To my knowledge the city is not involved in any way with any of the
following Downtown projects in planning or currently under construction:

212 Lofts
Security Lofts
918 Lofts
Bookmen Lofts and Bookmen Stacks
The Carlyle
6 Quebec
Tower Lofts
Callumet Lofts (St. Anthony Main)
Pillsbury A Mill project (St. Anthony Main)
710 Lofts
Rock Island Lofts
Basset Creek Lofts
Lennox Flats
Elliott Park Lofts
American Trio Lofts
Artists Quarter Lofts (Eat Street)
Franklin Lofts (Eat Street)
Greenleaf Lofts (Eat Street)

It seems to me that the market must be sufficiently deep or these
companies and individuals wouldn't be investing in all of this right
now.  If they're wrong and there isn't a market it's the developers
problem, not the cities.

Most of the units that have begun lately are priced in the $200K - $350K
range which is definitely not high end for any new construction in the
entire metro area.  That's not to say its cheap but there has been a
definite shift lately toward that more moderate range in the downtown
market.  The 710 Lofts and Calumet Lofts even had units below $160K.  Is
that affordable?  That depends on you definition but I'd say so.

I've lived in the North Loop since 1998 and can say that is a lot more
soul here now than there was when I moved here.  There was no one over
here and no reason to be here if you didn't live  or work here for the
most part.  

A lot of the developmennt over the past 6 years has been on vacant lots
and parking lots, not things worth trying to preserve.  A lot of the
Loft conversions have taken place in buildings that were partially or
mostly abandoned.  Furthermore, no one has been pushing to knock down
any of the siginificant buildings so our architectural history is
preserved.  There simply hasn't been the massive gentrification
(exisiting population being pushed out) that people tend to think there
has been.  

Do the developers make a lot of money on these projects?  I would guess
that they make plenty.  For example, my understanding is that Jim
Stanton of Shamrock Development has owned the parking lots that many of
his projects have been built on since the mid-eighties when he most
likely bought them for a song.  But why shouldn't he be able to profit? 
There was a lot of risk inherent in investing in a basically abandoned
industrial district in the mid-eighties.  He seems to have guessed right
on the investment though.

I guess I don't see how the continued development in the North Loop and
Downtown is detrimental to the city in general since it has added
population, tax base, and construction and design jobs to the city at a
steady rate for several years.  There are always some negative
unintended consequences but the benefits in this case seem to far
outweigh the costs.

Nick Frank
North Loop
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