A New Construction 4-Bedroom Duplex Down in East Lincoln Park: 1845 N. Sedgwick
This new construction 4-bedroom duplex down at 1845 N. Sedgwick in East Lincoln Park came on the market in October 2021.
This 4-unit building was constructed in 2021 on a wider-than-average Chicago lot measuring 36 feet by PLD Homes.
It has an elevator and an attached heated garage.
This unit has an open floor plan with the kitchen, dining room and living room on the main level along with 3 of the 4 bedrooms.
It has built-in bookcases and a fireplace in the living room.
The kitchen has white cabinets, luxury appliances by Subzero and Wolf, a wine refrigerator, quartz counter tops and a large island.
It has a NanaWall spanning the width of the building.
There are 2.5 bathrooms on the main floor.
The primary suite is also on the main floor and has a “spa-like” en suite bathroom with heated floors, steam shower, double vanity and free-standing soaker tub.
The lower level has a “second living room”, the fourth bedroom and a third full bath.
There is a side-by-side washer/dryer and central air as well as a garage space.
The unit has two outdoor spaces including a large walk-out terrace and a private roof deck above the garage.
Listed in October 2021 for $1.7 million, is this a single family home alternative in this neighborhood?
Patrick Teets at Jameson Sotheby’s has the listing. See the pictures and floor plan here.
Unit #1: 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, no square footage listed, duplex down
- New Construction
- Listed in October 2021 for $1.7 million
- Currently still listed at $1.7 million
- Assessments of $375 a month (includes scavenger)
- Taxes are “new”
- Central Air
- Washer/dryer in the unit
- Garage parking included
- Elevator building
- Fireplace
- Bedroom #1: 14×12 (main level)
- Bedroom #2: 12×11 (main level)
- Bedroom #3: 12×11 (main level)
- Bedroom #4: 12×10 (lower level)
- Living/dining room combo: 27×19 (main level)
- Kitchen: 13×8 (main level)
- Laundry room: 8×6 (main level)
- Walk-in-closet: 14×8
- Recreation Room: 26×13 (lower level)
It needs more white
The folding glass doors look cool but won’t get used w/ due to traffic
Would rather have enclosed the outdoor space off the back, seems like a huge waste. Maybe the figured the owners would be too lazy to walk up a flight of stairs to use the Garage deck
Feels very bubbly
maybe it’s me, but the “nanawall” would seem to be more appropriate opening to a bigger outdoor space and off the rear of the unit (or even for the lower level family room) rather than creating “indoor/outdoor” living for the more formal living room space to open it up to a very shallow outdoor space.
I’m also confused about the pictures of the garage roof and terrace. The floorplan shows a fireplace for the terrace, not the garage roof deck, but the pictures seem to show the opposite. I agree that the Terrace space looks dreary in the pictures and would be best used for kids play gear/bikes.
Finishes are great, but I’d prefer to have more public space on the main level & more bedrooms on lower level.
You NEVER want to have your deck above the level of the interior. That “nanowall” WILL leak. WTF??
Maybe just me, but at this price point, I don’t want someone else’s parking space just steps from my single back door.
“Would rather have enclosed the outdoor space off the back”
How would that work with zoning??
“ How would that work with zoning??”
Unless you’re butting up to sf limits, why couldn’t you enclose the lower patio (it appears to be off the MBr?
“nanawall”
do people forget about all the bugs we have in the summer months.
“Unless you’re butting up to sf limits, why couldn’t you enclose the lower patio (it appears to be off the MBr?”
Because it would appear that all of the terraces/roof deck in the back are common spaces… which would definitely be a deal breaker for me with the primary bedroom immediately adjacent…
As far as duplex-downs go, this is among the best I’ve seen. It appears well equipped with quality materials/fixtures and is quite bright and cheerful. Nice deck, too.
Still, I’d never consider paying $1.7 mln to live in a ground floor unit, even when the location is as good as this one. Maybe one floor higher, but even then, it’s a lot to pay for a condo with none of the amenities you’d get in a high rise.
“Unless you’re butting up to sf limits, why couldn’t you enclose the lower patio”
Rear yard requirements.
But I’m sure this place is also butting up on FAR limits. RM-5, so it is 2.00–even with the larger lot, it’s 9,000 sf max.
“it would appear that all of the terraces/roof deck in the back are common spaces”
Don’t think so–they certainly are *accessible* to the upper units, due to the shared stairs/fire escape, but the areas are intended a private.
Nice place obviously but 1.7 is a big ask for what is essentially a juiced up condo with neighbors above you.
“1.7 is a big ask”
#2 and #3 sold–basically same layout as main floor of this, smaller rear deck. $1.35m and $1.5m
#4 has private roof deck, also same basic layout. Sold for $1.575m.
Really enjoy the BS pic of the roofdeck: https://www.redfin.com/IL/Chicago/1845-N-Sedgwick-St-60614/unit-4/home/177074798
“ https://www.redfin.com/IL/Chicago/1845-N-Sedgwick-St-60614/unit-4/home/177074798”
The Pergola alone is a half a million
“The Pergola alone is a half a million”
How much would that view of downtown cost??
Look at it, then look again.
“ How much would that view of downtown cost??”
I’m freezing at 20 million
Wow the fake skyline in unit 4 is hilarious. That should be illegal.
Who wants to pay nearly $2M for this, madness.
“Really enjoy the BS pic of the roofdeck:…”
OMG That is hilarious. How on earth is that remotely legal – – virtual staging can also be a huge lie if the dimensions of spaces and furniture are manipulated but to flat out create a fake skyline view that is so obviously not the view from this location…wow. If that were the actual view from that unit it would have sold for quite a bit more.
“If that were the actual view from that unit it would have sold for quite a bit more.”
Is there an actual premium for interdimensional space?
Note the north side of Grant Park to the left, and then the heart of the Loop to the right. Which would make this place through the looking glass.
That skyline is great!
As a slight aside, I’ve seen people use those nanawall’s on decks during special events, like the marathon, but don’t know if you’d use them regularly (yeah, bugs and birds…).