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606 Trail

(Above) Mayor Rahm Emanuel rides on the opening day last year of the Bloomingdale Line, also known as The 606, a former elevated railroad that was converted into a greenway and passes through the Logan Square neighborhood on Chicago’s northwest side. (Click on images to view larger versions.)

Logan Square…
One of North America’s ‘15 hottest’ retail neighborhoods

The winds of neighborhood change continue to blow across Chicago’s north and northwest sides with some surprising results, experts say.

18-Jul-16 – When it comes to Bucktown, Logan Square, and Wicker Park, the boundaries of the steadily upcoming West Town neighborhood have blurred.

Development of the 606 Trail and the City of Chicago’s bold move to adjust the southern boundary of Logan Square to North Avenue (1600 North) from Bloomingdale Avenue (1800 North) a couple of years ago created some panache for the former blue-collar neighborhood.

Now, Logan Square, populated diversely with a mix of young professionals – including techies, graphic designers, and tattoo artists – and long-term ethnic residents, is being described as the “Midwest headquarters of hip.”

606 Trail The 606 Trail, an elevated 2.7-mile-long bike and jogging venue, runs west along Bloomingdale Avenue from Ashland Avenue (1600 West) to Ridgeway Avenue (3732 West).

The 14.6-acre former elevated railroad provides a recreational connection to Humboldt Park and features several new pocket parks. The trail, which features 38 bridges, connects sections of the Bucktown, Humboldt Park, Logan Square, and Wicker Park neighborhoods.

Recently, Logan Square has been named one of the 15 “hottest urban retail markets across North America” by Cushman & Wakefield, a national commercial real estate services company. The ranking was compiled by querying hundreds of experts across the country, including brokers, property managers, appraisers, and marketing executives.

According to the report, key criteria for a “cool” neighborhood are: walkability, bicycle friendliness, and ease of public transportation – as well as availability of places to dine and enjoy music.

Restaurants and bars that have gained national attention over the past decade in Logan Square include Lula Café, Longman & Eagle, and Revolution Brewing.

Residents say that Logan Square’s hipness began two decades ago when artists flocked to the area from Wicker Park when rents became too expensive. The launch of the Logan Square Farmers Market in 2007 “was a major touchstone,” but growth since 2010 has been driven by new restaurants and bars, according to the report.

The average household income in Logan Square is $84,529. Sixty percent of the adult residents in the neighborhood are college educated. One of every three residents range in age from 20 to 34, and 58 percent are apartment renters.

Real estate experts say the retail boom in Logan Square and the neighborhood’s related hipness has had a major impact on housing values and rents, economic facts that have made both the arts community and long-time less affluent ethnic residents worry about gentrification.

Wicker Park and Bucktown are “still cool while going mainstream,” notes the report.

Both of these neighborhoods are considered more affluent than Logan Square, which could explain why profit-minded residential developers continue to stretch the boundaries of Bucktown into West Bucktown, which means west of Western, and West Wicker Park, which means into Humboldt Park, also west of Western and south of North Avenue.

(Right) Greystone three-flats in Logan Square like this one are commanding rent levels similar to properties in Old Town and Lincoln Park.

Photo by Don DeBat

But there is no denying the rise in residential property values in West Town, especially west of Western. Existing housing stock in Logan Square includes a mix of vintage mansions, single-family homes, new condominiums, and renovated two-flat and three-flat Greystone apartments that line wide boulevards and side streets.

Experts say apartment rents are skyrocketing in Logan Square. Renovated one-bedroom-plus-den garden apartments are going for $1,795, up from about $900 to $1,000 a few years ago. Nicely redone two-bedroom-with-den, two-bath units are leasing for $2,400-plus. That’s nearly in the bracket of Old Town and Lincoln Park.

Enclave

For new construction, home shoppers should tour the sales center at Enclave (above), a new-construction development of 49 upscale row homes underway on a two-acre site at 2500 West Cortland Street, just steps from The 606 in West Bucktown.

Sales at Enclave grand opened in mid-April, and 20 fee-simple row homes already have been sold to a mix of young professionals and move-up buyers, said Jennifer Arons of Guardian Properties, the developer of the project in a joint venture with Chicago-based Harlem Irving Companies.

Jennifer Arons “Demolition of an existing former factory building on the site is underway and construction is scheduled to start on the row homes in late July,” said Arons (left).

Each three-bedroom or four-bedroom row home at Enclave features 3.5 baths, den and/or family room, roof deck, 2,450 to 3,027 square feet of living area, and a two-car garage. Pre-construction base prices range from $669,900 to $759,900.

The development is bounded by Homer Street (1950 North) on the north, Cortland (1900 North) on the south, and Campbell Avenue (2500 West) on the east. Call 773-235-3333, or visit www.EnclaveResidential.com.

Bucktown’s average household income is $109,494. 77 percent of residents are college educated. About 43 percent are age 20 to 34. Renters account for 58 percent of the neighborhood’s population.

Wicker Park also scored high marks for walkability and nightlife. The average household income is $102,698 with 73 percent being college educated. Nearly four in ten are between 20 and 34 years old. Some 57 percent are renters.