Showing posts with label Wrigley Field. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wrigley Field. Show all posts

Sunday, April 05, 2015

Heavy Metal (construction) vs. the Cubs - new Wrigley Field, on the street, and on tonight's season opener on ESPN

It's like deja vu all over again.  But supersized.
click images for larger view
It was less than a decade ago that the Chicago Cubs were rebuilding the Wrigley Field bleachers, removing the original 1914 brick walls to add over 1,700 new seats, extending the structure out over the public sidewalk.
Child's play.  Now under it's new ownership, the Cubs are completing the transformation from a neighborhood ballpark to the cash machine of a modern franchise eating up the surrounding community.

image source: Wikipedia Commons
Back in 1890's, the Chicago Lutheran Theological Seminary had built their new campus on what was them the largely unsettled outskirts of the city, but the tranquility of the site was soon overtaken by the city's explosive growth.  After the trestled "L" was constructed right at their back door in 1900, their was no stopping the development.  The seminary picked up stakes and moved to Maywood, selling their land and buildings for the construction of the 14,000 seat Weeghman Park.  On opening day in 1914, the Seminary buildings could be seen just outside the stadium's walls.
In 1917, the Chicago Cubs made the park their own. For decades, the team was owned by chewing gum tycoon William J. Wrigley, Jr. and his heirs. The closing years of their reign was marked by a kind of lazy decrepitude that was the source of what has come to be seen as Wrigley's unique charm.  Teams were most often not very good, crowds often dipped into the low thousands, and residents living in the greystones across the street from the park would sometimes drag lawn chairs and beer up to the roof to take in the game.

This was the legacy up through 1981, when the Chicago Tribune bought both the Cubs and Wrigley field for $20.5 million.  Mostly the deal acquired a cheap source of lucrative programming for the Trib's broadcast properties.  The Trib tinkered - executing that 2005-6 renovation and expansion of the bleachers, adding lights to allow for the first night games.  Changes were conservative and incremental.
Outside Wrigley field, however, the future was already simmering right under the Trib's nose.  An astonishing mutant capitalism emerged, catering to fans willing to spend big bucks to emulate the rooftop experience the guys in bermuda shorts sitting on a lawn chair used to get for free.  The greystones became corporate "baseball clubs" which constructed their own slices of bleachers on the rooftops.  In 2004, the Tribune company actually entered into a 20 year revenue-sharing deal to allow the rooftop clubs to continue to poach on their attendance.

By then, however, things had changed dramatically.  The newspaper publishing business was no longer a license to print money, and Tribune Company's revenues and profits were in a free fall.  As journalism waned as an industry, professional sports teams went from the playthings of millionaires to the creator of billionaires.   In 2009, the club the Trib had paid little more than $20 million for less than 30 years before was sold to the Ricketts family for $845 million.  Last month, after the Ricketts sold a minority int6erest in the club for $175 million, Forbes Magazine placed the current value of the Chicago Cubs and their stadium at $1.8 billion.
Last year the Ricketts announced a $575 renovation and expansion plan for Wrigley Field.  A large part of that is taking control of a large part of the surrounding neighborhood.  After a major court victory last week, the Ricketts are in the process of destroying the views and running the rooftop clubs out of business. As part of agreements with the city, they'll be able to shut down adjacent streets on game days.  They've acquired major pieces of the property just to the west of Wrigley.  The nearest block, site of tall coal silos for much of the stadium's history, is currently under construction for a new office building and plaza.  On the other side of Clark street, a Ricketts-owned hotel is next. An 800 car garage is also on the boards.
The original Weegham Field was constructed in just two months.  The renovations, by VOA Architects, aren't so lucky.  A "harsh Chicago winter" has been blamed for the new bleachers not being ready for opening night (tonight, April 5th).  Right now, the site is a festival of steel and steelworkers.
Since the brick wall that Bill Veeck began planting with ivy over 70 years ago, isn't all there at the moment,  there's faux ivy imprinted on the screens for the construction fences.
The Cubs are saying the left-field bleachers will be finished on May 31st. (Even after the concrete is poured, it has to cure for a month.)  The right-field is scheduled to follow sometime in June.
There may be no seats for many season-ticket holders, but the Cubs at least have their priorities straight.   The 6,000 square-foot Jumbotron should be ready for its network debut for the ESPN Sunday Night Baseball broadcast beginning at 7:00 CDT tonight.
Cubs rendering of Jumbo-tron
42 feet high and 95 feet wide, it's as tall as a shoe-horned River North condo project, and a lot more capacious.  To power all the pixels, there looks to be enough wiring to connect a small city.
Right now, the construction crews at Wrigley are putting on quite a show.  Let's hope it doesn't prove more winning than the one on the field.
Clean Up, sculpture by Ted Sitting Crow Garner
Play Ball!

Read More:

Ragged Liberty or Polished Upscaling? Speculating on the Future of Wrigleyville's Mutant Urbanism.
Foul Ball Hotel: the In-Your-Face Mediocrity of The Wrigleyville Sheraton

 Four Buildings and a Funeral - Wrigley: The Architecture that Remains after a Great Company Dies



Monday, July 01, 2013

Chicago Debates Wrigley, A River Runs Through it at CAF, Evanston Design, Robert Ivy, Jewels in July, Architecture 101 on Jeju Island and more. Don't leave town - it's the July Calendar!

Where'd everybody go?

It's full-up summer, and a number of institutions have gone on hiatus for July and August, but for those of us who haven't abandoned the city for our summer homes in Ocean Springs, there's still nearly three dozen great items on the July Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.  (There's also eleven fascinating exhibitions - from Alfonso and Margaret Iannelli, to The Rendered Image, to Take Me to River and more, and we've got information on all these, as well.)

The month gets off to a late start, with this Fourth of July holiday week featuring only Radiant Cooling for Commercial Projects at the CCGT, but things start heating up after that, with Accelerating Sustainability in Chicago's 77 Community Areas at CCGT on Tueday the 9th, and then a panel discussion, A River Runs Through It: Developing and Designing Chicago's Shoreline, with Doug Farr, Benet Haller and others at the Chicago Architecture Foundation, which is also sponsoring the latest in its series of Chicago Debates: Wrigley Fast Pitch: Renovation Wreck or Refreshed Design, at Moe's Cantina  on Clark on Monday the 15th.

John Eifler will talk about Wright's Search for Innovation in Design at Fourth Presbyterian's Gratz Center on Thursday, the 11th,  the same day the CCGT offers up Previewing the GreenBuilt Home Tour, and AIA/Chicago and Design Evanston has a panel discussion with Stuart Cohen, Jack Weiss, Laura Saviano and others on Evanston Architecture, Urbanaism and Landscape Design: 1880 to 2012, tying into the just published Evanston: 150 Years, 150 Places. On Saturday, the 13th, AIA Chicago offers a daytrip to the John DeSalvo Design's Jett Residence.

Archi-treasures annual Jewels in July takes place on Wednesday, the 17th, while Thursday the 19th, USGBC Illinois offers Hartshorne Plunkard's Megan Zack, dbHMS's Sachin Anand and M&R Development's Paul Marucci discussing Parc Huron, the first LEED Gold certified high-rise apartment building in Illinois.  AIA/Chicago offers a tour of Joe Valerio's U of C Laboratory School Early Childhood Center on the 18th, and Revolution Brewery on the 19th.

Sunday the 20th, CCGT offers From Debris to Elegance: A Metamorphosis of Timber Frame Construction, and on Tuesday the 23rd, former Architectural Record editor and current AIA CEO Robert Ivy delivers the keynote, Design Excellence in Affordable Housing: The Multiplier Effect, to this year's Affordable Housing Design Leadership Institute, at a public-welcome Cultural Center event which will also feature the presentation of awards to New York's Via Verde and Chicago's La Casa.  On Thursday and Friday, the 25th and 26th, this year's Complete Streets Symposium takes place at CTA HQ.
The month finishes up on a romantic note with a free Cultural Center screening of Architecture 101, the breakout South Korean hit film about a 35-year old architect being asked by a long-lost first love to rebuild her home on Jeju Island.

And there's a lot more.  So spending the month in a Chicago seemingly stuck in a holding pattern alternating between broiling and freezing, monsoons on the side, isn't really so bad when you can check out all the great items on the July Calendar of Chicago Architectural Events.

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

Foul Ball Hotel: the In-Your-Face Mediocrity of the Wrigleyville Sheraton


image: Chicago Cubs 
Tom Ricketts officially revealed renderings for the Wrigley Field and environs rehab at a City Club breakfast Wednesday morning.  Inside Wrigley, the most prominent change is the addition of a 6,000 square foot Jumbotron screen.  The terra cotta along Wrigley Field's roofline is also scheduled to be restored, and there's a large number of adjustments designed to improve basic functionality.

At least for the moment, I'm leaving the critique of changes to the actual stadium to the Trib's Cheryl Kent.  (Although if she thinks the Landmarks Commission will do anything other than roll over for whatever plan Mayor Rahm Emanuel signs on to, I've got a big shiny bean to sell her.) 

I do want to say a couple words about the 175-room Sheraton hotel the Ricketts want to build across the street from the stadium, where a McDonalds currently stands . . .

It sucks.
image: Chicago Cubs - hotel to left
I think that's pretty clear even from the rudimentary renderings released so far.  The office structure to be built to the north isn't much better, but at least it has a couple of doo-dads - a rounded ramp building and a tall clock tower - stuck on to provide at least a pretension of personality.
image: Chicago Cubs - click for larger image (recommended)
The hotel can't even be bothered with such minimal gestures.  It looks like a parking garage with balconies.  The design makes SCB's design for a mega-development south on Clark look like Pritzker-Prize winning work.  At Wednesday's presentation, the spin was how the hotel is in ‘harmony’ with Wrigley across the street.  And if you're looking to memorialize the cheapness of P.K. Wrigley, I guess you've got a point. (A January Tribune article cited Rebel Roberts and VOA as project architects.)
What was originally Wrigley's charm - an old school stadium smack dab inside a working class neighborhood - is evolving, perhaps inevitably, into a supply-chain designed sports complex.  Oozing like The Blob, it absorbs more and more of the surrounding community.  An untidy, diverse but sub-potential economy of multiple businesses finds itself squeezed out by a centrally controlled, precisely engineered profit engine, constructed out of a Disneyfied historicism reeking nostalgia for a time that never existed.

This is the way the world works, and it would be naive to believe Wrigleyville could somehow be exempt.  With 35,000 square feet of new, state-of-the-art advertising, the area west of the stadium will become a little bit of Ginza on Clark.  All the more reason, then, to embrace the reality and reject mediocrity masquerading as contextualism. The current design for the hotel is ‘like’ Wrigley Field in only the laziest, most cynical sense.  This is one of the most visible corners in Chicago.  Can we please get a building that frankly addresses the needs of its program with a honesty that honors rather than mocks Chicago as a place where relevant architecture can still be made?

Read:
Ragged Liberty or Polished Upscaling?  Wrigleyville's Mutant Urbanism.

Monday, April 01, 2013

If You Build It, Will They Come? Opening Day Shocker: Cubs to Move Downtown?

Click images for larger view
It was the opening day surprise no one had seen coming.    After months of unresolved negotiations between the Ricketts family, city officials, community groups and rooftop owners, the Chicago Cubs on Sunday officially spurned an offer of free land from suburban Rosemont and revealed they will build a completely new stadium in downtown Chicago.
At a hastily called press conference at the bottom of the 86-foot wide hole excavated for Santiago Calatrava's abandoned Chicago Spire project, a sedated Tom Ricketts stood next to a beaming Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who called the situation a win-win . . .
Number one, the Cubs stay in Chicago. 
Number two, Chicago will have a first-class, Olympics-ready stadium that guarantees the Cubs will be a Chicago team for the next 50 years, and beyond. 
Number three - there is no number three.  
Number four, the neighborhood, the rooftop owners and the fans will still have Wrigley Field. It's a museum quality facility, a historic landmark, and so we're making it . . . a museum.  Everything that people have loved about the Cubs through all these years when the closest they got to a World Series was when the team bus got lost coming back from Busch Stadium, everything about that great Wrigley experience - the atmosphere, the food, the rooftop bleachers -that's going to be there. 
There'll be a game, every day, during the regular season.  They won't be real games, but they'll look just like it.  The players will be animatronic.  I've seen them.  They're amazing.  There's a little problem right now with the animatronic players having more credible careers than the guys signed to the actual Cubs roster.  But they're working on it.

Santiago Calatrava, who, as you may know, was to design the world's tallest building right where we're standing now, is coming back to Chicago, back to this site, to build what I believe will be the greatest stadium in the world.  This amazing hole we're at the bottom of this morning will fulfill its original purpose.   But . . . in a new way. 
As you know, right to the west of where we are now, we're in the process of constructing the Navy Pier Flyover, which will provide an express path for bicycles over Grand and Illinois.  Now, we're adding ramps, from that path, that will lead right into this hole.  People will be able to bike to Calatrava Field, and park - securely - in the largest bicycle garage the world has ever seen. 
And, we believe, there will still be enough space left in this hole to bury the crushed hopes of Cubs fans for many, many decades to come.
The new, two-block square stadium will actually cross Lake Shore Drive and make use of land, now undeveloped, originally earmarked for a park honoring Jean Baptiste du Sable.  Emanuel anticipated possible objections . . .
As you know, we're marking the 10th anniversary of Mayor Daley closing down Meigs Field, on Northerly Island.  The intention was to make it a park, but that didn't happen.  The only thing that's happened is the temporary Charter One concert pavilion.  It's been very successful, and by that I mean it brings in money, which, frankly, is more than you can say about all those plants on the rest of the island. 
We've done studies, very extensive studies, and again, frankly, every one of them has come to the conclusion that vegetation is a drag on the economy we can no longer afford.  You do have, and I'll be the first to admit this, contracts for spraying pesticides, for watering, for basic gardening.  But if Chicago is to be a world-class city, we need more, and, as mayor, it is my responsibility to make sure we get it.

And so, at DuSable Park, we're cutting to the chase.  Instead of ten years of waiting for a park, we're going to skip directly to not having a park - ever.  We're still working the numbers on how much money this will save. I haven't gotten all the specifics.  But I believe I have heard the word “gazillions” included in the conversations.
Budget Director Alexandra Holt explained the finances behind the deal.
The financing for this truly amazing stadium will also be truly amazing.  Funds from the new Entire North Side TIF district will allow the City of Chicago to guarantee the Ricketts family profits of at least $50 million a year on Wrigley Field, which will now be a private museum, much like the Field Museum, but with more curators.   These TIF funds will also finance the $1.5 billion cost of constructing the stadium, plus an anticipated $1.2 billion in overruns in executing Mr. Calatrava's unique corkscrew design, for which we soon hope to conclude negotiations with National League Baseball over the telescoping configuration of the playing field.

What this means in the end, however, is that the City of Chicago will have sole ownership not only of the stadium, but of the Chicago Cubs, which will become the first major league sports team under municipal ownership.  We anticipate major efficiencies from this, beginning with the replacement of  players with multi-million dollar contracts by members of the family of Cook County Assessor Joseph Berrios.   This, alone, we expect to result in savings of tens of thousands of dollars each year.

More importantly, the City of Chicago will also be sole owner of the casino which, we are confident, will soon be enabled by legislation in Springfield, and which will occupy the two bottom-most levels of the hole we are standing in now.  The Ace in the Hole Casino will be a state-of-the-art facility, with world-class restaurants, luxury accommodations, and a 30,000 niche columbarium for gamblers who have expired on site, or just want to be closer after they die to where all their money went.

We are especially grateful to the Village of Rosemont, for putting us in touch with some of their most effective associates in developing an innovative system to reclaim lost revenues from the markers of overextended gamblers.  We believe that, working together, we will make write-offs a thing of the past, and set a new standard for the gaming industry.  We also appreciate the very persuasive negotiators our friends in Rosemont sent in to convince the Ricketts family that his plan was in their best interest.  Accordingly, we are working very closely with Speaker Madigan to advance in Springfield the Slot Machines for Outlet Malls within 1,000 feet of the Balmoral Exit bill.  
Looking up to the vagrant sunlight 70 feet above him, Mayor Emanuel restated how the new stadium plan extends his vision for Chicago . . . 
I want to stress again, this stadium will not only provide the best baseball viewing experience in any city in America, it will also be an Olympics quality stadium.  What does that mean?  It means that next time, things will be different.  I know, in the past, some of my predecessors (Mayor Daley) have promised Chicago an Olympics and it didn't happen.  I'm going to change that.  I believe - and some of the best business leaders in the city tell me the same thing - that with this stadium, Chicago will host not only the 2020, but the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympics, the 2022 Winter Olympics, and the Lingerie  Football League Championships for at least 16 of the next 30 years. We don't have the final figures yet, but we believe it will bring 3 trillion dollars in new spending to Chicago over the next two decades - give or take 3 trillion dollars - and it will allow us to buy every homeless person in Chicago a condo in Miami.
photograph: Bob Johnson
There's an old saying that when we find yourself in a hole, stop digging.  Well, my friends of the press, look around you.  We're at the bottom of the biggest hole you've ever seen.  But when it comes to digging deeper, this administration is just getting started.
Read:  Analysis by Ben Joravsky
Read also:  Daley Center in Line for $250 Million Makeover?
And: Pictures of Wombats

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Ragged Liberty or Polished Upscaling? Speculating on the Future of Wrigleyville's Mutant Urbanism

click images for larger view
 If there's such a thing as original sin, there's also original charm.  That's the feel-good karma that Wrigley Field and the Chicago Cubs have made a long life of, even down to today.  As battle lines are drawn over major renovations to the landmark stadium, how they're to be paid for, and how they'll affect the surrounding neighborhood, it’s a good time to take a look at the three radically different ecosystems of Wrigleyville's past, present, and intended future.

Once upon a time - let's say, a day in September, 1965 - you could amble down to Wrigleyville and take in a day game.  You had no choice; Wrigley had no lights.   You may have driven down with your Dad, cruising down the street until you found a kid holding a sign directing you into an alley to a spot in somebody's back yard where you could park for a buck or two.  Or maybe you had called in sick and come down via the Howard L or Clark Street bus. 
Either way, you would have found yourself in a solid, working-class neighborhood, well-worn buildings ugly as sin and just as comfortable.  If you had arrived early, you might have grabbed a beer and a burger at one of the taverns just outside the stadium, bought peanuts and a cap from a street vendor, or just looked into the shop windows.  You'd pass through the turnstile and settle into the 35,000-seat stadium along with that day's other 550 other paid attendees and, season safely lost, watch the Cubs lose to the Los Angeles Dodgers, with Sandy Koufax getting the save.  You could look out past the outfield, past the bleachers, and see, on one of the rooftops of the many graystones that lined Wrigley along Waveland and Sheffield, some skinny old guy in bermuda shorts and a white T-shirt sitting in a lawn chair taking in the game, in one hand, a bottle of Meister Brau, in the other, a big, stinky cigar you would swear you could smell from your seat four hundred feet away.

The stadium and the team were the personal possession of one P.K. Wrigley, the taciturn son of chewing gum tycoon William Wrigley, Jr.  The senior Wrigley had gained control of the team in 1918, and for decades ran the operation with his team President, Bill Veeck, Sr. Together they were known as the “double-bills”, a pun on the gum company's Doublemint brand.

The teams weren't always terrible, and when they weren't, the old stadium would fill and the streets would become a continuous mass of people, but the last year the Cubs made the World Series was 1945.  The last time they won it 1908.

Here's really all you need to know to measure Wrigleyville then and Wrigleyville now.  In 1977, P.K. was sent to the showers for the last time, and in 1981 his heirs sold the Cubs and their stadium to the Chicago Tribune - for $20,500,000, a figure only slightly more than the 2012 salary of just one player, Alfonso Soriano.  When the Trib resold the team, after less than thirty years, to the Ricketts family in 2009, the price tag had escalated to $845 million.  To understand the urban fabric of Wrigleyville today, just follow the money.

When the stadium, designed by architect Zachary Taylor Davis, was constructed in 1914 for Charles Weeghman's Whales, of the Federal League, the tall silos of a Coal and Coke distributor were right across the street.  Most of the greystones we see today were already in place.
Then, Wrigley Field was part of the neighborhood.  Today, it is the neighborhood.  Nowhere can you see the disruptive effect of the new Moneyball economics than among the greystones.

Those guys on the roof with their folding chairs have long since gone the way of the Potawatomi.  As early as 1938, the Sheffield Baseball Club sold $5.00 rooftop seats for the World Series, but after the Trib bought the team, the trend hit warp speed, fueled by 1989 a Championship series sold-out in the stadium.  Bare rooftops became slightly more finished rooftops, and then apartments became clubhouses.  A guy named Tom Gramatis became a “rooftop mogul”, owning not just the Sheffield Baseball Club, but two other buildings, as well.
Instead of places to live, the greystones and their neighbors became, over time, the strange machines of a mutant urbanism, creating a Magritte-like architectural landscape where rooftop after rooftop is crowned with its own metallic bleachers.  If baseball has become a billionaires' clubhouse, rooftop clubs are the millionaires outpost, with estimated annual revenues exceeding $20 million.
In 2004,  in exchange for 12 more night games, Wrigley Field won designation as an official Chicago landmark, with protection for historic elements such as the old scoreboard and ivy-covered brick.  After the Cubs sued the rooftop owners and threatened to block their views, owners agreed in a 2004, 20-year contract, to giving the ballclub 17% of their take.

The battle to fix Wrigley: the end of public funding?

Joe Ricketts could well be remembered as the man who ended the long run of sports teams building stadiums on the public dime.  Valuations of sports club have reached astronomical heights - last year Forbes magazine put the Cubs at $879 million, fourth highest in professional baseball.  Along with swelling revenue streams from escalating ticket prices and cable and TV rights, public subsidies have a lot to do with it.  It was a great scheme: a team threatens to bolt a city unless it gets government to build it a new stadium.  The taxpayer pays the bill; the owners reap the benefits.

Recent studies, however, call into question just how much public-funded stadiums actually benefit  cities, especially when the cities are in the usual throes of fiscal crisis.  In the case of the new, $639 million publicly-financed  stadium for the Florida Marlins, it was revealed that just one $91 million loan has ballooned into a $1.2 billion obligation for taxpayers

When new Mayor Rahm Emanuel came into office in 2011, he was disinclined to write the Cubs any blank checks.  Even so, he was reported to be ready to sign off on a plan to split the costs of $300 million in Wrigley renovations - $150 million from the Ricketts; $150 million from easing the landmark restrictions to allow for more advertising.  Other plans -  for a Tax-Increment-District, or for allowing the Ricketts to divert future increments in amusement tax revenues from general use to funding Wrigley improvements  - were also floated at various times.

And then came old man Ricketts.  At the height of the 2012 Presidential campaign, the Wall Street Journal ran a report that family patriarch Joseph Ricketts was about to help bankroll $10 million in virulent, racially-tinged ads attacking Barack Obama.

Suddenly, Tom Ricketts, Joe's son and the guy who was actually running the Cubs operation, couldn't get Rahm to return, must less take his calls.   Usually a man of sweetest temperament, Emanuel, Obama's former Obama Chief-of-Staff , was said to be “livid”.
As the Ricketts were left dangling in the wind, they waited, and then they went back to the drawing board.  Last month, they came up with a new plan for Wrigley, one that asks for zero dollars in public funding.  In exchange for a commitment of $300 million over five years  for renovations, the Ricketts would get what Emanuel has called “The Fenway Plan”, after the $285 million rehab plan for the stadium used by the Boston Red Sox.  Let the Ricketts accumulate the revenue they need by removing limitations on the number of night games, easing some landmark protections, and shutting down Sheffield and Waveland for game-day street fairs.
Worried rooftop owners are fighting back, trying to stop closing the streets on game days, and coming up with a counter-proposal to allow the Cubs to place advertising signs, not at Wrigley Field, where they might block rooftop views, but on the rooftops themselves, producing perhaps $10 million in new revenue, to be shared with the Cubs, who quickly dismissed the idea.  (Is it just me, or does this mockup look especially cheesy?) 

In its modern prime, Wrigley Field was the urbane alternative to the kind of isolated suburban stadiums, isolated among the expressways and moated with acres of surface parking lots, that sprang up in the 60's and 70's.  More recently, however, new baseball stadiums have returned to the center city, emulating the attractive qualities of old classics like Fenway and Wrigley, itself.  Ironically, the long-range plans of the Ricketts for Wrigley entail acquiring and developing a lot of the land on the ballpark's periphery, in essence making Wrigleyville more like those totally-controlled, self-contained, old-style "modern" stadiums.
The Ricketts already own the triangle that once held the Coal and Coke silos, later home to the one-story Yum Yum donuts.  Originally, there was talk of building a large parking garage on the site, but right now it's highest use is as a winter skating rink.
Just last year, the family paid $20 million to acquire from McDonald's the large restaurant and parking lot the fast food chain owned across from the skating rink.  Last month, the Rickett's announced a deal with Sheraton to construct a boutique hotel on the site.  (Big Macs included - part of the 2011 sales agreement reportedly gives McDonald's the right to open a restaurant somewhere on the redeveloped property.)

Will the Ricketts continue to land bank their way through Wrigleyville?  Rooftop owners retain a paranoid fear that the Ricketts's ultimate goal is to drive them out of business and buy up their properties on the cheap.  And those aren't the only parcels that might be had at a bargain.
There's the Wrigleyville Hotel on Clark south of Addison, a $5 million boutique project that has yet to open.
 The Ricketts/Sheraton deal also put the screws to developer Steve Schultz's plan for a proposed 137-room Hyatt Place that was to have had anchored Addison Park on Clark, a mega-development also featuring 135 apartments and nearly 150,000 square feet of retail.  Addison Park would replace all the current buildings along the southeast intersection of Clark and Addison, except the abject Sportsworld store on the corner, which survives in the renderings as indomitable as a cockroach.
Schulz had been slowly acquiring the existing properties over the past several years.  In 2010, there was an unveiling of project renderings by Solomon Cordwell Buenz, but now faced with the Ricketts' hotel project, investors are throwing in the towel on their own Hyatt.  The retail component also remains in question.  At the time of the 2010 announcement, names being floated as potential retail anchors included the likes of Best Buy and Dominick's, big box marketers who now find their business models under siege by, respectively, the internet and Wal-Mart.  Despite approval for the new project by the Chicago Plan Commission, all of the old threatened buildings - at the moment at least - remain standing.
It's an interesting time.  The thrust of the age of the supply chain is consolidation and scaling up, but  on Clark street, you'll still find this tiny relic, originally a service station . . .
No matter how charming, such a building is simply inconceivable today.  There is no scenario under which it could support any function returning an adequate profit.  Similarly, when we walk past the condemned buildings of Clark Street, you find a hodgepodge motley of structures which, with the possible exception of the large cold storage warehouse, manage to both be too inconsequential to register any real individual presence, and too carelessly varied to resolve in any visually coherent way.
SCB's John Lahey challenged observers to find anything in this mix that would qualify as a great building, and he's absolutely right.  This stretch of Clark Street goes beyond Rem Koolhaas “messy”; to full-up Sons of Anarchy territory.  It's a succession of small businesses sucking everything they can out of peak times of the baseball season while jabbing elbows into each others guts to attract enough patrons to survive another winter.  It's so graceless it's claustrophobic.
And yet, there's a raw vitality to this streetscene dump of parking lots, workhorse buildings of the homeliest kind, cell phone towers and crude massive billboards, this Improv Olympics of rowdy urban fabric, that SCB's polite mega-building will never be able to equal.

I once heard noted zoning lawyer Jack Guthman, arguing against what he saw as excessive landmarking, remarking that no one needs more Class C office space.  The fact of the matter, however, is that it's the blue-chip tenants of the Class A buildings that you most often read about finding more and more ways to downsize their workforce.  It's in the cheap, Class C space that you find the true entrepreneurs - trying, failing, trying harder, failing better - until one or two become the breakthrough companies of tomorrow.  It's the same way with the small businesses along Clark and Addison.  Some struggle just to keep the doors open.  Most will never escape the shadow of their own neighborhood, but once in a while, one of them will create something entirely new, something that will radiate outward to enrich the character of the city.
There won't be room for those kind of dicey tenants in the big sparkling new building.   There, they'll need high rents just to make back their investment, the kind of rents that only big chains with their heavy standardization and high dollar volumes can guarantee.

This conflict between the bureaucratic and the creative was referenced in a Monday Tribune profile of Bob Mariano, formerly of the Dominick's grocery chain and now CEO of Roundy's, the Milwaukee parent of Mariano Fresh Markets.  Mariano talks about the inspection of a deli department by a team from the Safeway mega-chain that had just acquired Dominick's.  They asked how many varieties of potato salad were prepared for sale.  Mariano answered seven.  The Safeway response was “you only need three.”  As you might imagine, a few years down the line, Dominick's is struggling to define itself and Safeway is closing locations.  Mariano's, with its sparkling stores and goal of becoming “the Nordstrom of the grocery world,” is successful and expanding.

Real life has a way of confounding expectations.  If you were up on the rooftop with that guy in the lawn chair fifty years ago, could you ever have imagined how it would all eventually play out with all those surreal mini-stadiums?  There's no doubt that the Ricketts and developers like Schulz are looking to make Wrigleyville a lot more dense, a lot more uniform, consolidated and controlled, but if the recent history of this historic neighborhood proves anything, it's that nothing turns out exactly the way you plan.  And that what keeps cities interesting and creative.