased demand from homebuyers in nearby communi-
number of activities focused on retail and mixed-income housing devel-
ties for quality housing stock, as well as new condominiums and town
opment, including the creation of a new Tax Increment Financing (TIF)
homes.
district, and historic heritage initiatives.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 39
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER THREE
Figure 3.1 Historic Lawndale: preservation, design and image-building strategies.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 40CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORIC GREYSTONE INITIATIVE PLANNING PHASE Civic Committee staff convened leading community organizations that
In addition to several Lawndale community organizations, members of
represented a broad constituency of local residents and businesses
the advisory group included the Chicago Historical Society, Landmarks
– Lawndale Business and Local Development Corporation, Neighbor-
Preservation Council of Illinois, Chicago Public Library, National Trust
hood Housing Services of Chicago, H.I.C.A. Corporation, Lawndale
for Historic Preservation, and the City Design Center. To facilitate the
Christian Development Corporation, Steans Family Foundation, and the
planning dialogue that took place over several months, members of the
Homan Square Community Center Foundation. Each of these partner
group were asked to draw from their expertise in historic preservation
organizations had a long history working in Lawndale and each brought
and urban design and planning to help community partners identify a
its own core values about Lawndale’s growth and development to the
range of approaches that were aligned with their goals. (See Appendix
planning process. Chief among them was the desire that existing resi-
A for Advisory Group members.)
dents not only play a significant role in shaping revitalization plans, but also that they benefit from these opportunities. Community partners rec-
Inventory of Assets – Graduate Seminar at UIC
ognized that the gentrification of Lawndale would have both helpful and
The Advisory Group began by asking two key questions:
harmful effects. While they wanted Lawndale to new attract develop-
How can the community use historic heritage as an economic
ment and new residents who would contribute to the economic health
revitalization tool – both to help build a sense of community and to
and vitality of the neighborhood, they expressed concern that a wave of
project a more positive image to outsiders?
new high-end housing might eventually push some of Lawndale’s more vulnerable renter households out of the market.
Which strategies are most likely to foster community development, achieve maximum visibility and economic benefit?
The Civic Committee formed four advisory groups that focused on development priorities identified by its partners. One of these groups,
The group recognized that the first step was to inventory the communi-
the Historic Heritage Advisory Group, was formed out of a collective
ty’s cultural and architectural assets. To support this recommendation,
desire to link Lawndale’s historic, cultural and architectural assets to
Brent Ryan, Co-Director of the City Design Center and Assistant Profes-
the broader goals of community revitalization and heritage tourism.
sor of Urban Planning and Policy, proposed a university-level course
Charles Leeks and Kristen Dean were founding members whose early
that would focus on documenting Lawndale’s architectural assets as
thinking included the idea of a historic heritage museum and cultural
well as its social and multi-cultural history.
facility in North Lawndale.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 41
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER THREE The result was an interdisciplinary graduate seminar at UIC focused on
revitalization strategy. Drawing from these collective views, the Advisory
North Lawndale taught during the Spring of 2004. Robert Bruegmann,
Group drafted core guiding principles that emphasize the important link
Professor and Chair of the Department of Art History, Professor Brent
between promoting the community’s historic heritage and encouraging
Ryan, and Jim Peters, Director of Planning at the Landmarks Preserva-
civic engagement among residents who help to shape the community’s
tion Council of Illinois, developed and co-taught the seminar. It was
future direction. The Advisory Group then worked to draft specific
supported by three local foundations – Richard H. Driehaus Founda-
recommendations for historic heritage initiatives that were presented
tion, Woods Fund of Chicago and Polk Bros. Foundation. The resulting
to all members of the planning collaborative. The community partners
student research on North Lawndale can be found at the Lawndale
supported these ideas and agreed to incorporate the historic heritage
Heritage website (www.lawndaleheritage.org).
recommendations into a broader revitalization strategy for North Lawn-
As a final project, seminar students presented their research and ideas for promoting Lawndale’s historic heritage in a symposium held for community partners and members of the Historic Heritage Advisory Group. Students recognized the important linkages between Lawndale’s history and the community building process. Their ideas included hold-
dale. These strategic growth recommendations and a summary of the community planning process are presented in the Civic Committee’s “North Lawndale Planning Initiative” report, completed in January 2005. Guiding Principles about North Lawndale’s Historic Heritage •
Rebranding North Lawndale as a historic community will
ing community forums to highlight special historical and cultural events,
change its image to the outside world and differentiate it
and incorporating Lawndale’s history into the local school curriculum.
from other Chicago communities with similar redevelop-
Students were interested in a variety of ways to engage residents and
ment opportunities and challenges.
high school students in documenting their own history. They also sug-
• Promoting North Lawndale’s image as a historically signifi-
gested creating a forerunner to a historical society that would house
cant community can support and enhance housing and
Lawndale’s neighborhood archive, perhaps in partnership with the local
retail redevelopment strategies.
branch of the public library.
• Focusing on Historic heritage can be a potent and cost-
Among community partners, advisors and students alike, there was strong agreement that North Lawndale’s assets and image, including preservation, could inform broader thinking about the community’s
effective way to add incalculable value as a community evaluates its vision and priorities for future growth. • Implementing an architectural preservation and historic
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 42CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORIC GREYSTONE INITIATIVE PLANNING PHASE heritage initiative can generate multiple positive benefits;
o
including generate greater interest among resident stewards and other stakeholders in preserving and revitalizing
tions o
their community and attracting new residents who have overlooked Lawndale’s assets and growth potential
Historic Districts (example: Martin Luther King historic district)
o
Thematic nomination – highlight assets dispersed across the community
Historic Heritage Advisory Group Recommendations Objective: Support and enhance preservation and redevelopment
Individual building – historic and landmark designa-
o
Historic markers (example: synagogues, site of Dr. King’s speeches)
strategies by promoting North Lawndale’s image and assets as a historically significant community. Highlight Lawndale’s historic and
2. Community Image-Building
cultural heritage to encourage resident leadership in preserving and
•
Change the community’s image to the outside world by pursu-
revitalizing their community. Use historic heritage as a tool to attract
ing the following:
new resident stewards who have overlooked North Lawndale.
o
Strategy:
o
1. Community Preservation •
Identify historically significant buildings and sites with input from current and former residents o
Create a community policy for anti-demolition that preserves significant buildings
• Create a Historic Greystone Initiative for North Lawndale • Assess the potential benefits and drawbacks of nominating specific neighborhood areas to the National Register of Historic Places and/or the City of Chicago’s Landmarks Commission
o o
Install special lighting on historic avenues or boule- vards Design and install banners and murals along visible corridors Restore the landscape, install new historic street furni- ture, kiosks, and other landscape features Assign honorary names to streets (after historically significant residents or events)
o
Restore and clean building façades
o
Design walking, bike and bus tours in conjunction with
outside partners such as the Chicago Architecture
Foundation
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 43
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER THREE Creation of Lawndale Heritage
Planning Phase for the Greystone Initiative
In the Summer of 2004, Charles Leeks and several community leaders
In the summer of 2004, a core group comprised of staff from NHS of
came together to form Lawndale Heritage, a new non-profit organiza-
Chicago, the Civic Committee and UIC’s City Design Center began to
tion with a unique community mission. The idea for the organization
discuss next steps for launching a Greystone Initiative in North Lawn-
grew out of many conversations that had taken place for several years
dale. These partners held preliminary discussions with the City’s Com-
among numerous community residents who wanted to promote the arts
missioner of Housing and the Commissioner of Environment to gauge
and culture in the community. Torrio Osborne was an important voice
potential interest in the proposed initiative. The Commissioners were
in these conversations. This collective interest spawned several cultural
very supportive and assigned staff liaisons to share background on
programs, including the “Ravinia-Lawndale Partnership,” a community
the Historic Chicago Bungalow Initiative and related green bungalow
concert program coordinated jointly by Ravinia and community leaders
projects – both City-endorsed initiatives that predated the Greystone
that brings family-oriented musical performances to Lawndale.
Initiative. The group also met with the founder of the Historic Chicago
The founders of Lawndale Heritage want to create a permanent institutional presence in North Lawndale that fosters civic engagement and
Bungalow Association to learn about the origins and evolution of that successful initiative.
restores community pride by preserving, supporting, and becoming a
Early support from the Departments of Housing and Environment
good steward of those historical and cultural assets. The new organiza-
encouraged these core partners to pursue a more formalized planning
tion will be devoted to researching and chronicling the story of North
process for the Greystone Initiative. That summer, the group met with
Lawndale as a way to celebrate its culture and history as well as to plan
the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, a strong supporter of the Bunga-
for the community’s future. Its founding board members will seek to
low Initiative, to introduce the idea for the proposed Greystone Initiative.
more broadly share Lawndale’s story and more effectively use its cul-
The Foundation agreed with a planning phase approach and awarded
tural and historical legacy as a tool for community change. As of 2005
a planning grant to the City Design Center in early September 2004
Lawndale Heritage is currently in the process of formalizing its orga-
to carry out the necessary research to launch the Greystone Initiative.
nizational structure and its board is identifying and developing initial
Civic Committee staff secured an additional planning grant from the
programs that are aligned with its mission. (See Lawndale Heritage’s
JPMorgan Chase Foundation. This funding supported a strategic plan-
website www.lawndaleheritage.org for more background on the mission
ning process for the Greystone Initiative, work that would be conducted
of this new non-profit organization.)
in tandem with the City Design Center’s greystone research.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 44CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORIC GREYSTONE INITIATIVE PLANNING PHASE In November 2004, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago
planning phase were a new body of research on greystones in North
stepped into a lead position for the Initiative, agreeing to manage
Lawndale and a multi-year strategic plan that lays out the overarching
day-to-day operations of the program in collaboration with community
goals and programmatic components of the Greystone Initiative.
partners in North Lawndale. With assistance from the Civic Committee,
City Design Center Activities
NHS formed and convened a Greystone Steering Team, whose central
As discussed in earlier in this report, the City Design Center’s exten-
role was to provide periodic feedback and guidance to the greystone
sive survey research focused on estimating North Lawndale’s current
research and planning efforts. NHS also retained Michael Schubert, a
stock of greystone homes and cataloguing the architectural styles of
principal with Community Development Strategies, Inc., to complete a
greystone buildings. Based on this research, the Center offered sug-
strategic work plan for the Initiative.
gestions to the Steering Team for potential programmatic definitions of
In December 2004, the Greystone Steering Team held monthly meet-
greystones. The Center also created an integrated GIS system for North
ings, where staff from the City Design Center and Community Devel-
Lawndale that documented the geographic distribution, condition, and
opment Strategies presented preliminary research findings and early
ownership of greystones. This research informed the Steering Team’s
conceptual thinking on program design. Steering Team members
decisions about the scope and parameters of the Greystone Initiative,
included several North Lawndale residents and local elected officials
including defining greystones and the eligibility process, potential public
who represent Lawndale – Alderman Michael Chandler, Cook County
and private partnerships, and the design of program interventions that
Commissioner Bobbie Steele, and State Representative Art Turner.
would be carried out in North Lawndale.
Other members included representatives from Lawndale Heritage, the
Program Definition of Greystones
City Design Center at UIC, the Civic Committee, and City Departments of Housing and Environment. (See Appendix B for members of the Greystone Steering Team.)
The Steering Team emphasized the need for a clear, accurate definition of a greystone (e.g. housing type, style, and period) to facilitate the marketing and administration of the new program. The definition needed
Over the next five months, the Steering Team reviewed progress on
to be flexible enough to use throughout the City and easily understood
the Center’s research efforts and approved final recommendations on
by the general public. Initially, the City Design Center presented two
program design and implementation. Two key deliverables from the
potential definitions for consideration: greystone era and greystone
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 45
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER THREE structure. The working definition of a greystone home approved by the
Of the 75 buildings rehabbed, 80 percent were 2-flats, 4% were single
Steering Team consists of the following:
family homes, and 16% had three to six units. The majority of repairs
Residential buildings with 1-6 dwelling units
included roofing, porches, electrical systems, windows, paint, and
Limestone façade
masonry work. A key finding was that rehab costs were generally
Built before 1945
greater than costs associated with rehabbing bungalows. This is due, in
The definition approved by the Steering Team excludes similar his-
large part, to the fact that greystone buildings are older than bungalows
toric brick 2-flats, which were built in the same time period and may
and have larger square footage (approximately 2,800 sq. ft. for a 2-flat
even have been built by the same builder or owner. Center research-
greystone vs. 1,200 sq. ft for a bungalow).
ers observed that, apart from the limestone facing, some brick 2-flats were otherwise identical to their greystone counterparts. Based on this information, the Steering Team gave thoughtful consideration to the idea of including other types of facing in the working definition that would determine eligibility to participate in the Greystone Initiative. Ultimately, the Steering Team agreed that a limestone facade was a primary distinguishing characteristic for the program and that similar buildings with brick facades would be ineligible.
Overall cost estimates made by NHS were based on varying levels of rehabilitation work needed to restore the building to a higher standard. Actual costs varied greatly based on several variables: the size of the building; building condition prior to renovation; the extent of renovation actually completed; and year that each renovation was undertaken. Given these variables, the average rehabilitation cost per building was $36,213; the average per unit cost was $18,107; and the average cost per square foot was $13. Note that such low rehab costs are some-
Analysis of Greystone Rehabilitation Previously Completed by NHS
what misleading because the work performed by the majority of these
The City Design Center also conducted an analysis of rehabilitation
greystone homeowners was limited by a lack of resources.
(“rehab”) needs and costs incurred by a number of greystone home-
Also, the data was slightly skewed because nearly two-thirds of these
owners who were previously assisted by NHS staff. Center researchers
rehab projects used TIF funds to cover the cost of exterior improve-
met with Darris Shaw, Director of Construction, and several project man-
ments. City rules require that 70 percent of TIF funds must be spent on
agers to review records of 75 rehabilitation projects completed by NHS
exterior improvements. It was therefore assumed that the average per
over the past 10 years on Lawndale greystones. The source of funds
unit cost would have been higher if homeowners were able to access
for these rehabilitation projects was a combination of NHS low-interest
more flexible funds that could have been allocated to interior rehabilita-
loans and Tax Increment Financing (TIF) funds.
tion needs.
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 46CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORIC GREYSTONE INITIATIVE PLANNING PHASE Center researchers found that one of the biggest rehabilitation challenges was maintaining painted limestone façades, which require a new coat every three to four years. The limestone on these buildings is old and very porous, making repainting time-consuming and costly. Many homeowners therefore opt to remove the paint, which creates a separate set of environmental challenges. If the paint contains lead, which is typical of older buildings, extra safety measures are needed to prevent the spread of air-borne particles and soil contamination. The installation of additional insulation was another challenge for greystone Figure 3.2 Results of greystone rehabilitation analysis completed by NHS Chicago. The analysis demonstrates the need for information and resources that facilitate greystone renovation efforts.
homeowners. The majority of greystones have only one inch of space between the plaster and the brick exterior wall. Gut rehabs provide the ability to install higher value insulation if the walls are reframed. Other energy conservation measures can be achieved through the installation of new windows, doors, roof, and heating systems with programmable thermostats. Strategic Work Plan The “Historic Greystone Initiative Strategic Plan,” was reviewed and approved by the Steering Team in late April 2005. The five-year strategic work plan, which was developed by Community Development Strategies Inc. as an outcome of the strategic planning priorities referred to earlier, presents a menu of rehabilitation and energy efficiency programs, financing tools and other public and private resources necessary to operate the Greystone Initiative. The plan also draws from the City Design Center’s greystone research to propose a working definition of greystones and program eligibility criteria. The Center’s mapping work also informed the plan’s
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 47
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER THREE suggestion of creating model greystone blocks, which would target
•
resources towards greystones clustered in various blocks of Lawndale.
Encouraging improvements and enhancements to preserve greystones for future generations
The internal planning document addresses the need for potential public
•
Stimulating private investment in the local housing market
and private programmatic partnerships, operational funding sources,
•
Increasing number of owner-occupied greystones
and staffing. It includes a targeted marketing strategy for the Lawndale
•
Preserving affordable rental units in owner-occupied
program as well as a broad city-wide public education campaign. The plan also calls for the creation of a resource publication for greystone
greystones •
owners interested in rehabbing their homes and suggests an evaluation framework to measure program outcomes, changes in community
Promoting energy-efficient “green” greystones that are more affordable to maintain
•
image and pride, and broader market impacts of the Initiative.
Serving as a prototype for a broader initiative to be implemented across Chicago’s “Greystone Belt”
Goals of the Greystone Initiative in North Lawndale
Greystone Initiative - Program Components
As articulated in the strategic plan, the first phase of the Greystone
The strategic plan lays out three primary areas for the Initiative.
Initiative will be launched in North Lawndale where a variety of technical assistance, rehabilitation, lending and marketing strategies will be tested and evaluated before potentially expanding the program to other transitional Chicago communities that are situated within the “Greystone
General Program A package of low-cost loans, grants, and technical assistance available to all greystone owners in North Lawndale. Other resources available to the general public will include:
Belt.” Primary goals of the Greystone Initiative detailed in the strategic plan
•
history of the greystone, as well as considerations for design,
include: •
Raising awareness and community pride in the historic significance of greystone homes
•
Drawing positive attention to Lawndale’s historic housing assets
A Greystone Guide publication that focuses the architectural exterior and interior renovations, and green improvements
•
Workshops developed by various partners that address a variety of rehabilitation needs and energy conservation options
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 48CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORIC GREYSTONE INITIATIVE PLANNING PHASE Target Block Lending
Greystone Guide
Significant improvements to greystones in concentrated blocks in
The Center will author and publish a Greystone Guide for the preser-
North Lawndale.
vation and renovation of greystone residential buildings in the City of Chicago. The project will be led by Roberta Feldman, Co-Director of the
Model Greystones A cluster of 4-6 rehabilitated greystones using a variety of approaches (e.g. de-conversions, redesigns, green technology models)
City Design Center, and a team of architectural historians, designers, and several leading architects affiliated with UIC’s Department of Architecture. Staff from NHS of Chicago and the City Departments of Hous-
Planning Phase (Completed, May 2005)
ing and Environment will serve as advisors to the Guidebook project.
The planning phase for the Greystone Initiative was completed in May
The Greystone Guide will be published in two parts: Part One in
2005. Going forward, NHS of Chicago agreed to serve as the lead
Summer 2006; Part Two in Spring 2007. Part One will focus on the his-
implementing organization for the Initiative, with ongoing guidance
torical and cultural aspects of the Historic Greystone Initiative, including
from the Greystone Steering Team. In the summer of 2005, NHS and
a description of Chicago greystones, a history of the design and devel-
its key partners met with prospective funders and public sector part-
opment of North Lawndale’s greystones, a brief history of the North
ners with the goal of funding both the operating budget and the capital
Lawndale community, with a focus on physical fabric, and profiles of
budget for the Greystone Initiative. The official public launch date for
several Lawndale greystone owners. Part Two will focus on technical
the Initiative is early summer 2006, with a variety of marketing activities
concerns for maintaining and restoring greystones, including assess-
taking place in the first half of the year.
ing the condition of a greystone building, and establishing priorities and guidelines for interior and exterior renovation that preserve historic
Next Steps for the Implementation Phase The City Design Center will continue to play a partnership role in the implementation phase of the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative® with involvement on three projects: the Greystone Guide, the Greystone
charter and support energy conservation. Part two will also provide useful information on alternative reconfigurations of greystone interiors and guidelines for landscaping and street improvements.
Impact Evaluation, and “Learning from Lawndale,” a museum exhibit
The primary audience for the Greystone Guide is existing and potential
on North Lawndale’s architectural, social, and cultural history.
greystone owners, contractors, and community organizations, although
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 49
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
CHAPTER THREE it is expected that many other individuals including preservationists, his-
evolution from start-up to full implementation. Main components of the
torians, community activists and others from Chicago and further afield
evaluation will include: A) an assessment of the community’s image,
will be interested in the book as well. The Guide will be released in
both internally and externally; B) case studies featuring greystone hom-
conjunction with the launch of the Historic Greystone Initiative in North
eowners; C) an assessment of program design and implementation
Lawndale and will also coincide with the opening of an exhibition on
outcomes; D) documentation of program communication strategies,
North Lawndale at the Chicago Architecture Foundation in the Summer
marketing tools, and public education programs; and E) an analysis of
of 2006.
economic impact and community revitalization, which will draw from relevant baseline data collected by the Center in the greystone plan-
Greystone Impact Evaluation As detailed in this report, the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative®
ning phase.
seeks to create a prototype program that uses historic heritage as a key
In terms of program enhancements, the evaluation will help NHS pro-
tool in community organizing and neighborhood economic develop-
gram administrators understand what modifications may be needed
ment. The partners involved in designing and implementing this inno-
to improve the program’s impact. The evaluation will also serve as
vative program recognize the importance of documenting the process,
an important source of information when expanding the program to a
outcomes, and lessons learned from this initiative. To track these
larger scale in other transitional Chicago communities.
outcomes, the City Design Center will conduct a multi-year evaluation of
From another equally important vantage point, findings from the Cen-
the Historic Chicago Greystone Initiative , which will provide quantitative
ter’s evaluation of the Greystone Initiative will potentially provide data
and qualitative evidence of the program’s impact in its first five years of
that would both inform and influence policy makers and researchers
operation. The evaluation team will be led by Center Research Professor
working in the field of neighborhood economic revitalization. The evalu-
Susanne Schnell and Co-Directors Roberta Feldman and Brent Ryan.
ation will be a valuable source of information that could not only pro-
Charles Leeks and Bob Bruegmann will also serve as advisors.
mote the Greystone Initiative as a replicable model, but also promote
The evaluation will measure the Greystone Initiative’s impact and
historic heritage as a viable strategy for rebuilding other economically
effectiveness using several different methods that track the program’s
disadvantaged areas across the country.
®
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 50CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
HISTORIC GREYSTONE INITIATIVE PLANNING PHASE North Lawndale Exhibit and Design Competition
through November 2006. The exhibition will be shown in North Lawn-
The Chicago Architecture Foundation, in collaboration with numerous
dale beginning in the Spring of 2007. The historical materials gathered
partners — the City Design Center, Lawndale Heritage, NHS of Chicago,
in preparation for the exhibition will ultimately be deposited with Lawn-
the Chicago Architectural Club, and the Civic Committee – will stage
dale Heritage and form the core of its historical collection.
an exhibition focused on North Lawndale. Ned Cramer, Curator at the
A design competition organized by the Chicago Architectural Club will
Chicago Architecture Foundation, will co-curate the exhibit with David
be another key feature of the exhibit. The competition will provide a
Brown, Associate Professor at UIC’s School of Architecture and Associ-
structure for different kinds of interaction and collaboration between
ate Director at the City Design Center.
residents and the design community. It seeks to expose residents to a
The “Learning from North Lawndale” exhibit seeks to promote a greater
broad range of ways that the community might fully utilize all or parts
sense of community pride and engagement among residents, and
of its architectural, social, and cultural assets. The winning ideas from
to demonstrate possibilities for economic renewal. The process of
the design competition will be exhibited as part of the North Lawndale
documenting the neighborhood’s history and its contemporary culture
exhibit.
will involve an ongoing collaboration between the exhibit team and Lawndale residents. Community ambassadors, a group of current and former residents, will be enlisted to help formulate major themes for the exhibit, locate records held by residents, identify individuals to be interviewed, and to develop an overall narrative that weaves together North Lawndale’s many stories. The results of these efforts – new and archival text and images as well as oral histories – will be placed into an overall graphic and curatorial context for the exhibition. The exhibit will also feature a comprehensive series of public programs and resident-guided neighborhood tours. It will be shown in downtown locations from July
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 51
PLANNING PHASE REPORT
APPENDIX A Historic Heritage Advisory Group Robert Bruegmann College of Architecture and the Arts University of Illinois at Chicago Ted Christians North Lawndale Resident UMOJA / Manley High School Andrea Danks Kristin Dean Homan Square Community Center Foundation Sam Flowers North Lawndale Resident H.I.C.A. Corporation of North Lawndale Cleophus Glover North Lawndale Resident H.I.C.A. Corporation of North Lawndale Bernard Jennings Lawndale Business & Local Development Corp. Charles Leeks North Lawndale Resident Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago
Kenneth Nelson Chicago Public Library – Douglass Branch Torrio Osborne Franchise Partnership Center for Neighborhood Technology Jim Peters Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois Brent D. Ryan College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs and City Design Center University of Illinois at Chicago Eric Strickland North Lawndale Resident Lawndale Business & Local Development Corp. Susanne Schnell Civic Committee Richard Townsell North Lawndale Resident Lawndale Christian Development Corp. Royce Yeater Midwest Office of the National Trust for Historic Preservation
Russell Lewis Chicago Historical Society
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY ® DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY D CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN C 52CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER C
HISTORIC CHICAGO GREYSTONE INITIATIVE
APPENDIX B
Historic Greystone Steering Team Members Shawn Boler North Lawndale resident Robert Bruegmann Professor, College of Art History, University of Illinois at Chicago
Darris Shaw North Lawndale resident Director of Construction Services, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago Commissioner Bobbie Steele North Lawndale resident Cook County Board of Commissioners
Alderman Michael Chandler 24th Ward, City of Chicago Juri Jones-Moore Assistant Commissioner, Department of Environment, City of Chicago Charles Leeks Board Chair, Lawndale Heritage, North Lawndale resident, North Lawndale Neighborhood Director, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago Bill Povalla Assistant Commissioner, Department of Housing, City of Chicago Seth Reimer Special Projects Coordinator, Department of Environment, City of Chicago Brent D. Ryan Co-Director, City Design Center, University of Illinois at Chicago
Eric Strickland North Lawndale resident Executive Director, Lawndale Business & Local Development Corp. William Townsell North Lawndale resident Assistant Director, CAPS Implementation Office Chicago Police Department Representative Art Turner North Lawndale resident Illinois House of Representatives Jim Wheaton Deputy Director Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago
Susanne Schnell Senior Manager, Economic Development, Civic Committee Research Assistant Professor, City Design Center, University of Illinois at Chicago
CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESI CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENT CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY DESIGN CENTER CITY 53
PLANNING PHASE REPORT