A tower crane permit has been issued for the first phase of Halsted Pointe, a mixed-use 46-story tower at 931 N. Halsted. Planned by Onni Group, the overall development will replace the former Greyhound Bus facility on the southern tip of Goose Island. After demolition permits were issued in May 2023, the site was cleared in preparation for the new development.
Designed by Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, the 46-story mixed-use tower has been designed with rectilinear corners instead of the original rounded corners, and the building massing will feature an angular expression enhanced with depth and plane changes as the tower rises. The facade will feature angled mullions and balcony walls in a captured glass system that uses two glazing and mullion colors.
At the base, the sloped site creates a series of lower floors meeting different elevations around the building. The lowest level will be fully submerged and house retail parking and mechanical spaces. The next level up will front N. Halsted St with 13,300 square feet of retail. Above that, the official first floor will have leasing offices facing north, the residential lobby facing east, and 5,600 square feet of retail facing south.
The building’s podium will span from the 2nd through 5th floors, holding 8 units per floor in the northern section under the tower, and parking spaces in the remaining floor plate to the south. The podium will have a total of 209 parking spaces. A full indoor amenity suite including a spa/wellness space, fitness center, game room, and party room and lounge will occupy the sixth floor, opening up to an outdoor amenity deck that will include a pool.
With a total of 464 apartments, the typical residential floors will have 12 units per level made up of a mix of one-beds, one-bed flexes, two-beds, and three-beds, representing a shift to larger units with more bedrooms per floor. Every unit will feature a balcony.
Overall, Onni Group is planning four phases of development for the site that is expected to deliver up to 2,650 residential units, retail space, a hotel, and 1,470 parking spaces. Subsequent phases haven’t been fully designed but preliminary approvals suggest a potential for four more towers rising up to almost 700 feet tall.
The tower crane permit comes as construction has commenced on site with drilling and caisson rigs working on the building’s foundations. A permit for the building’s foundation, below grade construction, and the superstructure for floors lower level two through level six was issued back in November 2025. The tower crane permit will allow Onni Contracting to place the tower crane ahead of construction going vertical. A full building permit has been filed and is awaiting issuance.





