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Bobby Roundtree, former Illinois football star, dies at age 23Satchel Priceon July 16, 2021 at 8:20 pm

Bobby Roundtree, the former Illinois defensive end whose football dreams came to an end when he was paralyzed in a diving accident two years ago, died Friday in the Tampa Bay area. He was 23.

The Illinois football program announced Roundtree’s death Friday afternoon.

Roundtree, a star on the Fighting Illini defense for two seasons, had his life changed May 18, 2019, when he suffered a severe spinal injury in a diving accident near his home in Largo, Florida.

The once fearsome pass rusher soon pivoted his attention from football to new goals, including walking again and trying to inspire others. He spoke with the Sun-Times’ Steve Greenberg for a November 2020 feature in which he opened up about his loneliness, frustrations, desire to inspire and his ultimate goal: independence:

“Just living comfortably,” Roundtree said. “Just being able to wake up and get myself dressed, not need help to use the restroom, to brush my own teeth,” he says. “I would like to be able to feed myself. To just get out and be working, doing stuff I don’t need no assistance for.”

Roundtree joined the Illinois football team in 2017 after growing up in western Florida. He made an immediate impact as a freshman with 50 tackles and four sacks in 12 games, then emerged as one of the Big Ten’s best defensive players with 67 tackles and 13.5 sacks as a sophomore.

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Bobby Roundtree, former Illinois football star, dies at age 23Satchel Priceon July 16, 2021 at 8:20 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs Rumors: Extensions for current core not ruled outJordan Campbellon July 16, 2021 at 8:00 pm

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Chicago Cubs Rumors: Extensions for current core not ruled outJordan Campbellon July 16, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Law Department paralegal collected $14,250 in jobless benefits during pandemic — while working for the city, IG saysFran Spielmanon July 16, 2021 at 7:47 pm

Since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, the Illinois Department of Employment Security has been inundated with 3.7 million unemployment claims.

One of them came from a paralegal for the Chicago Law Department who fraudulently collected $14,250 while “actively employed” by the city in a scheme that dragged on for “at least six months.”

Retiring Inspector General Joe Ferguson exposed the fraud in his quarterly report released Friday.

“The paralegal made false material representations in an application and subsequent electronic certifications of their employment to the Illinois Department of Employment Security for unemployment insurance benefits when, in fact, they were employed full time by the city,” the report stated.

“The state paid the paralegal a total of $14,250 from May 31, 2020, to November 28, 2020, and the paralegal admitted to accepting benefits into 2021.”

The Law Department moved to fire the paralegal, following Ferguson’s recommendation. But the paralegal resigned less than a week after the pre-disciplinary hearing.

The quarterly report also described yet another rip-off — totaling $12,285 — involving a customer service representative for Clarity Partners, an agency hired by City Hall to staff the city’s Utility Billing and Customer Service Contact Center.

Customers or their banks “inadvertently mailed water bill payments to different city departments” and the mail was re-routed to the billing center where the contract employee worked and was sometimes responsible for collecting and sorting mail.

“The contract employee stole some of the mail containing customers’ checks and fraudulently deposited the checks into their bank account,” the report stated.

“In less than a month, the contract employee deposited 63 checks into their bank account totaling $12,285.”

Clarity Partners fired the employee. The case was referred to the Law Department to seek cost recovery and to the state’s attorney’s office for prosecution.

In yet another case, a pipe yard foreman-turned-safety specialist for the Department of Water Management was accused of filling out four material requisition forms, falsely claiming that underlings had requested and received five “diamond saw blades” valued at $4,000.

None of the underlings requested or received the equipment. When supervisors reviewed the forms, the foreman falsely claimed that the diamond saw blades had been requested by a district superintendent. The accused employee has since been fired and placed on the do-not-hire list.

A Chicago Police Department sergeant assigned to the Marine Unit was accused of accepting a $1,000 payment from a professional diver in exchange for gaining access to the Chicago Harbor Lock to use CPD personnel and equipment to recover a lost boat propeller for the diver’s client.

The professional diver and the sergeant were described as friends who had worked together as captains on private sailing vessels for the same client, the inspector general said.

“Since private individuals are not permitted access to dive in the Chicago Harbor Lock, the sergeant used [his or her] official position to obtain authorization from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which manages and controls the lock chamber.

“The sergeant’s purported reason for accessing the lock chamber was to conduct a training exercise for the Marine Unit divers. On the day of the propeller recovery, the sergeant assembled a dive team consisting of three DPD Marine officers. The sergeant also equipped a CPD marine vessel with a specialized sector scan sonar to aid in locating the missing propeller.”

Ferguson recommended firing both the sergeant and a marine officer accused of filling out a fraudulent report claiming the team was in the lock chamber to conduct a “Homeland Security dive” to survey the lock chamber floor.”

The marine officer resigned before being fired. Discharge proceedings for the sergeant are still pending before the Police Board.

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Law Department paralegal collected $14,250 in jobless benefits during pandemic — while working for the city, IG saysFran Spielmanon July 16, 2021 at 7:47 pm Read More »

Rescuers rush to help as Europe’s flood toll surpasses 125Associated Presson July 16, 2021 at 6:01 pm

BERLIN — Emergency workers in western Germany and Belgium rushed Friday to rescue hundreds of people threatened by historic floods, including residents of a town where the ground gave way beneath their homes, as the disaster claimed dozens more lives and search for the missing went on.

The death toll rose to more than 125, and hundreds of people were still unaccounted for.

Sixty-three people perished in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, including 12 residents of an assisted living facility for disabled people in the town of Sinzig who were surprised by a sudden rush of water from the nearby Ahr River, authorities said.

In neighboring North Rhine-Westphalia state, the number of dead stood at 43, but officials warned that it could increase.

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he was “stunned” by the devastation and pledged support to the families of those killed and to cities and towns facing significant damage.

“In the hour of need, our country stands together,” Steinmeier said in a statement. “It’s important that we show solidarity for those from whom the flood has taken everything.”

A harrowing rescue effort unfolded in the German town of Erftstadt, southwest of Cologne, where people were trapped when the ground gave way and their homes collapsed.

Fifty people were rescued from their houses, county administrator Frank Rock told German broadcaster n-tv. Aerial photos showed what appeared to be a massive landslide at a gravel pit on the town’s edge.

“One has to assume that under the circumstances some people didn’t manage to escape,” Rock said.

Authorities cautioned that the large number of missing could stem from duplicated reports and difficulties reaching people because of closed roads and disrupted phone service.

After Germany, where the death toll stood at 106, Belgium was the hardest hit. The country had confirmed the deaths of 20 people, with another 20 still missing, Belgian Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden told the VRT network Friday.

Several dikes on the Meuse Rriver that runs from Belgium into the Netherlands were at risk of collapsing, Verlinden said. Authorities in the southern Dutch town of Venlo evacuated 200 hospital patients due to the river’s looming threat.

The flash floods followed days of heavy rainfall in Western Europe. Thousands of people remained homeless in Germany after their houses were destroyed or deemed to be at risk.

The governor of North Rhine-Westphalia, who hopes to succeed Chancellor Angela Merkel as the nation’s leader after Germany’s election on Sept. 26, said the disaster had caused immense economic damage to the country’s most densely populated state.

“The floods have literally pulled the ground from beneath many people’s feet,” Gov. Armin Laschet said at a news conference. “They lost their houses, farms or businesses.”

Federal and state officials have pledged financial aid to the affect areas.

Malu Dreyer, the governor of Rhineland-Palatinate state, said the disaster showed the need to speed up efforts to curb global warming. She accused Laschet and Merkel’s center-right Union bloc of hindering efforts to achieve greater greenhouse gas reductions in Germany, Europe’s biggest economy and a major emitter of planet-warming gases.

“Climate change isn’t abstract anymore. We are experiencing it up close and painfully,” she told the Funke media group.

Steinmeier, the German president, repeated his calls for greater efforts to combat global warming.

“Only if we decisively take up the fight against climate change will we be able to limit the extreme weather conditions we are now experiencing,” he said.

Experts say such disasters could become more common in the future.

“Some parts of Western Europe … received up to two months of rainfall in the space of two days. What made it worse is that the soils were already saturated by previous rainfall,” World Meteorological Organization spokesperson Clare Nullis said.

While she said it was too soon to blame the floods and preceding heat wave on rising global temperatures, Nullis added: “Climate change is already increasing the frequency of extreme events. And many single events have been shown to be made worse by global warming.”

The German military had deployed over 850 troops to help with flood efforts, and the need for help is growing, Defense Ministry spokesman Arne Collatz said. He said the ministry had triggered a “military disaster alarm.”

Italy sent civil protection officials, firefighters and rescue dinghies to Belgium to help in the search for missing people.

In the southern Dutch province of Limburg, which also has been hit hard by flooding, troops piled sandbags to strengthen a 1.1-kilometer (0.7 mile) stretch of dike along the Maas River, and police helped evacuate low-lying neighborhoods.

Caretaker Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said the government was officially declaring flooded regions disaster areas, making businesses and residents eligible for compensation. Dutch King Willem-Alexander visited the region Thursday night and called the scenes “heartbreaking.”

Meanwhile, heavy rain in Switzerland caused several rivers and lakes to burst their banks. Public broadcaster SRF reported that a flash flood swept away cars, flooded basements and destroyed small bridges late Thursday in the northern villages of Schleitheim und Beggingen.

Erik Schulz, the mayor of the hard-hit German city of Hagen, 50 kilometers (31 miles) northeast of Cologne, said a wave of other regions and ordinary citizens offered to help.

“We have many, many citizens saying ‘I can offer a place to stay. Where can I go to help? … Where can I bring my shovel and bucket?'” he told n-tv. “The city is standing together, and you can feel that.”

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Associated Press writers Geir Moulson and Emily Schultheis in Berlin, Raf Casert in Brussels, Nicole Winfield in Rome, Angela Charlton in Paris and Mike Corder in The Hague and contributed to this report.

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Rescuers rush to help as Europe’s flood toll surpasses 125Associated Presson July 16, 2021 at 6:01 pm Read More »

Calf injury forces Kevin Love to withdraw from Olympic basketball team; JaVale McGee added to rosterBrian Mahoney | Associated Presson July 16, 2021 at 6:12 pm

Kevin Love has withdrawn from the Olympics because of a right calf injury, forcing the U.S. basketball team to replace two players on its roster.

Veteran center JaVale McGee and Spurs guard Keldon Johnson will be added to the 12-man Olympics roster, a person with knowledge of the details said Friday. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the additions had not been announced.

It means the much of the U.S. roster will have little time together before its Olympic opener July 25 against France.

Johnson, who plays for U.S. coach Gregg Popovich in San Antonio, was a member of the select team of young players training against the Americans. McGee, who played for the Cleveland Cavaliers and Denver Nuggets last season, has won three NBA titles but has no Olympic experience.

Love’s agent, Jeff Schwartz, confirmed the Cleveland Cavalier forward’s withdrawal Friday. It was first reported by ESPN.

Love’s withdrawal comes a day after the Americans announced that Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal would miss the Olympics because he was in health and safety protocols.

Love would have been trying for a second Olympic gold medal, having played for the Americans in London in 2012. He also was on the team that won gold two years earlier in the world championships.

That past USA Basketball experience helped him get selected for this roster despite his difficult NBA season. Love missed 46 games because of the injury and averaged just 12.2 points in 25 games.

He played in two of the Americans’ three exhibition games in Las Vegas, scoring one point.

The U.S. was already short-handed before the losses of Beal and Love. Milwaukee’s Jrue Holiday and Khris Middleton, along with Phoenix star Devin Booker, won’t join the team until after the NBA Finals.

The Americans canceled their exhibition against Australia scheduled for Friday night because of health and safety concerns.

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Calf injury forces Kevin Love to withdraw from Olympic basketball team; JaVale McGee added to rosterBrian Mahoney | Associated Presson July 16, 2021 at 6:12 pm Read More »

Chicago Cubs: Joc Pederson trade gives hope at deadlineJordan Campbellon July 16, 2021 at 6:22 pm

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Chicago Cubs: Joc Pederson trade gives hope at deadlineJordan Campbellon July 16, 2021 at 6:22 pm Read More »

City Council showdown on civilian police oversight put off — againFran Spielmanon July 16, 2021 at 4:56 pm

Police reform advocates have already waited 26 months for Mayor Lori Lightfoot to deliver on her promise to empower a civilian oversight board to fire Chicago’s police superintendent and have the final say on police spending and policy.

They’ll just have to wait a little longer.

The City Council’s Committee on Public Safety is poised to make certain of it on Friday by putting off a showdown vote on the volatile issue — again — at least until Tuesday.

This time, the delay was triggered by Lightfoot’s decision to propose a revised civilian oversight ordinance that, Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th) said, comes “extremely close” close to the compromise endorsed by the Black, Hispanic and Progressive Caucuses.

Police reform advocates plan to spend the weekend negotiating with the mayor’s office in hopes of reaching a compromise capable of attracting the 34 votes needed to approve any ordinance involving the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.

“It’s difficult to pass something over the objections of a sitting mayor…She made a very, very serious proposal. I don’t think we would be…changing course to sit down with the administration if they hadn’t sent over a compromise in substitute ordinance form that was very close to where we’ve been at,” Ramirez-Rosa said.

“We’re not ready to accept what she sent right now. There’s still some things that need to be discussed. But it’s the closest this mayor has ever been to an ordinance that our coalition would like to see.”

The mayor’s office had no immediate comment. Aldermen Roderick Sawyer (6th) and Harry Osterman (48th), who have championed the more moderate version of civilian police oversight, could not be reached.

Ramirez-Rosa refused to reveal specifics of the mayor’s offer, but said it is “extremely, extremely similar” to the version embraced by the three caucuses, particularly on the performance of the police superintendent.

That version empowers the 11-member civilian oversight commission to find there is “just cause” to take a vote of no-confidence in the superintendent and proceed with that vote after giving the top cop 30 days to respond.

If the commission approves, the City Council would vote on whether to recommend that the superintendent be fired. The mayor would not be bound by that vote, but the political pressure to make a change would be tough to ignore.

“She previously didn’t want the commission to have that power at all–to be able to initiate that vote of no-confidence,” Ramirez-Rosa said.

Ramirez-Rosa acknowledged that police reform advocates and the mayor’s office are “still a little further apart” on the issue how to resolve police policy disputes.

But they hope to get over the hump after a few more days of negotiations. The final version is almost certain to empower the civilian oversight commission to resolve disputes over police policy that could only be overruled by a two-thirds City Council vote.

Lightfoot has argued repeatedly that she “wears the jacket” for Chicago violence and she’s not about to “outsource” control over CPD to a civilian police oversight commission.

When Lightfoot finally got around delivering her own version of civilian oversight, she retained for herself and future mayors the power to hire and fire the superintendent and have the final say in disputes over police policy.

But Lightfoot’s ordinance attracted such tepid support, she pulled it, setting the stage for the latest round of negotiations.

Civilian oversight was a pivotal recommendation by the Task Force on Police Accountability that Lightfoot co-chaired in the furor that followed the court-ordered release of the Laquan McDonald shooting video.

The mayor has been under heavy political pressure to deliver civilian oversight, particularly after changing her tune on an elected school board bill approved by the Illinois General Assembly over her strenuous objections.

Last month, a Public Safety Committee heavily stacked with mayoral allies and law enforcement advocates spared the mayor, what would have been a bitter political defeat.

The 10-9 vote came after Ramirez-Rosa and others agreed to “split out” a binding referendum that, if passed, would give the civilian panel even broader powers.

Public Safety Committee Chairman Ald. Chris Taliaferro ( 29th) said he objected to considering that compromise immediately because he “screamed form the rooftops” for supporters to “pull the referendum and you would have support.”

“No one listened,” until that day, he said.

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City Council showdown on civilian police oversight put off — againFran Spielmanon July 16, 2021 at 4:56 pm Read More »

NBC has lots at stake with Tokyo OlympicsDavid Bauder | AP Media Writeron July 16, 2021 at 5:14 pm

NEW YORK — If all goes well for NBC Universal over the next several weeks, Americans will be buzzing about the Olympic performances of Simone Biles, Gabby Thomas, Kevin Durant or some unexpected star.

The year-delayed Tokyo Olympics officially opens with NBC’s telecast of the opening ceremony on July 23 — live in the morning and with an edited version in prime time.

The Olympics arrive dripping in bad vibes, amid a COVID-19 state of emergency in Japan. The majority of Japanese citizens are unvaccinated against the virus and most wish the Olympics weren’t taking place this summer. Most events will occur in near-empty venues. Star sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson was kicked off the U.S. team after a positive marijuana test, and the U.S. men’s basketball team suffered embarrassing exhibition losses to Nigeria and Australia.

Yet once the competition begins, NBC is banking on a COVID-weary United States to embrace the Games.

“I really believe that people are craving a shared experience after all we’ve been through,” said Molly Solomon, executive producer of NBC’s Olympics coverage.

If you miss anything, it won’t be NBC’s fault. More than 7,000 hours of Olympics coverage will be offered, on NBC, cable outlets like USA and NBCSN, on NBCOlympics.com and the Peacock streaming service, on Twitch, Twitter and Snap.

The length of COVID’s shadow is difficult to predict.

While the International Olympic Committee gave the go-ahead for the Games, it’s hard to fathom that NBC Universal, which is paying $7.75 billion to broadcast the Olympics between 2022 and 2032, didn’t make its voice heard. Mike Wise didn’t exempt NBC when he called it “one of the most brazen, hubris-over-humanity cash grabs in modern history” in a Washington Post column this week.

Asked about the issue, Solomon said, “if there’s an Olympic Games that’s happening, as the American broadcaster, we’re going to be here to chronicle the stories of the games.”

NBC News anchor Lester Holt will report during the opening ceremonies about the COVID-19 concerns and restrictions placed on participants.

“You would hope that (NBC) would be willing to, as much as it is feasible, step out of the Olympics bubble and talk to everyday people in Japan to hear their thoughts,” said Jules Boykoff, a Pacific University professor and author of “Power Games: A Political History of the Olympics,” who has been critical of the decision to proceed with the games.

How much Holt will be needed after opening night is anybody’s guess. Only a determined optimist would believe that no athlete will catch the virus or be exposed. The question is whether it will happen often enough to wreak havoc on the schedule.

NBC tends to handle news at the Olympics in perfunctory fashion and keep the focus on sports. There’s also a history of pre-games concerns melting away once competition begins. Remember the Zika virus? Worries about terrorism in London?

A recent survey suggested there’s not a great deal of public interest leading into the games. COVID restrictions will also mean fewer reporters will be there to cover the events, eliminating some avenues of attention, said John Affleck, professor of sports journalism and society at Penn State University.

NBC considers anticipation levels relatively meaningless before Olympians get into the starting blocks. Andy Billings, director of the sports communications program at the University of Alabama, said he sees positive signs for NBC in the attention paid to televised Olympic team trials.

The lack of a live audience is one issue NBC is working hard to counteract.

The company said it would not pipe in fake crowd noise. That’s a technicality, since the Olympic Broadcasting Service, which provides the video and audio feeds of events that NBC will use, is working to “create … an atmosphere for the athletes so they’re not competing without any crowd murmur or presence,” Solomon said.

NBC is looking to amplify the sounds of competition — the splash of the pool, the interplay between coach and athlete — to give viewers the feel of being there, she said.

Without the broadcast staple of a cutaway to nervous parents in the stands, NBC will try to recreate that by showing viewing parties back in the United States.

NBC’s prime-time coverage will almost exclusively be devoted to swimming and diving, track and field, gymnastics and beach volleyball, as it has in the past. There will be some exceptions, like gold medal games in men’s and women’s basketball.

That lack of variety is less a point of contention than it used to be, since there are other outlets for competition. The time difference — Tokyo is 13 hours ahead of the Eastern United States, 16 hours ahead of the West — means limited opportunity for live coverage in the evening.

All of the consumer options give NBC Universal other ways to make money; NBC prime-time ratings will be the biggest factor, but no longer the sole determinant, of financial success or failure.

NBC Universal announced just before the pandemic shutdown in March 2020 that it had sold a record $1.25 billion in advertising time for the games, then scheduled for four months later. With the games rescheduled, NBC Universal has not publicly updated that figure. The company has said that it expects to exceed advertising sales from the last Summer Games, in 2016, with more advertisers than any previous Olympics.

“If they break even, that is a great success,” Alabama’s Billings said. “If you can simply not lose money and have a massive number of new subscriptions for Peacock, from people checking that out, that’s an incredible promotion for what they probably see as the future of television.”

Peacock is the new wrinkle this year. The service, looking to compete in a streaming world dominated by Netflix and Disney, claims 42 million subscribers. Customers can get it for free, or there are $5 and $10 options with fewer ads and more content.

It is experimenting with Olympics content, much of it highlight-based, although it will offer some events streamed live or later on demand. The $10 option opens access to live U.S. basketball games. The NBCOlympics.com website remains the place for customers to access the most content.

The first U.S. competition predates the opening ceremony: a softball game against Italy that will be broadcast on NBCSN on Tuesday night.

As he prepared to head for Japan this weekend, NBC commentator Ato Boldon, a former track and field Olympian, said he felt no anxiety despite the COVID-19 state of emergency.

“I know this is not going to be a typical Olympic Games,” he said. “But I still feel it has its purpose in not just the sporting landscape this year, but in the human landscape.”

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NBC has lots at stake with Tokyo OlympicsDavid Bauder | AP Media Writeron July 16, 2021 at 5:14 pm Read More »

Five North Shore Midcentury HomesWhet Moseron July 16, 2021 at 5:13 pm

My colleague Edward McClelland has a reflection on how Chicago’s northern suburbs have come to define what America thinks of as suburban (and, in a very suburban nation, itself). In a lot of cases, that’s well-heeled and well-designed — most famously the Highland Park glass house from Ferris Bueller, designed by Mies pupil A. James Speyer, very much in the grandly minimalist style of his teacher.

As it happens, I was looking at midcentury homes around the Bueller house at the same time. (Maybe it’s the season, it’s a pleasant place for summer drives.) Don’t let that one fool you: modernist houses, in keeping with the relative modesty of the aesthetic, tend to not be enormous, and as a result, they can be fairly affordable, particularly when they’re surrounded by styles that tend to scale up.

For example: MCM doesn’t have to be expensive and it doesn’t have to be a house. In this case, it’s a townhome, with no HOA besides. It’s small—1,000 square feet with two beds and two baths—but efficient, squeezing in two beds on the second floor so that what could be a below-grade bedroom serves as a rec room instead. Outside is a patio along a neighborly rear sidewalk and deeded parking. Which you might not need: it’s a short walk to the Metra.

If you like split-level ranches, you’ll love this split-split-level ranch: three levels centered around a big, bright living room, with green trees right outside the windows, and a stylish in-wall wood-burning fireplace. It’s been recently renovated, but with just the essentials, so there are no bad decisions to undo. Stretching across those three levels are four bedrooms and three bathrooms over more than 1,729 square feet, enough but not too much for a family, and another few hundred square feet below grade for good measure.

1976 might be pushing mid-century a bit, but it’s hard to argue with the square, floor-to-ceiling windows of this lakefront condo, and the clean wood lines in its handsome home office, with glass doors that open out to the sunroom. It’s the kitchen and main bath that reflect the louche mid-70s with their curvaceous walls and counters. They work well together, and mirror how the modernist building curves to meet the water. It’s not cheap, but it’s big: two beds, two baths, just a hair under 2,000 square feet, so plenty of space to relax.

This subtly odd 1956 home looks almost more like a small apartment building, or maybe an outbuilding for a church or other institution. Inside it’s a nice, big SFH, four bedrooms and three bathrooms, with a pleasant layout that puts all four well-lit bedrooms on the second floor, one of which has a walk-in closet and en suite bathroom. On the first floor, the living room has a minimalist in-wall fireplace and opens out onto the one-acre yard. The finishings are very basic, but it’s a lot of space, a lot of flexibility, and especially a lot of yard.

This Highland Park home was designed by Highland Park architect (and former Miss Detroit) Greta Lederer, aka “the Blonde Builder of the Suburbs.” It’s a handsome, stout split-level, centered on that muscular double set of front doors, that looks and is bigger than a lot of homes in its fashion: 5,000 square feet, with five beds and 4.5 baths. Inside it has been… very designed, in a contemporary sleek-chic style (save for the extremely pink kid’s bedroom, which, I’m a parent, I get it). Even with all the beds and baths, there’s plenty of space to go around: big laundry room, big mudroom, big downstairs rec room. The master suite is 1,000 square feet alone. There’s also a sauna. But the MCM style wears the size well, bringing modesty to McMansion-y amenities.

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Five North Shore Midcentury HomesWhet Moseron July 16, 2021 at 5:13 pm Read More »

The Forester Hotel celebrates its Grand Opening in Lake Foreston July 16, 2021 at 5:15 pm

Show Me Chicago

The Forester Hotel celebrates its Grand Opening in Lake Forest

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The Forester Hotel celebrates its Grand Opening in Lake Foreston July 16, 2021 at 5:15 pm Read More »