Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Park Forest: the new community model


South Chicago suburban Park Forest has been a model community from its inception. A town built in the late 1940s as one of the nation's first-large scale planned unit developments, Park Forest 's success gave rise to a format that shaped thousands of communities across the country for decades. It had one of the first regional shopping malls, the village's main economic engine for years, which only fell on hard times when shoppers took their pocketbooks to newer indoor malls in the 1990s. The village recognized the futility of a Park Forest Mall with no major anchors and converted its failed mall to a town center—DownTown Park Forest—cutting streets through parking lots, taking down outmoded buildings and reinventing itself. Now, once again, the village is leading the way, modernizing suburban homeownership opportunities, breathing new life into the downtown and attracting new investment, proving that Park Forest is building its legacy and creating a great place to call home.

The groundwork for this transformation was laid in 2003, when village leaders invited the Urban Land Institute-Chicago and Campaign for Sensible Growth to convene a Technical Assistance Panel (TAP) to assist with increasing the viability of the newly created DownTown. The industry experts who comprised the panel offered several workable strategies as reported in Building on the Legacy: Creating a New DownTown. In the few short years since the TAP took place, many of the recommendations have been implemented, creating a new legacy in historic Park Forest .

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