State-of-the-Art Recording Facilities Proposed for Stockyards Bank Site

November 18, 2024

Department of Planning and Development    312.744.9267

An $80 million recording complex proposed by Third Coast Music is the winning respondent to a City of Chicago Request for Proposals (RFP) for the landmark Stockyard Bank and adjacent land in New City, the Department of Planning and Development (DPD) announced today.

The “Scoring Stage” complex would create a global destination at Halsted Street and Exchange Avenue for the recording of musical ensembles up to 100 people, with additional space for post-production, special events, education, and a Chicago music museum. Most recordings would be for the film, television and music industries, which currently lack a local, state-of-the-art recording complex for orchestras, choirs and other large groups, according to the Third Coast.

The 76,000-square-foot project is one of two responses to a 2023 DPD RFP for the 45,000-square-foot bank building, which the City acquired in 2000, and a one-acre vacant lot across Exchange that the City acquired in 1997.

Event space, classrooms and the museum would be housed within the former bank while recording and post-production uses would be housed within a new, 31,700-square-foot building that features an 8,000-square-foot scoring studio. Parking would be provided in a new multi-story garage that’s connected to the studio building.

Third Coast Music is a charitable and educational organization that helps prepare music students and professionals for careers within the industry.

Third Coast’s proposed purchase price for the properties is $1.9 million. Construction financing would include grants and donations from institutions and benefactors, conventional loans, and public assistance that is yet to be determined. The sale and potential City assistance requires City Council authorization.

If approved, the project could help bolster Chicago's top-five national ranking as a  recording center, with 6,300 local jobs in the field, according to World Business Chicago.

“Unlike its counterparts on Los Angeles movie lots, the Scoring Stage would be a creative hub that serves industry professionals and supports youth in all areas of the music business, through workshops, internships, and other opportunities that leverage the facility,” Third Coast said in its purchase application.

The Colonial Revival-style bank was designed by Abraham Epstein and completed in 1925 to serve industries and employees of the nearby Union Stock Yards and Central Manufacturing District. With its Palladian windows and central clock tower, the design is closely modeled on Independence Hall in Philadelphia. It was designated an official City landmark in 2008.

###

Additional Information

ThirdCoast1ThirdCoast2ThirdCoast3ThirdCoast4

Right click to enlarge