The
beat of the south side could be heard in the Kenwood and Hyde Park
neighborhoods. Taking center stage was Drexel Boulevard, one of the
most celebrated avenues in America at the time, running through the
heart of Kenwood. With a central walk for pedestrians and winding picturesque
gardens, the boulevard was designed to encourage reflection upon the
beauty and manageability of nature. However, it was just as common
to see people making the most of the boulevard's expansive green space
by playing sports, walking with the family or napping leisurely."
Today, the development team of The Thrush Companies, Century Place Development
Corp. and Granite Development Corp. are bringing Drexel Boulevard back
to its grandeur with Jazz On The Boulevard.
The homes offered within Jazz On The Boulevard are in tune with the
lifestyles of today's homebuyers with a fusion of housing styles - upscale
single-family rowhomes, townhomes, duplexes, flats, and condominiums.
Each distinct home style fits the needs of the modern household, which
includes families with children, singles, and couples of varying incomes.
Throughout, the development team's commitment to quality architecture
resonates, with homes reflecting the Victorian style prominent along
Drexel Boulevard and in Kenwood. Designed in masonry, buildings feature
artistic elements such as stone detailing, bay windows, private balconies
arches, and decorative iron fencing.
Extensively landscaped with shrubs, trees and lush greenery to produce
a park-like setting reminiscent of turn-of-the-century Chicago, Jazz
On The Boulevard boasts abundant open green space. The development's
courtyard is specifically designed to give the community a unique sense
of place while providing a space for children to play and for residents
to socialize.
With Jazz On The Boulevard, the sounds of life, of culture and of style
are once again being heard on the south side, making Drexel Boulevard
and Kenwood as celebrated as they were nearly 100 years ago.
DEVELOPMENT TEAM
With its diverse housing and unparalleled quality, Jazz On The Boulevard
is the most recent illustration of the development team's commitment
to the community it serves.
The Thrush Companies has been a pioneer in urban living for more than
two decades, building new developments in emerging neighborhoods and
successfully creating wonderful new communities for Chicago homeowners.
While Jazz On The Boulevard is Thrush's newest venture in Kenwood, the
firm has been the neighborhood's most active developer for nearly a decade.
One of the first companies to begin redeveloping the area, Thrush built
two homes for the North Kenwood Parade of Homes in 1994. It also built
Kenwood's New Homes for North Kenwood/Oakland, which won the Distinguished
Building Award from the American Institute of Architects in 1997. Following
the success of these endeavors, Thrush increased the scope of its involvement
in Kenwood, developing the neighborhood's largest new-home community
to date, Shakespeare Townhomes and its companion development , Shakespeare
Court.
Granite Development Corp. partnered with Thrush to construct 19 scattered-site
single-family and duplex homes in Chicago's Auburn/Gresham neighborhood
as part of the New Homes for Chicago initiative. The company was founded
in 1995 by two African-American businessmen: Joseph A. Williams, president
of Target Group Inc., and Larry Huggins, president of Riteway Construction.
Century Place Development Corp. (CPDC) has been developing and preserving
affordable housing since 1988. Founded with the vision that all Chicagoans
should have access to decent housing in decent neighborhoods, CPDC responds
to a wide variety of housing and community development challenges on
a non-profit basis. Over the years, CPDC has developed nearly 800 units
of affordable and supportive housing throughout Chicago. The firm's housing
initiatives have received awards from and have been recognized by a number
of institutions, organizations, and media including the Urban Land Institute
- Chicago District Council, Local Initiatives Support Corporation, Fannie
Mae Foundation, Chicago Realtors Association, Multi-Housing News, Chicago
Tribune, and Chicago Sun-Times.
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