Posts Tagged new use for old fire station

Chicago African American Firefighters Museum

This from Brian P. Kazmierzak:

While on my way to O’Hare Airport the other day, I took a side trip off the Dan Ryan to Al’s Beef and to drive by the old quarters of Engine 61/Ambulance 36 (5349 S. Wabash).  I spent a lot of time “fanning” in that firehouse from 1993-1999.  The firehouse, which was last in-service as EMS South before they moved to the new Engine 16’s quarters, has been given to the African American Firefighters Museum.  There are some pretty neat historic graphic stickers on the window.  Here are a couple photos.

African American Firefighters Museum

Brian P. Kazmierzak photo

African American Firefighters Museum

Brian P. Kazmierzak photo

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As seen around … Chicago

This from Steve Redick:

Had ocasion to shoot old 70’s house and the new house for 102.

Steve

Chicago fire station

Steve Redick photo

former Chicago fire station

Steve Redick photo

former Chicago firehouse

Steve Redick photo

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New use for old Chicago fire station

The ChicagoReader.com has an article about the current tenant in a former fire house on Chicago’s north side

The sign above the century-old building at 1545 W. Rosemont still reads fire department, having once belonged to Engine Company 70. But since 2008, the address has been a media production hub.

Its ground floor, where a fire truck once parked, is now Firehouse Studios’ 22-by-60-foot video and photo studio as well as a rentable event venue run by its sister company, Firehouse Chicago. The editors of the video production company Plum Productions, whose clients include Visa, Mike’s Hard Lemonade, and White Castle, work upstairs in what used to be the firefighters’ sleeping quarters. The firehouse’s old horse stable from the preautomobile days has been renovated into a kitchen.

new use for old Chicago fire house

Former Chicago firehouse with a new tenant. – Courtesy Firehouse Studios

Firehouse Studios’ owner, Tim Plum, first heard about the building in ’08, when Engine Company 70 was preparing to move to a $9.3 million, 16,000-square-foot firehouse at 6030 N. Clark. He was in the market for new office space, and 40th Ward alderman Patrick O’Connor was looking for a new use for the soon-to-be-empty firehouse.

“I initially approached Alderman O’Connor because there was an old police station on Foster Avenue. I thought it’d be really cool to have a production company in a police station and the editing suites in the jail cells. Then he told me about the firehouse,” Plum says. “We drove by it that night, had a peek, and a formal tour with the firemen.”

Without the steady stream of emergency calls and sirens, the firehouse has settled into a tranquil rhythm—except, of course, when someone takes a giddy slide down the fireman’s pole.

 

 

 

thanks Dan

Previous mention of a new use for a different Chicago fire house

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Chicago sells old firehouse

DNAinfo.com has an article about a former Chicago firehouse being sold for renovation by a filmmaking company.

From firemen to filmmakers. The vacant city-owned firehouse at 5714 N. Ridge Ave., a Chicago Landmark built in 1928 and trimmed in terra cotta, would be sold to Andersonville nonprofit Chicago Filmmakers under a new plan announced by the city.

The city picked the organization — out of a handful of other arts and community groups — to take over and renovate the property.

If approved by the Chicago Plan Commission and City Council, the city would sell the firehouse for $36,000, just 10 percent of its market value, said Chris Chang, a representative of the Department of Housing and Economic Development.

But the Chicago Filmmakers, which offers independent movie screenings, hosts film festivals and teaches film classes, would spend $600,000 renovating the deteriorating the old firehouse that hasn’t had occupants since firefighters moved out in 2003.

“This is a dream for us. We are so thrilled and honored that we were chosen,” said Brenda Webb, the executive director of Chicago Filmmakers, at a meeting with community members living near the firehouse Wednesday night.

She said once the firehouse is renovated the organization would use the building to offer weekly screenings of independent films and documentaries, “the kind of films you would not see at your local megaplex.”

Webb said neighbors can also expect partnerships with nearby schools, two movie festivals and other “experimental, underground and offbeat” programming.

“We want the firehouse to be seen as a community resource,” she said.

If all goes as planned, the city’s sale of the property should be approved by the spring and the construction would begin immediately, Webb said.

The Chicago Filmmakers expect the renovation to take “eight months to a year after acquisition,” she said.

Neighbors have been waiting for years for a new tenant at the firehouse, which has been empty and open to the elements. The search began 10 years ago, and it wasn’t until May that the city issued a request for proposals from groups interested in acquiring vacant firehouses across the city.

Chicago Filmmakers Firehouse Design
Slideshow
Chicago Filmmakers Firehouse Design

An open house earlier in the summer at the firehouse attracted representatives of a brew pub, theater groups and a nursery school.

Sue Morales, the president of the area block club, said the Chicago Filmmakers’ plan would fit the neighborhood well.

The basement and first and second floor of the firehouse would be entirely renovated if the sale is approved, said James Gorski, the Chicago Filmmakers’ architect.

Gorski said the basement would be used mostly for storage. The first floor’s truck bay would be converted into a screening room with as many as 99 seats. The second floor would be used for classrooms.

An elevator would also be added to the building, he said.

The main entrance to the building would be located off of the alley. A concession stand and a bathroom would be built just inside.

The existing parking lot on the property includes 15 spaces.

Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) said Chicago Filmmakers was one of two finalists and was chosen over a for-profit arts organization, which he and the city declined to identify.

Webb, the organization’s director, said Chicago Filmmakers was founded 1973 and has spent the past 17 years leasing the second floor of 5243 N. Clark St.

She said she’s had her eye on the firehouse for years. When she first took a look at the firehouse, its basement was discouragingly filled with water.

thanks Dan

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New use for old fire station

Hank Sajovic submitted an image of Addison’s former fire station #3 at 101 Swift Road. It is now the home of Faux design Studio which incorporates a school to teach faux painting in addition to having contractors to that provide faux painting and decorative painting services.

former Addison fire station 3 101 Swift Rd

Formerly Addison Fire Station #3 at 101 Swift Road is now an art school. Hank Sajovic photo

former Addison Fire Department Station 3

When owned and operated as Addison Station 3, the building looked quite different. Bill Friedrich photo

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