Chicago developer Fern Hill recently presented a new iteration of their plans for a mixed-use development scheme at the site of Emanuel Congregation at 5959 N. Sheridan. Located along N. Sheridan Rd facing the lakefront, the project would redevelop the synagogue’s lakefront site as well as the vacant site on the west side of Sheridan Rd at 5950 N. Sheridan. The blue house to the north of the congregation’s site was acquired by the developer and its property has been incorporated into the development plan.
After considering 16 different massing options, Fern Hill first proposed a 12-story midrise courtyard building on the main lakefront site and a five-story building on the inland site on the west side of N. Sheridan Rd. In May, Fern Hill presented a revised version of the development that pivoted to three separate towers standing 23-stories along N. Sheridan Rd, 11 stories along the north side of the property, and 13 stories along the lake.
At a recent community meeting, developer Fern Hill and architect Eckenhoff Saunders revealed the latest plan for the site in response to community feedback. The latest plan shifts from a three-tower scheme to a two-tower scheme, eliminating the north building that was running east/west. The plan absorbs the space lost from removing the third building by adding two floors to the west tower and elongating the footprint of the east tower.
On the ground floor, the pedestrian mews has been retained but has been shifted to the north. Previously, the residential lobbies were north of the pedestrian corridor, but the redesign locates them south of the mews so they are no longer separated from the rest of the building. The pedestrian mews now becomes the northern boundary of the motor court, shortening the driveway space and the space to the north of the pedestrian corridor will now be a parking garage.
As part of the revised proposal, the new space for Emanuel Congregation will remain at the southeast corner of the site overlooking Lake Michigan and will be even more independent of the residential tower, with more of the synagogue's footprint pulled out from underneath the tower. The synagogue will be even more of an independent architectural element without anything rising on top of it as it becomes a longer rectangular form extending into the courtyard space and reaching over the motor court.
The development’s podium will take shape as a four-story element, set to hold parking and amenity spaces for the project. Parking will occupy the northern end of the ground floor, as well as the majority of the second and third floors, extending down into the footprint of the west tower. The synagogue will occupy the southeastern corner of the first three floors with direct access to their dedicated parking spots within the garage. The fourth-floor amenity offerings will include an indoor basketball court, outdoor tennis and paddle tennis courts, indoor fitness space, group fitness space, an indoor pool on the third floor, coworking space, and a social lounge.
Across all three buildings, the plan would deliver 603 residential units. The west tower, standing 25 stories tall, would have 410 residential units with 82 affordable units to meet affordability requirements. The west tower, standing 12 stories tall, would have 123 units with 25 of them affordable. As previously planned, the building on the site at 5950 N. Sheridan on the other side of the street would have 70 residential units with 14 of them set aside as affordable.
As the project moves forward, Fern Hill is continuing to develop the proposal in conversation with both the synagogue and the city. The plan would require a rezoning from RS-1 and RM-5.5 to a unified B3-5 with a Planned Development designation. If approved by the alderman, the development would proceed to seek formal city approvals from the Chicago Plan Commission, Committee on Zoning, and City Council. A timeline for the project has not been established.






