On the outside, this building
looks like a lot of the mystery buildings on Halsted Street, like someone has
forgotten they own it, or like they’ve inherited it from their grandparents and
they aren’t sure if it’s worth anything yet.
But if Halsted’s other mystery
buildings are, in fact, anything like this one, that’s good news for the near
term fortunes of the street, because this one has been humming with plans for several
years. Visible progress was slowed by structural
problems and hurdles in the Chicago codes, but now they’re cleared, and behind
the frontier-town façade the building’s insides are being rapidly rebuilt from
the basement floor to the rafters.
When renovations are finished in
July, there will be 2 second floor apartments, a maker of traditional Italian
sausage in the basement, and a giant live work space on the first floor.
Kevin Sheehan and Bobby Lyons were
both born and raised in Bridgeport. So were their parents -- Bobby’s family
were cops, Kevin’s were tavern keepers. They have been close friends since
grade school, they lived their wild youths together, though they’ve both
settled down a lot since then.
A few years ago they started
tossing around the idea of buying a building together. They considered buying a bar out in Mount
Greenwood, which seemed like a good source of easy profits, but the potential
for easy profit gave way to other considerations, and if this project has one
defining characteristic, it is something more like a long term view.
A Sticker Appearing Around Halsted Street |
Kevin’s father ran his own tavern
on Union and 38th Street, kitty corner to where the Shinnick’s
tavern still operates today. Kevin’s cousin Jack Sheehan, who married a
Schaller, still operates his tavern near 35th Street on Halsted –
next to the former site of Bridgeport Tattoo, whose owner once talked admiringly
about wanting to tie his business in to a traditional neighborhood like
Bridgeport, though he’d lived a more itinerate life himself and he’s since shuttered
the shop.
One of Kevin’s uncles ran the bar
at 3707 S Halsted when Kevin was a kid – he’d lived in the apartment over the
bar his entire life. After he died, the family
sold it to Richard Mossman, a bricklayer they knew, who rezoned the parcel to
accommodate plans for a lofty 4 story condominium development he hadn’t got
around to building before the market crashed in 2006.
By 2011 Mossman had a For Sale
sign in the window, and Kevin and Bobby called him up to inquire. They knew if they bought it they would have
to put time and money into it -- the building had settled and shifted over the
years, the whole frame tilted to the side.
But it’s in the same corner of Bridgeport where they have anchored their
lives, and it has sentimental significance. Kevin’s says his father, who has
passed away, had thought about buying it, and he would have been glad to know the
old building was back in the family.
Once they owned it, they went
back and forth a couple times about how to proceed. At first they got permits to renovate it, they
thought they could take down a couple exterior walls and salvage the others. For awhile it looked like they might have to
tear the whole thing down and start from the ground as a new construction
project. City codes would have required
them to move the structure back 15 feet from the sidewalk, and from its
original foundation, which they were willing to do, but they needed a new set
of permits, and the permit process dragged on through the fall of 2013.
By December they decided to go
ahead with the renovation, which they already had permits for. They tore the insides out, down to the exterior
walls; their contractor looped chains around the top beam in the north wall of
the frame, and workers on the ground in the lot just south of the building
pulled the whole thing straight with come-alongs. They nailed in some reinforcing carpentry and
let it stand for a month to make sure it stayed straight, then they built the
interior framing that will help hold it in place over time.
Meanwhile, one of the most brutal
winters in memory blasted the structure with freezes and thaws and eventually
caused the foundation, exposed when they took out the floors, to crack. At this
point, other investors might have turned, snarling, on each other and sued
their contractor; Bobby and Kevin made parallels to the metaphorical
significance of building a life on a strong foundation, and their contractor, whom
they’ve known for years, proposed to split the cost of the repair.
When it’s all finished, the
building will have a pretty new masonry façade facing Halsted Street. Bobby will move out into one of the apartment
on the second floor, and Mike Botica, another friend from the neighborhood,
whom they’ve known for years, will rent the basement to make sopressata, a dry
cured Italian sausage.
Mike makes sopressata using old
family recipes he learned from his wife’s Grandma Theresa. He says they used to hang their sausage in a
spare bedroom, leaving the windows open so it could cure in the cold. He first started helping out when he and his
wife were still dating. When Grandma
Theresa saw he had an interest, she sat him down and taught him her recipe, and
handed over her grinder and her press, which he still uses – they’re each over
100 years old.
Right now, Mike makes his
sopressata for friends and family as a hobby, but it’s “a hobby on steroids”
--- last year he made 1,200 pounds of it in a 3 day operation that brought up
to 30 people to his house at a time. Setting
up all the tables and equipment is a project in itself: moving it all out from
his garage into the basement at South Halsted will allow him to make the set up
permanent, and also to install a walk in cooler and de-humidifier.
Eventually he would like to get
all his licensing lined up and open a business – he says he’d try selling it
mail order first, and if that goes well, he’d like to open a deli on the first
floor of Bobby and Kevin’s building. It
would require changing the zoning back to commercial, but he’s already discussed
it with Alderman Balcer, and the Alderman was enthusiastic about the idea. They both remember a time when South Halsted
had more storefronts on it – including Granata’s, next door to the Ramova
Theater, which Mike describes as something like Conte di Savoia on Taylor
Street, not as large, but very successful.
All that would be several years
away, come July, the 1st floor space will be ready for other
uses. Mike says Kevin and Bobby have
chosen an ideal location – with the new homes being built out from Donovan Park
on the west, and some of the most stable blocks in Bridgeport to the east. The Halsted renaissance might seem slower to advance
than its residential one, individual investments might take time to mature, but
the foundations are good.
Thank you for letting us know what is happening on Halsted. I hope this is the birth of a new and active street.
ReplyDeleteWE NEED MORE YOUNG PEOPLE OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD TO TAKE CHANCES LIKE KEVIN AND BOBBY!! BEST OF LUCK TO BOTH OF YOU!!! MAY THE LUCK OF THE IRISH STAY FOREVER WITH YOU AND GUIDE YOU TO NOTHING BUT SUCCESS!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear it!
ReplyDeleteAlso enjoyed the style of the article, with all the little contextual asides. Felt like I was watching Pop-Up Video on VH1 back in the day.
That Super Sot could use some HOME MADE GARDINERA.
ReplyDeleteBest of luck!!
Thank you ! - in finding such a wonderful project happening and for telling its interesting story. Live / work spaces are great ( and, it happens I was priced out of one, several years ago, in the more well-known area along Halsted just to the north ) . . . . . . . ( Carpenter St. resident )
ReplyDeleteNice piece, Kristin. Have you stopped sending out email notices when you publish?
ReplyDeleteThanks TC - I send out e-mail notices on alternating posts, and you are still on my list! If anyone else wants to be on a list to receive a note highlighting new posts, send me a line at thehardscrabbler@gmail.com.
DeleteHello, you mentioned in your post a saloon/tavern that was located across from Schaller's Pump. Are you referring to the tavern located on the corner of 37th & Halsted, on the east side of the street? If so, this was the tavern featured in that terrific 1940s movie, "Call Northside 777", with actor Jimmie Stewart as a Chicago newspaper reporter.
ReplyDelete