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Several high-rise buildings poke through a lawyer of low fog hovering over a dense city. Getty Images

Mapping the 34 high-rises under construction in Chicago

A look at the projects expanding the city’s famous skyline

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Over the past several years, a wave of new construction has redefined Chicago’s famous skyline as well as brought tall and dense developments to a number of overwise low-rise neighborhoods. New luxury apartments continue to be the driving force behind the Windy City’s vertical growth spurt, but some condominium, office, hotel, and educational projects are also in the mix.

Since our last update, a handful of new buildings opened for business and dropped off the list—including Wolf Point East and Alta Grand Central. But recent additions like 1125 W. Van Buren Street, 448 N. LaSalle, and Hyde Park’s Study Hotel keep the overall count of 100-foot projects in the mid-30s.

Here’s a look at the high-rise buildings under construction in Chicago right now. The projects roughly are ordered from the tallest to the shortest.

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Vista Tower

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Rising 1,191 feet to claim the title of Chicago’s third tallest building, Vista Tower is hard to ignore. Designed by starchitect Jeanne Gang and architect of record bKL and developed by Magellan, the riverfront supertall features a striking facade comprising six distinct shades of glass and an unoccupied “blow through” gap on its 83rd floor. Vista will deliver 192 hotel rooms and 396 condominiums priced between $1 million and $18 million when it opens in the third quarter of 2020.

One Chicago

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One Chicago, the block-sized project across from Holy Name Cathedral, calls for a podium topped by a pair of high-rise towers with the tallest rising 78 stories and 969 feet. Developed by JDL and designed by Goettsch Partners and Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the transformative project replaces a longtime parking lot with a mix of 812 condos and apartments, a Whole Foods Market, a Life Time Athletic club, offices, an event space, and parking for 865 cars. One Chicago will open in 2022.

At 1000 S. Michigan Avenue, work is underwayon the 74-story condo tower known as 1000M. The Helmut Jahn-designed skyscraper will take between 30 and 36 months to reach its final height of 832 feet and welcome residents to its 421 units. If completed today, 1000M would stand as Chicago’s 15th tallest building, but will slip to the 17th spot once the Vista Tower and One Chicago open. The South Loop project comes from developers Time Equities, JK Equities, and Oak Capitals.

1000M

Bank of America Tower

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Replacing the Loop’s low-rise General Growth Building, the waterfront office tower at 110 N. Wacker Drive is developed by Chicago’s Riverside Investment & Development and designed by architecture firm Goettsch Partners. The Bank of America-anchored project includes a new pocket park, a public riverwalk, and a Gibson’s restaurant. It reached its final 815-foot height in October and is expected to be completed in fall 2020.

A modern office building with an angled facade with vertical edges running along the side. It stands next to a river and amid other high-rise towers. Goettsch Partners

Union Station Tower

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Union Station Tower broke ground in December at the former site of an underutilized parking garage located one block south of Union Station. The glassy office high-rise from Riverside Investment & Development, Convexity Properties, and architecture firm Goettsch Partners recently asked the city to increase its size from 50 to 51 stories. The plans also include a 1.5-acre publicly accessible park atop a 400-car parking structure. The 1.5 million-square-foot, BMO-anchored skyscraper will open in January 2022.

Goettsch Partners

This 47-story, 512-foot-tall condo building is underway along Lake Shore Drive in Chicago’s Lakeshore East community. The project comes from developers Lendlease and Magellan and design firm bKL Architecture. Offering 363 for-sale condominium units priced between roughly $400,000 and $4 million, Cirrus will open in the second half of 2021.

A 47-story residential tower with exterior balconies, glass, and vertical strips of gold-colored metal. It is flanked by other tall buildings. bKL Architecture

369 W. Grand

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Rapidly climbing skyward at the former site of the Clark and Barlow hardware building, River North’s 41-story, 452-foot rental tower is developed by Vancouver-based Onni Group and designed by Chicago architecture firm Brininstool + Lynch. The project includes 356 rental units as well as 261 parking spaces, ground-floor retail, and a small pocket park fronting Orleans.

A glass-clad high-rise tower looming over some lower townhouses. Taller buildings are visible in the distance. Brininstool + Lynch

Old Town Park Phase 3

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The third and tallest apartment high-rise comprising the redevelopment of Chicago’s 1970s-era Atrium Village apartment complex into Old Town Park broke ground in mid-2019 on Chicago’s Near North Side. Also developed by Onni and designed by Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the building will rise 41 stories (447 feet) and will contain 456 rental units, office space, a sixth-floor tenant amenity deck, and a 193-car garage.

A blue glass high-rise with stacks of balconies and a metal panel crown. It stands next to another glassy apartment tower. HPA

Old Town Park, Phase 2

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Next door, at the corner of Wells and Hill, the second of the three Old Town Park rental towers rises 430 feet. The Onni/HPA project contains 428 residential units, parking, and lower-level commercial space. Old Town Park Phase 2 is very close to complete and should welcome renters soon.

The corner of the base of a mixed-use building with commercial use on the lower levels and glassy apartment units above. HPA

Cascade

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Rising nearly 400 feet just west of Cirrus, this 37-story rental building broke ground alongside its taller condo tower sibling. Also developed by Lendlease and Magellan and designed by bKL Architecture, Cascade will contain 503 rental apartments and will share a 589-space parking garage with its neighbor. Move-ins are expected to take place in summer 2021.

A glass and metal-clad high-rise surround by landscaping and a vehicular drive. The modern building stands in the middle of several other high-rise towers. bKL Architecture

Imprint

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Without needing a zoning change, this 31-story apartment high-rise quietly broke ground last spring in Chicago’s Printer’s Row neighborhood. Replace a parking lot and incorporating parts of the old Palmer Printing building, the glassy development will bring another 349 rental units and 192 parking spaces to the South Loop. The developer is CMK Companies with Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture handling design.

Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture

410 S. Wabash Avenue

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A downtown parking lot at 410 S. Wabash Avenue is biting the dust for this 25-story apartment development, which recently landed its first construction permit. The soon-to-rise project by architecture firm Antunovich Associates and developer LMC calls for 344 apartments, ground-floor retail space, and a 104-car parking garage.

Antunovich Associates

This 24-story Near South Side project at 2111 S. Wabash includes 275 rental units, ground-floor retail, and an 88-car parking podium. Developed by Draper and Kramer and designed by Chicago-based Solomon Cordwell Buenz, Aspire will open later this summer.

A metal panel podium with a blue glass apartment tower above. The facade is broken into vertical sections and balconies. Draper and Kramer

Parkline

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Rising 26 stories, this residential high-rise near Millennium Park is replacing a parking garage at the northeast corner of Wabash and Randolph. The 293-foot-tall building will contain a retail base topped by 70 parking spaces, 190 rental units, and 24 condominiums. The downtown project comes from architect-developer Thomas Roszak and partner Dan Moceri.

Thomas Roszak Architecture

1125 W. Van Buren

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Commuters on the Eisenhower Expressway can follow the work at 1125 W. Van Buren, where work recently began on a 24-story apartment tower from developer Tandem Partners. Designed by Antunovich Associates, the glassy tower will include 200 residential units, retail space, and onsite parking for just seven cars. The West Loop project replaces a low-rise last occupied by an auto mechanic and will open in mid-2021, according to the developer’s description.

Antunovich Associates

Tandem and Antunovich are also behind this 23-story apartment tower at the corner of Milwaukee Avenue and Carpenter Street. The glass and brick project is River West’s tallest building and is expected to open soon. Avenir will offer residents of its 196 rental units a wide array of amenities including a pool deck and top-floor coworking lounge with sweeping skyline views.

A building with a brick base and a narrow, glassy tower above. One side has balconies and the ground floor has commercial space. Antunovich Associates

800 Fulton Market

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Rising just north of the neon Fulton Market gateway sign, this 18-story office tower from New York-based developer Thor Equities is just getting started. Designed by Chicago-based architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 800 Fulton Market features a stepped layout with long, north-facing terraces and X-shaped steel braces on east and west elevations. The development includes ground-floor retail and 36 parking spaces in a below-ground garage.

A stepped office building with a brick and glass exterior and landscaped terraces. The side has a metal beams arranged in an X pattern. SOM

167 N. Green Street

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This 17-story, 725,000-square-foot office tower has topped-off at the southwest corner of Lake and Halsted in Chicago’s Fulton Market District. Developed by Shapack Partners and Focus Development, the Gensler-designed project will feature ground-floor retail spaces and a pedestrian-only promenade—or “mews”—that passes under the building between Halsted and Green streets.

A reflective glass tower with a cantilever portion with a gridded facade supported by tall columns. A pedestrian and retail plaza runs below. Gensler

The Venn

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Comprising a pair of 17-story buildings, this development transforms a block-sized parcel bordered by Madison, Monroe, Peoria, and Green street in the West Loop, across from Mary Bartelme Park. The two-tower project from GREC Architects and co-developers Lendlease and the John Buck Company will feature 586 apartments and for-rent townhomes. It is set to open later this spring.

GREC Architects

Woodlawn Residential Commons

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The University of Chicago is growing its presence in Woodlawn with this new 1,300-bed student residence hall designed by Elkus Manfredi Architects. When completed later this, the complex will comprise three seven-story towers and one 16-story high-rise atop a shared podium at the corner of Woodlawn Avenue and 61st Street.

A mid-rise and a high-rise complex with a beige exterior and stacks of windows surrounded by autumn trees and students. Elkus Manfredi Architects

West End on Fulton

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The Fulton Market office boom is creeping further west thanks to projects like the aptly-named West End on Fulton, which is just about ready to welcome its first tenants. Located at the corner of Fulton and Ogden, the 14-story building comes from ESG Architects and Texas-based developer Trammell Crow.

A contemporary white, beige, and gray office building along a grassy boulevard. The structure gets narrower as its rises and has retail space on the first floor. ESG Architects

AMLI 808

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Another newcomer to the list, AMLI 808 just started digging in. The 17-story will bring 318 micro-apartments to the corner of Wells Street and Chicago Avenue at the former site of a 23-story condo project which never got off the ground. Designed by Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the transit-oriented development also includes ground-floor retail space and parking for 16 vehicles.

Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture

The Bentham

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Although the 15-story condo tower known as the Bentham scored its first construction permit way back in 2017, the slow-to-start project didn’t break ground at the corner of Erie and LaSalle until last year. Currently, the Bentham is about five floors above ground, but seems to be temporarily stalled again. Developed and designed by Sedgwick Development, it will include 31 for-sale residences, a 53-spot garage, and ground-floor retail at the corner of LaSalle and Erie.

A contemporary white and glass condo building on a corner. Two sides of the building have balconies and there is a retail space on te corner. Sedgwick Development

320 N. Sangamon

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This 13-story Fulton Market office project comes from veteran Chicago real estate firm Mark Goodman & Associates and New York-based partner Tishman Speyer and replaces the former AmeriGas propane fueling facility. The development is approved for 225,000 square feet of office space, ground-floor retail, and a 47-stall parking garage. It’s designed by Solomon Cordwell Buenz.

A boxy 13-story office building with a brick and glass facade, topped by a rooftop terrace. SCB

448 N. LaSalle

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Downtown’s newest construction crane recently reported for duty at 448 N. LaSalle Street. Here, developers CA Ventures and Midwest Property Group have begun work on a 12-story office building designed by Lamar Johnson Collaborative. Replacing a surface parking lot, 448 N. LaSalle contains no parking of its own and will be anchored by CA Ventures and WeWork, Crain’s reports. Building amenities include a roof deck, a fitness center, and a tenant lounge.

Lamar Johnson Collaborative

Superior House

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The Superior House condo development broke ground in early 2019 at the northeast corner of Sedgwick and Superior in March. The 12-story development from Ascend Real Estate Group and FitzGerald Associates Architects replaces a pair of demolished low-rise commercial buildings with 34 two- to four-bedroom residences. It is expected to open this year.

A modern condo development with corner balconies and a rooftop deck with flying buttress style beams abovel FitzGerald Associates Architects

Nobu Hotel

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One of Fulton Market’s most anticipated developments, the 12-story Nobu Hotel has faced a number of delays including a work stoppage. With new developers on board, the boutique hotel hopes to finally open in sometime in early 2020. Designed by Modif Architecture with Studio K handling the interiors, Nobu Chicago includes 115 guest rooms, an indoor pool, and a rooftop lounge.

A dark brick hotel stands on a street corner it has a grid of oversized warehouse style windows, pronounced vertical piers, and a extra-height ground floor. Modif Architecture

David M. Rubenstein Forum

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Located at the southeast corner of Woodlawn Avenue and 60th Street, the David M. Rubenstein Forum at the University of Chicago is New York-based architectural firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s first Chicago project. Described as the new hub for “intellectual collaboration and exchange,” the tower-like building consists of vertically stacked meeting and event spaces hosting lectures, workshops, and other academic symposia. The Rubenstein Forum—or “Rube” for short—is on track to open in September.

A modern building with a metal skin and an abstract stack of boxy volumes on the corner of a school campus. Diller Scofidio + Renfro

Fulton East

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All topped-off, this 12-story office project from developers Bob Wislow and Camille Julmy and architecture firm Lamar Johnson Collaborative replaces a parking lot at 215 N. Peoria Street. Dubbed Fulton East, it calls for 5,000 square feet of ground-floor retail topped by 54 parking spaces, and 85,000 square feet of office space. The rooftop deck will offer sweet downtown vistas—at least until more Fulton Market high-rises block the view

A narrow brick, metal, and glass office tower with a lobby and retail space along the sidewalk. Bronze metal panels cover the second and third floor parking garage below glass-clad office levels. Lamar Johnson Collaborative

Rubschlager Building at Rush

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Work is steadily climbing above street level on the 480,000-square-foot Rush University Medical Center outpatient care center at the corner of Ashland Avenue and Harrison Street. Designed by HDR in collaboration with Nia Architects, the Rubschlager Building will connect to Rush’s Tower hospital building via a fourth-floor skybridge. The building replaces a low-rise student housing complex and targets a 2022 opening.

A medical building with a metal and glass exterior standing on a street corner. A long sky bridge extends across the street to a neighboring hospital building. HDR

740 N. Aberdeen

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Underway next to the Kennedy Expressway in River West, this 12-story apartment project from Chicago developer Fifield Companies and architecture firm FitzGerald Associates Architects. The transit-oriented development includes 188 rental units, 80 parking spaces, 2,400 square feet of ground-floor retail, and tenant amenities including a pool deck, fitness center, party room, co-working space, and a dog park.

A rendering of a brick, glass, and metal building rising 12 stories next to a busy multilane highway. A row of taller buildings is visible in the distance. FitzGerald Associates Architects

Study Hotel

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On U of C’s South Side campus, a 12-story hotel project with 167 guest rooms is underway along the Midway Plaisance. The upcoming development represent the third location for the Study brand, which operates college-oriented hospitality projects at both Yale and Philadelphia’s University City. Local architecture firm Holabird & Root is behind the design.

Holabird & Root

North + Vine

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This 11-story project is nearly ready to deliver 261-unit rental units, ground-floor commercial space, and parking for 183 cars to Old Town’s former Father and Son Plaza strip mall site. Designed by FitzGerald Associates Architects, North + Vine is a joint venture between White Oak, CA Residential, and GID. It is on track to open in 2020.

A boxy contemporary building stretches the length of a block. It has neutral colored brick exterior and a glassy storefront on the lower level. FitzGerald Associate Architects

The Jax

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Work is wrapping up on this 10-story apartment building at 1220 W. Jackson Boulevard. A transit-oriented project from LG Development and NORR Architects, it calls for 166 rental units, 7,600 square feet of retail, and 30 parking stalls. The first move-ins at The Jax are anticipated in April.

A dusk rendering of a 10-story apartment development. The building has square windows facing the street and narrow window on the side. The street level retail space glows from within. NORR

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Vista Tower

Rising 1,191 feet to claim the title of Chicago’s third tallest building, Vista Tower is hard to ignore. Designed by starchitect Jeanne Gang and architect of record bKL and developed by Magellan, the riverfront supertall features a striking facade comprising six distinct shades of glass and an unoccupied “blow through” gap on its 83rd floor. Vista will deliver 192 hotel rooms and 396 condominiums priced between $1 million and $18 million when it opens in the third quarter of 2020.

One Chicago

One Chicago, the block-sized project across from Holy Name Cathedral, calls for a podium topped by a pair of high-rise towers with the tallest rising 78 stories and 969 feet. Developed by JDL and designed by Goettsch Partners and Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the transformative project replaces a longtime parking lot with a mix of 812 condos and apartments, a Whole Foods Market, a Life Time Athletic club, offices, an event space, and parking for 865 cars. One Chicago will open in 2022.

1000M

At 1000 S. Michigan Avenue, work is underwayon the 74-story condo tower known as 1000M. The Helmut Jahn-designed skyscraper will take between 30 and 36 months to reach its final height of 832 feet and welcome residents to its 421 units. If completed today, 1000M would stand as Chicago’s 15th tallest building, but will slip to the 17th spot once the Vista Tower and One Chicago open. The South Loop project comes from developers Time Equities, JK Equities, and Oak Capitals.

1000M

Bank of America Tower

Replacing the Loop’s low-rise General Growth Building, the waterfront office tower at 110 N. Wacker Drive is developed by Chicago’s Riverside Investment & Development and designed by architecture firm Goettsch Partners. The Bank of America-anchored project includes a new pocket park, a public riverwalk, and a Gibson’s restaurant. It reached its final 815-foot height in October and is expected to be completed in fall 2020.

A modern office building with an angled facade with vertical edges running along the side. It stands next to a river and amid other high-rise towers. Goettsch Partners

Union Station Tower

Union Station Tower broke ground in December at the former site of an underutilized parking garage located one block south of Union Station. The glassy office high-rise from Riverside Investment & Development, Convexity Properties, and architecture firm Goettsch Partners recently asked the city to increase its size from 50 to 51 stories. The plans also include a 1.5-acre publicly accessible park atop a 400-car parking structure. The 1.5 million-square-foot, BMO-anchored skyscraper will open in January 2022.

Goettsch Partners

Cirrus

This 47-story, 512-foot-tall condo building is underway along Lake Shore Drive in Chicago’s Lakeshore East community. The project comes from developers Lendlease and Magellan and design firm bKL Architecture. Offering 363 for-sale condominium units priced between roughly $400,000 and $4 million, Cirrus will open in the second half of 2021.

A 47-story residential tower with exterior balconies, glass, and vertical strips of gold-colored metal. It is flanked by other tall buildings. bKL Architecture

369 W. Grand

Rapidly climbing skyward at the former site of the Clark and Barlow hardware building, River North’s 41-story, 452-foot rental tower is developed by Vancouver-based Onni Group and designed by Chicago architecture firm Brininstool + Lynch. The project includes 356 rental units as well as 261 parking spaces, ground-floor retail, and a small pocket park fronting Orleans.

A glass-clad high-rise tower looming over some lower townhouses. Taller buildings are visible in the distance. Brininstool + Lynch

Old Town Park Phase 3

The third and tallest apartment high-rise comprising the redevelopment of Chicago’s 1970s-era Atrium Village apartment complex into Old Town Park broke ground in mid-2019 on Chicago’s Near North Side. Also developed by Onni and designed by Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the building will rise 41 stories (447 feet) and will contain 456 rental units, office space, a sixth-floor tenant amenity deck, and a 193-car garage.

A blue glass high-rise with stacks of balconies and a metal panel crown. It stands next to another glassy apartment tower. HPA

Old Town Park, Phase 2

Next door, at the corner of Wells and Hill, the second of the three Old Town Park rental towers rises 430 feet. The Onni/HPA project contains 428 residential units, parking, and lower-level commercial space. Old Town Park Phase 2 is very close to complete and should welcome renters soon.

The corner of the base of a mixed-use building with commercial use on the lower levels and glassy apartment units above. HPA

Cascade

Rising nearly 400 feet just west of Cirrus, this 37-story rental building broke ground alongside its taller condo tower sibling. Also developed by Lendlease and Magellan and designed by bKL Architecture, Cascade will contain 503 rental apartments and will share a 589-space parking garage with its neighbor. Move-ins are expected to take place in summer 2021.

A glass and metal-clad high-rise surround by landscaping and a vehicular drive. The modern building stands in the middle of several other high-rise towers. bKL Architecture

Imprint

Without needing a zoning change, this 31-story apartment high-rise quietly broke ground last spring in Chicago’s Printer’s Row neighborhood. Replace a parking lot and incorporating parts of the old Palmer Printing building, the glassy development will bring another 349 rental units and 192 parking spaces to the South Loop. The developer is CMK Companies with Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture handling design.

Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture

410 S. Wabash Avenue

A downtown parking lot at 410 S. Wabash Avenue is biting the dust for this 25-story apartment development, which recently landed its first construction permit. The soon-to-rise project by architecture firm Antunovich Associates and developer LMC calls for 344 apartments, ground-floor retail space, and a 104-car parking garage.

Antunovich Associates

Aspire

This 24-story Near South Side project at 2111 S. Wabash includes 275 rental units, ground-floor retail, and an 88-car parking podium. Developed by Draper and Kramer and designed by Chicago-based Solomon Cordwell Buenz, Aspire will open later this summer.

A metal panel podium with a blue glass apartment tower above. The facade is broken into vertical sections and balconies. Draper and Kramer

Parkline

Rising 26 stories, this residential high-rise near Millennium Park is replacing a parking garage at the northeast corner of Wabash and Randolph. The 293-foot-tall building will contain a retail base topped by 70 parking spaces, 190 rental units, and 24 condominiums. The downtown project comes from architect-developer Thomas Roszak and partner Dan Moceri.

Thomas Roszak Architecture

1125 W. Van Buren

Commuters on the Eisenhower Expressway can follow the work at 1125 W. Van Buren, where work recently began on a 24-story apartment tower from developer Tandem Partners. Designed by Antunovich Associates, the glassy tower will include 200 residential units, retail space, and onsite parking for just seven cars. The West Loop project replaces a low-rise last occupied by an auto mechanic and will open in mid-2021, according to the developer’s description.

Antunovich Associates

Avenir

Tandem and Antunovich are also behind this 23-story apartment tower at the corner of Milwaukee Avenue and Carpenter Street. The glass and brick project is River West’s tallest building and is expected to open soon. Avenir will offer residents of its 196 rental units a wide array of amenities including a pool deck and top-floor coworking lounge with sweeping skyline views.

A building with a brick base and a narrow, glassy tower above. One side has balconies and the ground floor has commercial space. Antunovich Associates

800 Fulton Market

Rising just north of the neon Fulton Market gateway sign, this 18-story office tower from New York-based developer Thor Equities is just getting started. Designed by Chicago-based architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 800 Fulton Market features a stepped layout with long, north-facing terraces and X-shaped steel braces on east and west elevations. The development includes ground-floor retail and 36 parking spaces in a below-ground garage.

A stepped office building with a brick and glass exterior and landscaped terraces. The side has a metal beams arranged in an X pattern. SOM

167 N. Green Street

This 17-story, 725,000-square-foot office tower has topped-off at the southwest corner of Lake and Halsted in Chicago’s Fulton Market District. Developed by Shapack Partners and Focus Development, the Gensler-designed project will feature ground-floor retail spaces and a pedestrian-only promenade—or “mews”—that passes under the building between Halsted and Green streets.

A reflective glass tower with a cantilever portion with a gridded facade supported by tall columns. A pedestrian and retail plaza runs below. Gensler

The Venn

Comprising a pair of 17-story buildings, this development transforms a block-sized parcel bordered by Madison, Monroe, Peoria, and Green street in the West Loop, across from Mary Bartelme Park. The two-tower project from GREC Architects and co-developers Lendlease and the John Buck Company will feature 586 apartments and for-rent townhomes. It is set to open later this spring.

GREC Architects

Woodlawn Residential Commons

The University of Chicago is growing its presence in Woodlawn with this new 1,300-bed student residence hall designed by Elkus Manfredi Architects. When completed later this, the complex will comprise three seven-story towers and one 16-story high-rise atop a shared podium at the corner of Woodlawn Avenue and 61st Street.

A mid-rise and a high-rise complex with a beige exterior and stacks of windows surrounded by autumn trees and students. Elkus Manfredi Architects

West End on Fulton

The Fulton Market office boom is creeping further west thanks to projects like the aptly-named West End on Fulton, which is just about ready to welcome its first tenants. Located at the corner of Fulton and Ogden, the 14-story building comes from ESG Architects and Texas-based developer Trammell Crow.

A contemporary white, beige, and gray office building along a grassy boulevard. The structure gets narrower as its rises and has retail space on the first floor. ESG Architects

AMLI 808

Another newcomer to the list, AMLI 808 just started digging in. The 17-story will bring 318 micro-apartments to the corner of Wells Street and Chicago Avenue at the former site of a 23-story condo project which never got off the ground. Designed by Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the transit-oriented development also includes ground-floor retail space and parking for 16 vehicles.

Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture

The Bentham

Although the 15-story condo tower known as the Bentham scored its first construction permit way back in 2017, the slow-to-start project didn’t break ground at the corner of Erie and LaSalle until last year. Currently, the Bentham is about five floors above ground, but seems to be temporarily stalled again. Developed and designed by Sedgwick Development, it will include 31 for-sale residences, a 53-spot garage, and ground-floor retail at the corner of LaSalle and Erie.

A contemporary white and glass condo building on a corner. Two sides of the building have balconies and there is a retail space on te corner. Sedgwick Development

320 N. Sangamon

This 13-story Fulton Market office project comes from veteran Chicago real estate firm Mark Goodman & Associates and New York-based partner Tishman Speyer and replaces the former AmeriGas propane fueling facility. The development is approved for 225,000 square feet of office space, ground-floor retail, and a 47-stall parking garage. It’s designed by Solomon Cordwell Buenz.

A boxy 13-story office building with a brick and glass facade, topped by a rooftop terrace. SCB

448 N. LaSalle

Downtown’s newest construction crane recently reported for duty at 448 N. LaSalle Street. Here, developers CA Ventures and Midwest Property Group have begun work on a 12-story office building designed by Lamar Johnson Collaborative. Replacing a surface parking lot, 448 N. LaSalle contains no parking of its own and will be anchored by CA Ventures and WeWork, Crain’s reports. Building amenities include a roof deck, a fitness center, and a tenant lounge.

Lamar Johnson Collaborative

Superior House

The Superior House condo development broke ground in early 2019 at the northeast corner of Sedgwick and Superior in March. The 12-story development from Ascend Real Estate Group and FitzGerald Associates Architects replaces a pair of demolished low-rise commercial buildings with 34 two- to four-bedroom residences. It is expected to open this year.

A modern condo development with corner balconies and a rooftop deck with flying buttress style beams abovel FitzGerald Associates Architects

Nobu Hotel

One of Fulton Market’s most anticipated developments, the 12-story Nobu Hotel has faced a number of delays including a work stoppage. With new developers on board, the boutique hotel hopes to finally open in sometime in early 2020. Designed by Modif Architecture with Studio K handling the interiors, Nobu Chicago includes 115 guest rooms, an indoor pool, and a rooftop lounge.

A dark brick hotel stands on a street corner it has a grid of oversized warehouse style windows, pronounced vertical piers, and a extra-height ground floor. Modif Architecture

David M. Rubenstein Forum

Located at the southeast corner of Woodlawn Avenue and 60th Street, the David M. Rubenstein Forum at the University of Chicago is New York-based architectural firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s first Chicago project. Described as the new hub for “intellectual collaboration and exchange,” the tower-like building consists of vertically stacked meeting and event spaces hosting lectures, workshops, and other academic symposia. The Rubenstein Forum—or “Rube” for short—is on track to open in September.

A modern building with a metal skin and an abstract stack of boxy volumes on the corner of a school campus. Diller Scofidio + Renfro

Fulton East

All topped-off, this 12-story office project from developers Bob Wislow and Camille Julmy and architecture firm Lamar Johnson Collaborative replaces a parking lot at 215 N. Peoria Street. Dubbed Fulton East, it calls for 5,000 square feet of ground-floor retail topped by 54 parking spaces, and 85,000 square feet of office space. The rooftop deck will offer sweet downtown vistas—at least until more Fulton Market high-rises block the view

A narrow brick, metal, and glass office tower with a lobby and retail space along the sidewalk. Bronze metal panels cover the second and third floor parking garage below glass-clad office levels. Lamar Johnson Collaborative

Rubschlager Building at Rush

Work is steadily climbing above street level on the 480,000-square-foot Rush University Medical Center outpatient care center at the corner of Ashland Avenue and Harrison Street. Designed by HDR in collaboration with Nia Architects, the Rubschlager Building will connect to Rush’s Tower hospital building via a fourth-floor skybridge. The building replaces a low-rise student housing complex and targets a 2022 opening.

A medical building with a metal and glass exterior standing on a street corner. A long sky bridge extends across the street to a neighboring hospital building. HDR

740 N. Aberdeen

Underway next to the Kennedy Expressway in River West, this 12-story apartment project from Chicago developer Fifield Companies and architecture firm FitzGerald Associates Architects. The transit-oriented development includes 188 rental units, 80 parking spaces, 2,400 square feet of ground-floor retail, and tenant amenities including a pool deck, fitness center, party room, co-working space, and a dog park.

A rendering of a brick, glass, and metal building rising 12 stories next to a busy multilane highway. A row of taller buildings is visible in the distance. FitzGerald Associates Architects

Study Hotel

On U of C’s South Side campus, a 12-story hotel project with 167 guest rooms is underway along the Midway Plaisance. The upcoming development represent the third location for the Study brand, which operates college-oriented hospitality projects at both Yale and Philadelphia’s University City. Local architecture firm Holabird & Root is behind the design.

Holabird & Root

North + Vine

This 11-story project is nearly ready to deliver 261-unit rental units, ground-floor commercial space, and parking for 183 cars to Old Town’s former Father and Son Plaza strip mall site. Designed by FitzGerald Associates Architects, North + Vine is a joint venture between White Oak, CA Residential, and GID. It is on track to open in 2020.

A boxy contemporary building stretches the length of a block. It has neutral colored brick exterior and a glassy storefront on the lower level. FitzGerald Associate Architects

The Jax

Work is wrapping up on this 10-story apartment building at 1220 W. Jackson Boulevard. A transit-oriented project from LG Development and NORR Architects, it calls for 166 rental units, 7,600 square feet of retail, and 30 parking stalls. The first move-ins at The Jax are anticipated in April.

A dusk rendering of a 10-story apartment development. The building has square windows facing the street and narrow window on the side. The street level retail space glows from within. NORR