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Lender Halts Chicago's 1000M Tower as Developer Seeks New Financing | Columbus Ohio Dump Trucks

COVID-19 and Construction

The $470-million skyscraper is first major city project shut due to COVID-19 funding impact

1000M
The 1000M Tower is planned to be the tallest building in Chicago's South Michigan Avenue historic district.
Rendering courtesy of Time Equities

The planned 74-story 1000M condominium tower project in Chicago's South Loop area has been put on hold by construction financier Goldman-Sachs.

Francis Greenburger, chairman of New York City-based Time Equities, one of three project developers, said the lender is “concerned about economic stability of the market at this particular time due to recent events.”

Contractor James McHugh Construction Co. had already halted construction in June due to the COVID-19 pandemic, developers said at the time.

Greenburger said construction will paused on the project for 90 days while Goldman-Sachs performs its review, with September the soonest it may resume with its current financing. He declined to say how much Goldman-Sachs had invested in the project.

Time Equities would talk to other lenders about possibly financing the project in the interim, he said.

“We are hopeful that a solution will be found in the months ahead,” Greenburger said, adding that Goldman-Sachs finished funding foundation columbus oh dump truck work on the tower but declined to finance it further, pending its review.

The tower, designed by architect Helmut Jahn and setto be 832 ft tall, ranked No. 30 on ENR Midwest's list of 2019 Top Starts.

Named after its address at 1000 S. Michigan Ave., directly across from Chicago's Grant Park, the 421-unit tower would the tallest in the South Michigan Avenue historic district if completed. It would also be the tallest building designed by Jahn in Chicago, with other projects including the James R. Thompson Center and the United Terminal at O'Hare International Airport.