Mayor Lori Lightfoot recently joined Chicago FC Owner and Chairman Joe Mansueto, Alderman Jason Ervin (28th Ward), Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) CEO Tracey Scott, and Mary Baggett, President of the Local Advisory Committee for ABLA/Brooks Homes to celebrate the groundbreaking of the Fire’s new performance and training facility at 1336 S. Loomis in the Roosevelt Square neighborhood on the Near West Side.  

Chicago Fire Performance CenterCrawford Architects

"The Chicago Fire is a top tier football club and the team and its players deserve a top tier training facility," said Mayor Lightfoot. "I am also pleased that the Near West Side community will benefit from the job opportunities, recreational space, and housing support that CFFC has committed to providing as part of this development."  

Chicago Fire Performance CenterCrawford Architects

As a complex for the team to prepare for matches and improve the team, it will include two and a half hybrid grass fields for the team and three synthetic turf fields for the Chicago Fire Academy. An inflatable dome will be placed on top of the northwest field during the colder months from November to March.

Chicago Fire Performance CenterCrawford Architects

With Crawford Architects on board for the design, the training facility will measure 53,000 square feet and stand two floors high, down from an original 95,000 square-foot, three-story plan. On the ground floor, program space will include locker rooms, medical space, workout space, hydrotherapy, and a video room. The second floor will host offices, a cafeteria, and meeting space for team operations. A 4,100 square foot building for the field crew will be located just off S. Loomis St and W. Hastings St.

Chicago Fire Performance CenterCrawford Architects

The campus will include a pedestrian greenway corridor through the site. Starting at the intersection of S. Loomis St and W. 14th Pl, the pathway will run through the site over to S. Ashland Ave and W. 14th St.

Chicago Fire Performance CenterCrawford Architects

Projected to cost $75-80 million, the project will be entirely privately funded by the team, with no city financing. The city recently announced the signing of a ground lease between the Chicago Fire FC and the Chicago Housing Authority that will generate $40 million in revenue for CHA over the next 40 years which will be applied towards the agency’s housing initiatives.

With ground broken and the first permit issued, construction can begin on the site. Pepper Construction will be leading the construction of the facility which is targeted for a Summer 2024 opening.