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		Chicago sells lots for $1 while spending big on affordable housing 
		complex
		[April 08, 2025]  
		By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square 
		(The Center Square) – The city of Chicago is selling empty lots for $1 
		while spending more than $800,000 per unit on affordable housing.
 Chicago Department of Planning and Development Commissioner Ciere 
		Boatright said the total value of the 405 lots placed on sale last week 
		is $26 million, with some properties available from the city for a 
		dollar.
 
 Boatright said it is important for the city to get the vacant lots back 
		on the tax rolls.
 
 “Most of the properties were acquired by default, often by demo and tax 
		liens, sometimes decades ago,” Boatright said.
 
 The properties include Missing Middle housing on the Far South Side, a 
		Chicago Transit Authority site to be used for mixed-income housing on 
		the North Side, and more than nine acres of industrial land for mixed 
		uses in Armour Square and New City.
 
 Boatright said pricing missing middle lots at one dollar is a 
		repopulation strategy.
 
 “Missing Middle involves one-to-six unit homes that are systematically 
		disappearing from neighborhoods, and it’s been going on for the last 75 
		years, along with the people that lived in those homes,” Boatright said.
 
		
		 
		According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Chicago’s population was around 
		2.66 million in 2023. In 1950, it was 3.62 million.
 Chicago Flips Red founder Zoe Leigh said many of the city’s 
		redevelopment projects never get off the ground.
 
 “They’ll start, but it never happens because, at the end of the day, 
		they do it to try to get this [Tax Increment Finance district] money. 
		The city is the city. The city takes forever to pay out, so a lot of 
		people who are applying for TIF money and the TIF money is where these 
		vacant lots are, they can’t get the TIF funding, and so a lot of them 
		just end up not developing,” Leigh told The Center Square.
 
 Leigh said the city favors developers over residents who wish to develop 
		lots adjacent to their homes.
 
 
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            Chicago Mayor Brandon JohnsonChicago Mayor's Office | Facebook
 
            
			
			
			 
            Mayor Brandon Johnson touted his development plans with Boatright 
			and other city officials at the formal opening of Auburn Gresham 
			Apartments, an affordable housing complex on the city’s South Side.
 The $47 million project includes 58 units, placing the per-unit 
			taxpayer cost at $810,345.
 
 Johnson said the $1.25 billion economic plan he put forth was the 
			largest housing and economic development investment in the history 
			of Chicago.
 
 “What it ultimately does is it creates a comprehensive approach, a 
			citywide economic strategy that focuses on quality affordable 
			housing, but it also ensures that business innovation and job growth 
			and community development is also part of that,” Johnson said. “We 
			want to continue to attract people, businesses and jobs to Chicago, 
			particularly to our South and West Sides, and these projects in 
			Auburn Gresham are an important step forward for our city.”
 
 Paul Vallas, the former mayoral candidate Johnson defeated in the 
			2023 runoff election, offered his reaction on X.
 
 “Mayor Johnson celebrating spending $47 million in taxpayers dollars 
			to secure a meager 58 affordable housing units. That’s the 
			equivalent to spending $810,344 per unit. The city has approved five 
			such deals spending $324 million in subsidies in return for just 505 
			units,” Vallas posted. “This includes $150 million going to downtown 
			developers converting office buildings to housing, committing to 
			just 300 affordable units. An outrageous misuse of tax dollars.”
 
            
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