Tax Increment Financing Districts

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Tax Increment Financing Districts TIF CITY OF Tax Increment Financing D CHICAGO istricts - City of Chicago (Far South) 79TH ST/ CICERO TIF CITY OF TIF CITY OF TIF CITY OF CHICAGO CHICAGO TIF CITY OF CHICAGO 79TH ST/ 83RD ST/ HYDE PARK CHICAGO 79TH ST/ STEWART TIF CITY OF SOUTH SW HWY TOWNSHIP TIF CITY OF VINCENNES CHICAGO CHICAGO TIF CITY OF STONY ISLAND / CHICAGO TIF CITY OF CHICAGO BURNSIDE SOUTH CHICAGO 87TH/ WORKS F COTTAGE TIF CITY O 95TH ST/ CHICAGO WESTERN 95TH ST/ TIF VIL OF F TIF VIL OF TIF CITY O STONY ISLAND OAK LAWN EVERGREEN PARK CHICAGO TRAIN STATION 95TH ST 89TH ST / STATE ST TIF CITY OF CHICAGO TIF VIL OF STONY ISLAND/ TIF CITY OF OAK LAWN TIF CITY OF BURNSIDE CHICAGO COMMUTER CHICAGO TIF CITY OF COMMERCIAL AVE PARKING LOT WESTERN/ CHICAGO ROCK 105TH ST/ ISLAND VINCENNES TIF CITY OF CHICAGO TIF CITY OF NORTH PULLMAN CHICAGO LAKE ROSELAND/ TIF VIL OF OAK LAWN MICHIGAN TOWNSHIP TIF CITY OF 111ST ST/CICERO AVE CHICAGO LAKE 119TH / I-57 TOWNSHIP TIF CITY OF CHICAGO TIF CITY OF CHICAGO TIF CITY OF TIF CITY OF LAKE CALUMET TIF CITY OF H ST/KEDZIE AVE CHICAGO 111T CHICAGO CHICAGO W PULLMAN EWING AVE IND PARK 119TH ST/ HALSTED TIF VIL OF ALSIP PULASKI ROAD CORRIDOR TIF CITY OF BLUE ISLAND - 4 TIF CITY OF CHICAGO TIF VIL OF HYDE TIF CITY TIF VIL OF 126TH ST/ TIF VIL OF CALUMET OF BLUE CALUMET PARK TORRENCE TIF CITY OF CALUMET PARK - 5 ISLAND - 6 PARK - 4 TOWNSHIP CHICAGO PARK TIF VIL OF ALSIP 134TH ST/ TIF VIL OF 123RD ST TIF VIL OF AVENUE K CALUMET TIF CITY OF CRESTWOOD TIF CITY O PARK - 3 CHICAG 135TH ST/ OF BLUE ER IF VIL OF CALUMET RIV CICERO AVE TIF VIL OF ROBBINS ISLAND - 5 T CALUMET CALUMET PARK - 2 TOWNSTHIFI PVIL OF RIVERDALE TIF VIL OF TIF VIL OF NORTHEAST RIVERDALE RIVERDALE RIVERDALE OF TIF VIL OF CENTRAL IND/ TIF VIL TIF CITY OF ASHLAND/ RIVERDALE 138 STEWART DOLTON - 3 BLUE ISLAND - 2 138TH ST NORTHWEST LEGEND This map represents tax year 2012 TIFs only David Orr 0 0.5 1 Former and future TIFs are not shown This map was created using Cook County GIS Data by the Cook County Clerk Map Dept Cook County Clerk Miles 4th Floor 118 N Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60602 www.cookcountyclerk.com ©2013 Cook County, Illinois; All Rights Reserved.
Recommended publications
  • Our Great Rivers Confidential Draft Draft
    greatriverschicago.com OUR GREAT RIVERS CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT DRAFT A vision for the Chicago, Calumet and Des Plaines rivers TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgments 2 Our Great Rivers: A vision for the Chicago, Calumet and Des Plaines rivers Letter from Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel 4 A report of Great Rivers Chicago, a project of the City of Chicago, Metropolitan Planning Council, Friends of the Chicago River, Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning and Ross Barney Architects, through generous Letter from the Great Rivers Chicago team 5 support from ArcelorMittal, The Boeing Company, The Chicago Community Trust, The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and The Joyce Foundation. Executive summary 6 Published August 2016. Printed in Chicago by Mission Press, Inc. The Vision 8 greatriverschicago.com Inviting 11 Productive 29 PARTNERS Living 45 Vision in action 61 CONFIDENTIAL Des Plaines 63 Ashland 65 Collateral Channel 67 Goose Island 69 FUNDERS Riverdale 71 DRAFT DRAFT Moving forward 72 Our Great Rivers 75 Glossary 76 ARCHITECTURAL CONSULTANT OUR GREAT RIVERS 1 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This vision and action agenda for the Chicago, Calumet and Des Plaines rivers was produced by the Metropolitan Planning RESOURCE GROUP METROPOLITAN PLANNING Council (MPC), in close partnership with the City of Chicago Office of the Mayor, Friends of the Chicago River and Chicago COUNCIL STAFF Metropolitan Agency for Planning. Margaret Frisbie, Friends of the Chicago River Brad McConnell, Chicago Dept. of Planning and Co-Chair Development Josh Ellis, Director The Great Rivers Chicago Leadership Commission, more than 100 focus groups and an online survey that Friends of the Chicago River brought people to the Aaron Koch, City of Chicago Office of the Mayor Peter Mulvaney, West Monroe Partners appointed by Mayor Rahm Emanuel, and a Resource more than 3,800 people responded to.
    [Show full text]
  • Calumet Area: an Inventory of the Region's Resources, Illinois
    THE CALUMET AREA: AN INVENTORY OF THE REGION=S RESOURCES by Ruth Sparks Seeking natural areas in the Calumet area seems, at first, a hopeless task. Several Chicago neighborhoods and southern suburbs are located here, as well as the industries, service providers, and retail establishments that provide employment for thousands of people. With nearly a million people living here, the human population density is more than 4,000 people per square mile. A few natural nooks and crannies still exist, however, some of which contain unexpected treasures. The area is part of the Greater Chicago Metropolitan Region and includes five townships in southern Cook County and a small fraction of Will County. The core of the area is Lake Calumet, but the Calumet Area as defined in this report extends from the Illinois-Indiana border west to just beyond Tinley Park and Burbank and, north to south, from 95th Street in Chicago to Lansing, covering 185 square miles within the watersheds of the Calumet River and the man-made Calumet Sag Channel. Sizeable tributaries include the Little Calumet River and the Grand Calumet River, which drain the eastern portion of the area before joining to form the Calumet River. Stony Creek, in the northwestern part of the area, has a mild slope and gently flowing water. Midlothian Creek and Tinley Creek are located in hillier country south of the Calumet Sag Channel and so have steeper slopes and faster moving water. The Calumet Union Drainage Ditch is a man-made drainage canal which flows into the upper Little Calumet River.
    [Show full text]
  • Calumet Open Space Reserve Plan
    Calumet Open Space Reserve Plan 2 Dear Chicagoans: The idea for the Calumet Open Space Reserve was born out of the Calumet Area Land Use Plan, a plan for sustainable development of the land around Lake Calumet on the southeast side of Chicago. In attempting to create a plan that promoted industrial redevelopment while protecting wetlands, the opportunity to create an enormous urban nature preserve emerged. As proposed by the Calumet Area Land Use Plan and as detailed in this document, approximately 4,000 acres of the Calumet area are slated to become part of the Calumet Open Space Reserve. These lands and waters support large populations of herons, egrets and other water birds. Marshes and open lands will eventually be interconnected by hiking and biking trails. The acquisition and management of the first round of properties for the Calumet Open Space Reserve is already being undertaken by a coalition of state and local agencies. Residents and workers in the Calumet area will benefit from daily interaction with nature, and all Chicago residents will be able to enjoy what will become the City’s largest nature reserve. Eventually it will be possible to bike from the Loop to the Reserve on protected trails. Together with the City’s Tax Increment Financing (TIF) District and Planned Manufacturing District (PMD) established in the Calumet area to sustain and develop industry, this plan for the Calumet Open Space Reserve will help bring a bright future to Chicago’s southeast side. Sincerely, Richard M. Daley Mayor Calumet Open Space Reserve
    [Show full text]
  • Special Places in the Lake Calumet Area
    United States Department of Agriculture Special Places in the Forest Service Lake Calumet Area North Central Research Station Herbert W. Schroeder General Technical Report NC-249 TABLE OF CONTENTS METHODS ...................................................................................................... 1 RESPONDENTS .............................................................................................. 2 SPECIAL PLACE DESCRIPTIONS ................................................................... 2 The Value of Special Places.......................................................................... 4 Natural Features and Environments ............................................................. 5 Human and Built Features............................................................................ 7 Memories of the Past, Hopes for the Future .............................................. 10 DISCUSSION.................................................................................................. 11 CONCLUSIONS.............................................................................................. 13 LITERATURE CITED ....................................................................................... 13 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ................................................................................. 13 APPENDIX ...................................................................................................... 14 North Central Research Station U.S. Department of Agriculture - Forest Service 1992 Folwell Avenue St.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Resource Study of Pullman National Monument
    Chapter 6 EXISTING CONDITIONS The existing conditions and recent alterations in the Town of Pullman and the factory sites have been addressed well in other documents. The Pullman Historic District Reconnaissance Survey completed in 2013 offers clear and succinct assessments of extant buildings in Pullman. Likewise, the Archaeological Overview & Assessment completed in 2017 covers the current conditions of factory remnants. A draft revised National Historic Landmark nomination for Pullman Historic District, completed in August 1997 and on deposit at Pullman National Monument, includes a list of contributing and non-contributing structures.612 For the purposes of this Historic Resources Report, the existing conditions of built environment cultural resources that are not addressed in the aforementioned documents will be considered briefly for their potential significance for research and interpretation. In addition, this section will consider historical documents valuable for studying change over time in the extant built environment and also strategies for using Pullman’s incredibly rich built environment as primary historical evidence. Figure 6.1 offers a visual map showing the approximate age of extant buildings as well as major buildings missing today that were present on the 1892 Rascher Map. Most obvious from this map are the significant changes in the industrial core. Importantly, many of the 1880s buildings that no longer stand were replaced gradually over the twentieth century at first as part of the Pullman Company’s changing technological needs, then after 1959 as part of deindustrialization and the reinvention of the Calumet region. The vast majority of domestic structures from the Town of Pullman’s original construction survive.
    [Show full text]
  • Archaeological Overview & Assessment, Pullman National Historical Monument, Town of Pullman, Chicago, Illinois
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Midwest Archeological Center Lincoln, Nebraska Archaeological Overview & Assessment PULLMAN NATIONAL HISTORICAL MONUMENT Town of Pullman, Chicago, Illinois Dr. Timothy J. Scarlett and Dr. Steven A. Walton Technical Report No. 142 This report has been reviewed against the criteria contained in 43CFR Part 7, Subpart A, Section 7.18 (a) (1) and, upon recommendation of the Midwest Regional Office and the Midwest Archeological Center, has been classified as Available Making the report available meets the criteria of 43CFR Part 7, Subpart A, Section 7.18 (a) (1). a b ARCHAEOLOGICAL OVERVIEW & ASSESSMENT PULLMAN NATIONAL HISTORICAL Monument Town of Pullman, Chicago, Illinois Dr. Timothy J. Scarlett And Dr. Steven A. Walton Department of Social Sciences Michigan Technological University Houghton, MI 49931 Submitted to: Dr. Timothy M Schilling Midwest Archeological Center, National Park Service 100 Centennial Mall North, Room 474 Lincoln, NE 68508 18 December 2017 1 Management Summary The Archaeological Overview and Assessment (Archaeological O&A, or simply O&A) is a Baseline Research Report within the National Park Service’s Cultural Resource Management system. This report presents basic research results intended to help support planning regarding and management of park cultural resources, as well as supporting interpretive programming. The National Park Service defines an Archaeological O&A as a report which “describes and assesses the known and potential archeological resources in a park area. The overview reviews and summarizes existing archeological data; the assessment evaluates the data. The report assesses past work and helps determine the need for and design of future studies” (U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Lake Calumet and Calumet River Area
    Illinois Coastal Management Program 2011 This Issue Paper contains opinions that may or may not be the policy of the IDNR. Illinois Coastal Management Program Issue Paper Lake Calumet and Calumet River Area A. General Description The Lake Calumet and Calumet River area is highly urbanized. The economy was once completely dominated by manufacturing, particularly the steel industry. The large production mills are now gone, totally demolished and sitting idle as ―brownfields.‖ However, some steel-related and other heavy industries remain in the area. They transfer coal, lime, slag and other products to and from the Local and Indiana mills. Large industrial structures still line the 8-mile length of the Calumet River, from its mouth on Lake Michigan to Lake Calumet. Historic, beautifully designed steel bridges cross over the river at several points. Working class neighborhoods surround the lake and the river. They include South Chicago, South Deering, East Side, Pullman, and Hegewisch. Together these five neighborhoods hold nearly 100,000 people. Other nearby neighborhoods include West Pullman, Roseland, Calumet Park and Riverdale. The Calumet area contains very important natural areas. Remnant prairie and wetland systems exist throughout the area on public and private lands. Some are recognized statewide for their high levels of native plant and animal species. Many are recognized by the state as Illinois Natural Area Inventory Sites. This unique mixture of industrial and natural lands gives the Calumet region a remarkable landscape. It is a landscape of extremes, of remarkably valuable habitats amidst vast fields of industry. It offers enormous potential for community revitalization in a post-industrial era.
    [Show full text]
  • FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE for More Information Contact Laurence Msall at 312-201-9044
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For more information contact Laurence Msall at 312-201-9044 Officers ABOLISH THE ILLINOIS INTERNATIONAL PORT DISTRICT Barbara Stewart, Chairman Civic Federation Urges Transfer of Port Operations and Assets to More Responsive Governments Sarah Garvey, Vice Chairman George Lofton, Vice Chairman Thomas McNulty, Vice Chairman A new Civic Federation report finds that the Illinois International Port District has shifted its Joseph B. Starshak, Treasurer Laurence J. Msall, President primary focus from port operations to the management of a golf course. The golf course brings in over half of the District’s annual revenue, but there is no evidence that those revenues have been Board of Directors Catherine M. Adduci* reinvested to improve port facilities or promote commerce. Because the District is failing to fulfill Bridget M. Anderson* A.G. Anglum* its principal mission, the Civic Federation calls upon the Illinois General Assembly and Governor Adrienne Archia* to dissolve it. The District’s operations should be transferred to the City of Chicago and its assets to Murray E. Ascher* Alicia Berg governments more suited to operate them. Abel E. Berland ☼ Brian A. Bernardoni Roger Bickel The Civic Federation analyzed the Illinois International Port District’s finances and activities and Aileen Blake* contrasted them with five comparable ports along the Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Seaway. As a Douglas H. Cameron Whitney Carlisle result of this investigation, the Federation is concerned that the District appears to be focused on Richard A. Ciccarone * Jerry Cizek ☼ golf rather than shipping and port operations. Harborside International Golf Center is the Port Elizabeth Gallagher Coolidge District’s only major construction project since 1981.
    [Show full text]
  • Calumet Land Use Plan 4 PDF,X-Default
    Dear Chicagoans: Good environmental management is good for business, and good business development can also benefit the environment. Nowhere is this more true than for the Calumet region on Chicago’s southeast side. For over a century, the Calumet region has contributed to the prosperity of Chicago. It manufactures and processes products essential for industry and in the everyday lives of citizens. It serves as North America’s busiest hub for intermodal transportation. Today, opportunities are ripe for revitalizing the Calumet area. In a city where large tracts of vacant industrial land are needed but scarce, the Calumet area retains well over 1,000 acres suitable for manufacturing and other businesses. Almost 60 percent of land in Chicago that is available for industry can be found here. This industrial land exists side-by-side with Chicago’s most important wetlands. Approximately 4,000 acres are to be managed as the Calumet Open Space Reserve. Prompted by enormous opportunities for both industrial revitalization and for protection of important open space, the Department of Planning and Development (DPD) initiated the creation of the Calumet Area Land Use Plan, to determine appropriate land uses. DPD partnered with the City’s Department of Environment and three non-government organizations, the Southeast Chicago Development Commission, Openlands Project, and the Calumet Area Industrial Commission. A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sustainable development challenge grant and a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service helped fund the plan’s develop- ment, and the development of the Calumet Open Space Reserve Plan and the Calumet Design Guidelines.
    [Show full text]
  • Special Places in the Lake Calumet Area
    United States Department of Agriculture Special Places in the Forest Service Lake Calumet Area North Central Research Station Herbert W. Schroeder General Technical Report NC-249 TABLE OF CONTENTS METHODS ...................................................................................................... 1 RESPONDENTS .............................................................................................. 2 SPECIAL PLACE DESCRIPTIONS ................................................................... 2 The Value of Special Places.......................................................................... 4 Natural Features and Environments ............................................................. 5 Human and Built Features............................................................................ 7 Memories of the Past, Hopes for the Future .............................................. 10 DISCUSSION.................................................................................................. 11 CONCLUSIONS.............................................................................................. 13 LITERATURE CITED ....................................................................................... 13 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ................................................................................. 13 APPENDIX ...................................................................................................... 14 North Central Research Station U.S. Department of Agriculture - Forest Service 1992 Folwell Avenue St.
    [Show full text]
  • Calumet Open Space Reserve Plan
    Calumet Open Space Reserve Plan 2 Dear Chicagoans: The idea for the Calumet Open Space Reserve was born out of the Calumet Area Land Use Plan, a plan for sustainable development of the land around Lake Calumet on the southeast side of Chicago. In attempting to create a plan that promoted industrial redevelopment while protecting wetlands, the opportunity to create an enormous urban nature preserve emerged. As proposed by the Calumet Area Land Use Plan and as detailed in this document, approximately 4,000 acres of the Calumet area are slated to become part of the Calumet Open Space Reserve. These lands and waters support large populations of herons, egrets and other water birds. Marshes and open lands will eventually be interconnected by hiking and biking trails. The acquisition and management of the first round of properties for the Calumet Open Space Reserve is already being undertaken by a coalition of state and local agencies. Residents and workers in the Calumet area will benefit from daily interaction with nature, and all Chicago residents will be able to enjoy what will become the City’s largest nature reserve. Eventually it will be possible to bike from the Loop to the Reserve on protected trails. Together with the City’s Tax Increment Financing (TIF) District and Planned Manufacturing District (PMD) established in the Calumet area to sustain and develop industry, this plan for the Calumet Open Space Reserve will help bring a bright future to Chicago’s southeast side. Sincerely, Richard M. Daley Mayor Calumet Open Space Reserve
    [Show full text]
  • Lake Calumet - Take a Tour
    Lake Calumet - Take A Tour You don't have to travel to the Everglades to view wildlife that occurs among reeds in shallow marshes and wet prairies. The Lake Calumet Wetlands are remnants of a vast marsh system that once covered southeast Chicago and northwest Indiana. Explore this area to discover the wildlife that depends on the Lake Calumet Wetlands. file:///C|/REPORTS1/NEW%20REPORTS%208/Calumet%20Wetlands%20Tour%201.html (1 of 3)3/27/2008 3:46:10 PM Lake Calumet - Take A Tour 2. Brunswick Center South 21. Big Marsh 38. Burnham Prairie 3. Clark & Pine Nature Preserve 22. Deadstick Pond 39. Calumet City Prairie 3a. Clark & Pine East 23. Eggers Woods Forest Preserve 40. Dolton Prairie 4. Clark & Pine Dune and Swale 24. George Lake Woods 41. Lakeshore Prairie 5. Clark & Pine general Refractory 25. Grand Calumet Lagoons 42. Powderhorn Lake Prairie 6. Clark Junction 26. Grand Calumet Tern site 43. Sand Ridge Nature Preserve 7. Clark Junction East 27. Hegewisch Marsh 44. Thornton Fractional High School 8. Cline Avenue Dune and Swale 28. Heron Pond Nature Preserve 9. DuPont Natural Area 29. Indian Ridge Marsh North 45. Wentworth Prairie 10. Explorer Pipeline 30. Indian Ridge Marsh South 46. Wentworth Woods Forest Preserve 11. Gary Enterprise Zone 31. Lake Calumet 47. Van Vlissingen Prairie 12. Gary Works 32. Hammond Bird Sanctuary 48. Coulter Sand Prairie 13. Gibson Woods 34. Roxanna Marsh 14. Ivanhoe Dune and Swale 35. Wolf Lake 15. Ivanhoe South 36. Fay's Point 16. Miller Woods and Dunes 37. Oxbow Park 17. Penn Central 18, 19 Tolleston Ridges 20.
    [Show full text]