#1 Building in Chicago for Foreclosures? The Sterling

sterling-_2.jpgsterling-_4103-kitchen.jpg 

 sterling-_4103-bathroom.jpg

 Yes, foreclosures are happening even in the ritzier downtown Chicago locations.  But some buildings are seeing more of them than others.

In my unscientific observation, the #1 building in Chicago for foreclosures to date has been The Sterling at 345 N. LaSalle in River North.  Located near the Chicago River just down the street from Trump Tower Chicago, it was originally constructed to be an apartment building.   American Invsco bought the building in 2001 as it was just finishing construction and converted it into condominiums in 2002. There are 389 units ranging from studios to large penthouse units. There is no parking available for purchase but you can rent it in the attached public parking garage for about $200 a month.

Several times a month, units at The Sterling have been popping up on the foreclosure auction lists. I talked with one agent handling a bank owned unit in early spring and he said at that time that there were probably “20 to 30” units under foreclosure.

And that was then.

The building’s problems can be traced to the sheer number of investors who bought in the building- especially under American Invsco’s “2-2-2” deal. That deal gave buyers two years of free assessments, two years of taxes paid and two years of guaranteed rental income for the unit.

According to an agent I talked to, many of the investor owners weren’t prepared to suddenly pay the assessments, taxes and a higher mortgage payment when their ARM adjusted.

Here is a Junior 1 bedroom on Craigslist in pre-foreclosure for $220,000.

Another unit just went on the auction block:

Unit #4303: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1350 square feet

  • Previously sold in December 2003 for $616,400
  • Auction price of $493,100

The 03 tier has consistently sold for the upper $500,000s to upper $600,000s since 2002.  What does the foreclosure do to the comps?  It depends on what it sells at auction and for what price.  But, suffice it to say, it’s not good for those other owners.

Past sales:

  • Unit #4803 sold for $670,000 in April 2005
  • Unit #4703 sold for $595,000 in March 2007

Good luck to Unit #4103, currently on the market for $580,500.  The pictures above are of Unit 4103. 

(By the way, on a side note, the listing describes #4103 as “highly upgraded.”  But that bathroom doesn’t look “upgraded” to me.  The kitchen, as seen in the pictures, was an upgrade package offered from the developer to larger units located on the upper floors.  But it wasn’t exactly top of the line cabinets, faucets or granite.  No Waterworks here.  The developer didn’t offer an upgrade package for any of the bathrooms- so everyone got the standard apartment rental bathrooms.)

Rizzo Realty Group has the #4103 listing.

The foreclosures seem to have trickled a bit in the building lately.  Maybe the worst is over. 

Or maybe not.

4 Responses to “#1 Building in Chicago for Foreclosures? The Sterling”

  1. Streeterville Realtos on September 25th, 2007 at 12:10 pm

    Kitchen molding looks really odd. Why does it cross the far wall like that?

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  2. It makes it seem like part of the kitchen is missing- as if there was supposed to be cabinets underneath there but they just never put them in.

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  3. Thanks for the informative posting! I also heard through two independent sources that the 345 N. LaSalle building (The Sterling) is currently imposing a SPECIAL ASSESSMENT that will run until about Nov. 2007 to raise money to pay for the cost of repairing cracks in the building facade. Apparently, the cracks are more than cosmetic and cause water to leak into the building during inclimate weather. The special assessment, I heard, is about $5,000 a unit (2bed/2bath). Can anyone with first-hand knowledge please confirm: (1) the special assessment and amount, and (2) the facade repair story? Thanks much!

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  4. Streeterville Realtor on October 18th, 2007 at 10:13 am

    Hi,
    I was in the Sterling last night! Yes, there is a Special Assessment. Your agent should have told you about it. Most listings on the MLS say the seller will pay the special. I am not certain what it is for but the facade does look awfully cracked for a newer building and they did put up some contruction material around the building.

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