Cottage Grove Heights Community Coalition

Chicago Defender Building gets New Owner

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Former Chicago Defender building gets new owner, tenant

 - 2400 S. Michigan. Photo from CoStar Group Inc.
 

2400 S. Michigan. Photo from CoStar Group Inc.

After sitting empty for years, the historic former Chicago Defender building in Motor Row has a new owner and a new tenant.

 

Ventures led by Chicago developer Alexander Pearsall paid $6 million for the newspaper's former headquarters at 2400 S. Michigan Ave., an adjacent land parcel and small commercial buildings to the west and south of the Defender building, a city landmark, according to county records. The Pearsall ventures bought the properties from two investor groups led by Chicago restaurant operator Matthew O'Malley, the records show.

 

Mr. Pearsall also has leased the 50,000-square-foot Defender building and the 10,000-square-foot commercial structure at 2412 S. Michigan Ave. to events management and production company Revel Group, said Britt Whitfield, president of Chicago-based Revel.

 

The sale and lease are good news for Motor Row, which city planners want to transform into a thriving nightlife and dining district fueled by spending from conventioneers at nearby McCormick Place. Such plans are mostly stillborn at this point.

 

Mayor Rahm Emanuel and other public agencies have bet big on the area, agreeing to subsidize development of a proposed 10,000-seat arena for DePaul University and a 1,200-room hotel, both near the convention hall.

 

While the publicly backed projects are in the works — and in court — several other private developments, including a Cheap Trick nightclub, have yet to get off the ground.

 

Revel's space could anchor the southern end of Motor Row and draw in conventioneers by showcasing the former Defender building's unique history, said Charles Johnson, president and CEO of C.H. Johnson Consulting Inc., a Chicago-based tourism and hospitality consulting firm. But Motor Row has yet to “pop” like the West Loop, Mr. Johnson said, creating a challenge for the firm.

 

AREA DOESN'T HAVE 'WARMTH' YET

 

The neighborhood has “no warmth to it yet. They're going to have to focus on the inside (of the building) rather than sell the district,” he said.

 

Revel Group's Ms. Whitfield acknowledged Motor Row is still transforming, but she believes the market already exists for a new events space in the area.

 

“There is a very big desire for groups coming into town for shows to stay as close as they can to McCormick Place,” she said.

Ms. Whitfield envisions CEOs, for example, in town for a week for a convention staying in the ex-Defender building and using rooms in the property to hold off-site meetings.

 

The former Defender building, a block west of McCormick Place, will be brought back to its original glory, Ms. Whitfield added, with a careful focus on restoring the property's woodworking, stained glass and architectural details.

 

Revel plans to create a range of meeting spaces in the three-story building, including small rooms for breakout sessions, larger conference areas and even four or five “sleeping rooms” on the third level.

 

The firm will showcase an outdoor courtyard area in the middle of the U-shaped former Defender building. Leasing the building at 2412 S. Michigan gives Revel additional space options, added Ms. Whitfield, who co-runs Revel with Clint Paton, an executive at the firm.

 

Founded in 2007, Revel creates events for clients like the University of Chicago, the Lincoln Park Zoo and private companies. Following its acquisition of a catering company, the firm has more than 90 employees and expects revenue to hit around $25 million in 2014, Ms. Whitfield said.

 

Mr. Pearsall did not return calls.

 

SALE SOLVES LEGAL HURDLE

 

The sale of the Defender building, meanwhile, has solved a legal hurdle for Mr. O'Malley, an owner of Chicago-based Mainstay Hospitality LLC, a restaurant group that owns the Chicago Firehouse Restaurant in the South Loop.

 

Mr. O'Malley's venture bought the property in 2007 for $4.1 million, but following the real estate crash the group was never able to redevelop it. In 2011, Mr. O'Malley's lender filed a $3.3 million foreclosure suit against the property. The foreclosure case was dismissed in late February, following the sales, according to an online court docket.

 

Mr. O'Malley did not return calls. An executive at Northbrook Bank & Trust Co., which held the loan on the Defender building, also did not return a call.

 

The building's financial troubles also ensnared a real estate fund whose investors included by five municipal pension plans. The fund, which was run by politically connected developer Allison Davis and Robert Vanecko, the nephew of former Mayor Richard Daley, invested in the Defender building alongside Mr. O'Malley.

 

It's unclear how much the Chicago pension plans received following the sale. Derrick McGavic, principal at Skokie-based Newport Capital Partners LLC, which is now serving as general partner for the fund, did not return a call.

 

Mark and Mike Nelson, principals at Chicago-based NelsonHill LLC, represented Mr. O'Malley's venture in the sale of the Defender property. Justin Collins, senior associate at Chicago-based Jameson Commercial, represented Mr. Pearsall's ventures in the sales and lease with Revel.

 

Designed by architect Philip Maher, the art deco former Defender building was built as the Illinois Automobile Club in the late 1930s, according to a city report about historic properties in Motor Row.

 

In the late 1950s, John Sengstacke, the nephew of Defender founder Robert Abbott, moved the African-American-focused newspaper to 2400 S. Michigan Ave., where the firm stayed until 2005, when the paper moved downtown.

 

Five years ago, the Defender moved back to Bronzeville.

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