The much-publicized void left behind in the wake of Santiago Calatrava’s failed Chicago Spire proposal is finally being attended to, as now the Chicago Sun-Times and other outlets are reporting on developer Related Midwest’s start of construction for the SOM-designed replacement at 400 Lake Shore Drive.
The 76-foot hole was partially filled by the 12-hour concrete pour required for the mat foundation for the two-tower scheme that will yield 1,100 apartments and the new DuSable Park at the three-acre site by Q3 2027.
This update comes after caisson permits for the project were granted in December. David Childs is responsible for the design, which references Chicago's vernacular masonry and terra cotta architecture in two faceted 765- and 857-foot forms. Urbanize Chicago reports there to be a total of nine million tons of concrete poured to make way for the taller Tower One. The remaining sub-grade construction work is expected to be completed by the beginning of 2025.
The firm was named to deliver a replacement in May of 2018, ten years after Related put a halt to its plans for what would have been a record-setting 2,000-foot tower due to fallout from the 2008 financial crisis. Costs for the new scheme have been reported at $1 billion.
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