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Well that's not surprising.  It was pretty much a matter of when. 

 

But the article doesn't mention that Sears is planning to lease more space in that building for their online business and now CPS is moving in?  I guess it's good there's more loop office workers, but you can tell the strategy in that building has been to gradually convert the place into office only with shopping on the ground floor. 

 

I kind of like the multi-level retail but it seems modern retail stores rarely go above 3-4 floors unless they are in a mall.

 

 

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    The_Cincinnati_Kid

    Chicago Bears to invest over $2 billion to build new stadium near Soldier Field, reversing plans to move from city center By Ben Morse, CNN Published 12:26 PM EDT, Mon March 11, 2024  

  • This is cool, I'm excited to see a brick high rise being proposed. Glass has had too much of a monopoly on new high rises in recent times.      https://chicago.urbanize.city/post/

  • Former abandoned Chicago Spire project getting new life. New version will have 635 residential units if both towers get built.   Concrete continues to rise at 400 Lake Shore North Tower

Posted Images

New Safeguard Storage Building in Uptown

This midrise building will replace a 1 story laundromat 

 

20140227_162417.jpg

More about this at Uptown Update  http://www.uptownupdate.com/2014/02/first-look-safeguard-self-storage-at.html

 

 

 

 

Reclad + new floors on 1201 North Clark. 

gold-coast-apartments.png

Sourced from Curbed Chicago

http://chicago.curbed.com/archives/2014/02/27/developer-wants-to-stack-apartments-on-top-of-gold-coast-building.php

 

 

Sheridan and Dakin

loukas-1.png

Sourced from Curbed Chicago

http://chicago.curbed.com/archives/2014/02/21/new-details-emerge-for-sheridan-red-line-development.php

Here's a new rendering of the Trader Joe's in Wicker Park.  It has a sleek glass and steel facade and is two stories with parking inside.  There are neighborhood concerns that it will generate traffic

 

wicker%20park%20trader%20joe's%201.png

Sourced from curbed:

http://chicago.curbed.com/archives/2014/02/28/behold-the-proposal-for-the-future-wicker-park-trader-joes.php

 

 

And a big development I've forgotten about near North and Clybourn now well underway.....

 

New City.

NewCity2.jpg

Aerial View.  Halsted running top middle to lower right corner (Looking SW)

 

NewCity3.jpg

View of the grocery store component on Clybourn

 

NewCity4.jpg

Streetwall looking South down Halsted

 

NewCity5.jpg

Blackhawk St entrance

 

NewCity6.jpg

Interior plaza

 

NewCity7.jpg

Interior plaza looking towards Eastman St. garage

 

NewCity9.jpg

Looking north into interior plaza

 

NewCity10.jpg

Garage entrance on Eastman

 

NewCity11.jpg

Tower component at Halsted and Eastman

 

All images and more development info found here:

http://bucksbaumrp.com/new-city.html

 

In skyscraper news, 200 N. Michigan is officially a go.  Demolition on the current site is proceeding.  Really love the design of this tower.  At has a "Magnificent Mile" look to it, which unfortunately portions of the stretch from Millennium to the river either look distressed or too corporate.  The ground floor of this development certainly has a better retail vocabulary to it which will hopefully attract a big tenant.

200NM%20City%20Council%20Approval_b.jpg

http://www.bklarchitecture.com/news/city-council-approves-bKL-designed-200-north-michigan

  • 2 weeks later...

whoa - thumbs up for sheridan & dakin.

^ Yeah definitely a fan of mine. 

 

Here's some pictures I took of the new Bulls practice facility on my way to watch the Blackhawks - Wings game.  It's one surface lot that will bite the dust outside of the pavement parking prairie surrounding the UC. 

 

13207406483_52301b1853_b.jpg

 

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  • 5 months later...

Big new building next to rail stations...

 

September 2, 2014

Citizens Financial Leads $296M Financing for 1.2 MSF Chicago Office Project

150 North RiversideBy Barbra Murray, Contributing Editor

 

Citizens Financial Group has paved the way for the O’Donnell Investment Co.’s $500 million development of 150 N. Riverside, a nearly 1.4 million-square-foot office high-rise in Chicago’s coveted West Loop submarket. Citizens Financial, Bank of America and Helaba—co-lead arrangers and joint bookrunners—provided the developer with a $296 million construction loan.

 

The project was a magnet for investors, but there were a few reasons why the Citizens Financial-led consortium emerged victorious in the competition, one of which was reliability. “I think what our clients look for is certainty of execution, so when we say we’re going to do something, we do it,” Gary Magnuson, head of commercial real estate finance at RBS Citizens, the commercial banking arm of Citizens Financial, told Commercial Property Executive. “There’s a high level of confidence in our ability to deliver on time with reasonable terms.”

 

There’s a reason for the half-billion-dollar development price tag and big-ticket financing for 150 N. Riverside. Towering 53 stories above the Chicago River on a parcel that had sat vacant for quite some time, the Goettsch Partners-designed skyscraper will be a premier office destination, providing 1.2 million square feet of leasable state-of-the-art office space, as well as 12,000 square feet of on-site food service, a 7,000-square-foot fitness center, all surrounded by a 1.5-acre park. The property boasts LEED-CS Gold pre-certification, obtained through the incorporation of a host of features, including a 100 percent green roof. Further adding to its sustainability, the building will feature a bike room accommodating more than 100 bikes and serve as a model of transit-oriented development with a location within immediate proximity to Union Station, Ogilvie Transportation Center and a host of “L” stops.

 

READ MORE AT:

http://www.cpexecutive.com/finance/citizens-financial-leads-296m-financing-for-1-2msf-chicago-office-project/1004103168.html

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

New updated rendering showing the new McCormick Hotel and basketball arena now on the north side of Cermak.  The historic ABC warehouse will be incorporated.  The only building standing in the way a historic graystone.  That building is currently being moved to another location.  Not pictured is another hotel tower proposed across the street.  That will also rehab a bunch of historic buildings next door.

 

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Found here:

http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=207501&page=14

Another Goose Island Development:

2084_909_blisshr_0001.jpg

 

The Goose Island stuff looks good but what is it with these weird ass curvy pedestrian bridges lately?  Thanks OMAHA for the American trend!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

  • 5 months later...

Another flagship for the Mag Mile.

http://www.chicagomag.com/style-shopping/February-2015/Under-Armour-is-Opening-Their-Biggest-Brand-House-Ever-on-Michigan-Avenue/

 

Since Eddie Bauer moved to their new store, under armor will take over this space.  I also noticed Harley Davidson will moving into the 2nd floor of the Ritz Carlton with Shake shack is now open in the previous Harley space on Ohio.

 

Also heard that All Saints will move to a new boutique location which means  the Mich ave space will be freed up.  I have a gut feeling Apple may be interested but who knows.  But that would mean the existing apple space would become available.

 

Also lots of work going on at the Uniqlo store on the 5th and 6th floors of the Bonwit Teller building, which also features a new Verizon flagship And what appears to be an in-process facade renovation of H&M. 

 

Still waiting on tenants to be announced for two hundred north and the Northbridge Mall expansion. (New department store?). A couple new tenants opened at millenniun plaza and the new Blackhawks store on the 2nd level of 333 North.

 

Hm, that looks like a pretty bland development. Essentially a mall with a couple of non-descript towers and parking garages. Maybe this isn't a fair comparison, but I thought of New York's Atlantic Yards as being a similar large scale, multi-tower infill project, and the difference between the two is staggering.

^ Yeah and the comments to the article indicate some locals don't like it.

Hm, that looks like a pretty bland development. Essentially a mall with a couple of non-descript towers and parking garages. Maybe this isn't a fair comparison, but I thought of New York's Atlantic Yards as being a similar large scale, multi-tower infill project, and the difference between the two is staggering.

 

Wasn't saying it was anything great, but its very large scale on an area that was a very large empty field and more than a bit of a dead zone that's lied fallow for many years - what was there before was massive public housing blocks and other mid century junk so I do see this as an improvement.  I wish it was better looking, but the alderman there is particularly corruptible and I'm sure the developers lined his campaign wallet.

It's hideous.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

These kind of balconies give me the heebie jeebies

 

IMG_4339-thumb.jpg

Wow.

Pretty lame place in a cool part of town.

I can't imagine hanging out there much, but it sure is a marked improvement from the bleakness that existed prior.

 

But god almighty is the redline stop an abomination there.

 

 

Agreed.

On a side note, the Arhaus Furniture (CLE based company) store a few blocks away on Clybourn is one of the nicest retail spaces I've ever seen.

 

Apple really fixed up that stop it's better than it used to be.

Oy, I can only imagine what it was like before. It feels so narrow, cramped, isolated...kind of rapey too

Oy, I can only imagine what it was like before. It feels so narrow, cramped, isolated...kind of rapey too

 

A complete dump very dirty too. When that area was a gigantic region of public housing it wasn't terribly safe either.

 

Compared to Cabrini Green and it's old surroundings this development is like Paris. Not quite sure what some were expecting. Not every urban neighborhood can be 100% upscale gentrification. This is still a "transition" area at best.

The architecture of new city is disastrous.  I don't know why they chose such a jumbled collection of materials.  I would have played off the 50's streamline modernism of the station, some of that which is evident in the tower.  Maybe have a total aluminum clad base with nice rounded corners.  That would have been spectacular instead of the clunky brick facades and circus tent metal panel. 

Meanwhile, a block over from New City....

 

division101.jpg

Source: Me

 

parkside-1.jpg

 

cabrini-green-tower.png

Source: Curbed

 

And, one development I haven't heard much on, but a new building on the City Farm site which is just to the right of the photo I took.  The farm will be moving to a bigger location down the street. 

Screen%20Shot%202014-07-09%20at%209.50.05%20AM.png

 

In the 10 years since I've been living in Chicago and traveling to beforehand, I've taken quite a few photos of Cabrini when the projects were still active, were demolished and then rebuilt as new apartment towers, condos, townhouses, malls and department stores.  Same can be said for Prairie shores which looks like a boomtown these days.

Meanwhile, a block over from New City....

 

division101.jpg

Source: Me

 

parkside-1.jpg

 

cabrini-green-tower.png

Source: Curbed

 

And, one development I haven't heard much on, but a new building on the City Farm site which is just to the right of the photo I took.  The farm will be moving to a bigger location down the street. 

Screen%20Shot%202014-07-09%20at%209.50.05%20AM.png

 

In the 10 years since I've been living in Chicago and traveling to beforehand, I've taken quite a few photos of Cabrini when the projects were still active, were demolished and then rebuilt as new apartment towers, condos, townhouses, malls and department stores.  Same can be said for Prairie shores which looks like a boomtown these days.

 

Is the white building the one that's going in right across from the Target on Division?  That one looks pretty good.

 

And yeah New City is architecturally pretty terrible, but its a huge upgrade from what was there before.

  • 3 weeks later...

Kingsbury Blackhawk....MOAR MALL

 

rtklnewcity.jpg

http://chicago.curbed.com/archives/2015/03/24/new-city-expansion-clybourn-corridor.php

 

The amount of retail in the North / Clybourn corridor is insanity.  I'm liking all the towers going up along Blackhawk but the traffic from all the malls and parking garages has made this area a nightmare.  Just wait until New City opens and all those cars will try to be turning on Halsted.  I don't drive, so yeah...the traffic isn't a big deal to me.  But for anyone who is a pedestrian or cyclist in that area it's a deadly adventure.  Narrow sidewalks, obsolete bike lane design, cars existing hidden driveways, backed up turn lanes. It's become quite a mess.

 

 

 

 

Artist rendition of 9 Walton.  This one of the few remaining empty lots in Gold Coast.  I like the massing on this one.

 

sketch-rendering-layered.png

http://9walton.com/

Now THAT one I like.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Author

The Cubs and Cards had MLB's opening game last night at a partially renovated Wrigley Field.  The left field video board was finished.  But the left and right field bleachers were not.  Instead, the steel framework was temporarily covered with an Ernie Banks tribute tarp.  According to last night's broadcast, the left field bleachers should be open in May and the right field bleachers in June.

 

Below is a photo from http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/2015/04/05/cubs-fans-first-glimpse-wrigley-construction/25335371/

 

635638510715970262-wrigleyfield.jpg

 

Lots more photos from opening night: http://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2015/4/6/8352561/new-wrigley-field-video-boards-restrooms/in/3990383#4712120

  • 2 weeks later...

Can't say for sure, but it almost looks like the outfield concourses were bumped out a little further.  Might just be the perspective with the construction fencing and all.  Scoreboard is HUGE though.  It's way bigger than I thought it would be. 

 

I live over in the Southport Corridor less than a mile from the field and damn are those new speakers loud!  I can deal with it, but I'm sure the Lakeview NIMBYs are pissed.

  • 1 month later...

I'm surprised that the 606 a project to create Chicago's Bikeable version of the High Line hasn't been discussed here.  This is an old railroad viaduct turned into trail/linear park (the park is the 606 the trail is the bloomingdale Trail after the rail line the preceded it) that stretches from Ashland Ave in Bucktown all the way over to Ridgeland Ave in Humboldt park.  Its been a bit overcrowded due to it opening recently, with way too many dog walkers and strollers to be an ideal bicycle route, but its a really pretty park and riding on it in spite of the crowds is a lot of fun:

 

https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20150610/humboldt-park/whos-using-606s-bloomingdale-trail-at-3-pm-on-weekday

 

Here's a video of it from one of the editors of Streetsblog Chicago:

 

 

Here's the official website:

 

http://www.the606.org/

Kingsbury Blackhawk....MOAR MALL

 

rtklnewcity.jpg

http://chicago.curbed.com/archives/2015/03/24/new-city-expansion-clybourn-corridor.php

 

The amount of retail in the North / Clybourn corridor is insanity.  I'm liking all the towers going up along Blackhawk but the traffic from all the malls and parking garages has made this area a nightmare.  Just wait until New City opens and all those cars will try to be turning on Halsted.  I don't drive, so yeah...the traffic isn't a big deal to me.  But for anyone who is a pedestrian or cyclist in that area it's a deadly adventure.  Narrow sidewalks, obsolete bike lane design, cars existing hidden driveways, backed up turn lanes. It's become quite a mess.

 

 

 

 

 

Yeah, this is going to awful, I frequently use the halstead bus as a shortcut to get to the north side - I've got a feeling backups are going to make this quite a bit more difficult once this project comes online :(

  • 1 month later...
  • Author

Phase 1 of the Wrigley Field renovations is now done (more or less).  This is the most visible part of the renovation project involving Wrigley Field itself.  It includes rebuilt left field bleachers, rebuilt right field bleachers, new left field scoreboard, new right field scoreboard and some smaller signage:

 

19270217184_5906462f00_c_d.jpg

 

According to http://chicago.cubs.mlb.com/chc/restore-wrigley/updates/timeline/ - the rest of the renovation phases are as follows:

 

- Phase 2 (2015-16): Completion of the bleacher renovation and expansion, new Cubs clubhouse space, bullpens relocated underneath expanded bleachers and completion of third-base concourse work

 

- Phase 3 (2016-17): Begin first-base concourse work, new visitors clubhouse, renovation and expansion of luxury suites

 

- Phase 4 (2017-18): Completion of first-base concourse, two-story retail and entertainment complex in the right-field corner, Ricketts family development next to Wrigley Field that includes a new office building and Sheraton Hotel

Can't say for sure, but it almost looks like the outfield concourses were bumped out a little further.  Might just be the perspective with the construction fencing and all.  Scoreboard is HUGE though.  It's way bigger than I thought it would be. 

 

I live over in the Southport Corridor less than a mile from the field and damn are those new speakers loud!  I can deal with it, but I'm sure the Lakeview NIMBYs are pissed.

 

That's pretty loud.  I live in a different part of the city, has there been any backlash against  them?

  • 2 months later...

The old megamall in Logan Square (the new Wicker Park as Wicker has been overrun by bros) is getting replaced by an absolutely fantastic looking infill project!

 

http://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20150930/logan-square/check-out-total-overhaul-of-mega-mall-replacement-project

 

This is why I harp on Cincy so much to improve its infill.  It can happen, there are architects out there who know how to do much much better and this is it.

 

I'll miss the megamall though, it was a really great little latino oriented flea market even if its building was extraordinarily ugly.

The NIMBY's have fought hard against this one.

The NIMBY's have fought hard against this one.

 

Yeah I got in a debate with a friend in Logan Square about this - she didn't understand the basic economics of why having a larger apartment complex would be good for the neighborhood.  Too many people get caught in this myth of small town compact neighborhood even though Logan Square is right off a 24 hour transit line that just happens to be one of the more busy ones in the whole country.

 

I'm generally supportive of city policies that are encouraging station near TOD, because there are large swaths of development near EL lines that are underutilized and in order to keep rent down long term this is the best way to utilize both Chicago's transit infrastructure and support the growing demands for urban living that otherwise would swamp all neighborhoods near transit eventually leading to a San Francisco like gentrification crisis (which won't happen for a long time in Chicago, but the city needs to act now to prevent that from happening later - I have a feeling there will be a point where the growing parts of town will surpass the shrinking parts of town too - the last census was also distorted by the massive amounts of public housing teardowns last decade too...)

 

She also was concerned about gentrification, but I feel this sort of thing addresses it, by providing more supply to meet high demand than a smaller development would provide.  So long as the development looks good I don't have a problem and in its current form it looks pretty great and its totally better than what it replaced asthetically.

  • 4 months later...

Lots of ugly staggered windows with grey/silver materials (an architectural trend of the 2010s), but in general interesting projects.  From strictly a functional perspective the one in Lincoln Square is great - it had to overcome a lot of NIMBY push back even though its located at the intersection of one of the most popular bus lines with the brown line train.  Currently only architecturally insignificant low rise buildings exist on that site and Lincoln Square is a very nice shopping district so the density is already in the area though Western is a lot less utilized than the stretch of Lincoln they narrowed to create the square as a "German Village" back in the 1970s (there still are German-American cultural institutions there, but most of the population doesn't really exist anymore as it was mostly last wave post WWII germans).

 

In short its really great for the area.

 

I'm a pretty big fan of the TOD ordnance btw, its a great way to strategically grow parts of the city that are closest to transit lines - perhaps its a way to prevent more of the disaster that is Lincoln Park in terms of de-densifying near transit lines.

  • 1 month later...

Dear Ohioans, it happens elsewhere too....

 

Chicago's Never Built Skyscraper—Now a Hole in the Ground and a Pile of Dirt https://t.co/VEx7JVAScy

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

If every tower ever planned was built no major city would look the same as it does now. It's astonishing just how many massive buildings are proposed but never make it anywhere.

 

Chicago has no less than three proposals for 2,000 foot tall towers that never got built from the 80s to now. All three extremely interesting in their own manner and would have made a wildly different skyline for Chicago.

 

On top of that there are probably a dozen other supertall proposals that were very serious but never went anywhere for one reason or another. I remember reading somewhere that the moment some company in Chicago proposes a new tallest in the city is when you need to start liquidating any real estate assets you may have because the market is about to crash. And for many decades this has held true.

Dear Ohioans, it happens elsewhere too....

 

Chicago's Never Built Skyscraper—Now a Hole in the Ground and a Pile of Dirt https://t.co/VEx7JVAScy

 

The height of ''the big short era'' hubris...this hole being an appropriate reminder of the financial greed of the early '00s which, ominously, is all but forgotten today.  Throw in Chicago's built-in hubris and you have the The Spire.  2,000 condos in one building starting at 750K.  Chicago was expecting world-wide investors (Arab oil folks etc.) to own properties in The Spire so they could, I guess, watch Chicago's Air Show and shop on Michigan Avenue.  The one big time contract purchaser was the guy who created beanie-babies.  Hope he got his deposit back since the developer went bankrupt.

If every tower ever planned was built no major city would look the same as it does now. It's astonishing just how many massive buildings are proposed but never make it anywhere.

 

Chicago has no less than three proposals for 2,000 foot tall towers that never got built from the 80s to now. All three extremely interesting in their own manner and would have made a wildly different skyline for Chicago.

 

On top of that there are probably a dozen other supertall proposals that were very serious but never went anywhere for one reason or another. I remember reading somewhere that the moment some company in Chicago proposes a new tallest in the city is when you need to start liquidating any real estate assets you may have because the market is about to crash. And for many decades this has held true.

 

Chicago has had a few 2,000'+ towers proposed; none, however, got the ''hole'' digging stage like The Spire, but times were different 10 years ago.

The Miglin-Beitler Sky Needle and 7 South Dearborn definitely got close, but you're right in that they never made it as far as the Chicago Spire. Which is probably because the Chicago Spire started way earlier than it really should have. Financing was questionable to begin with and yet they began digging.

 

I will always have a soft spot for pushing height barriers from a purely engineering-fan standpoint. I find solutions to the exaggerated problems that exist by pushing the boundaries of what we can build incredibly interesting. That's why I don't even care how ostentatious many of these buildings wind up being.

 

Although the Miglin-Beitlier was one sexy Mother-F****r. It would have been THE quintessential postmodern tower.

 

m-b_2.jpg

 

So sexy. Then again, so was 7 South Dearborn.

 

7sd_02.jpg

The Miglin-Beitler Sky Needle and 7 South Dearborn definitely got close, but you're right in that they never made it as far as the Chicago Spire. Which is probably because the Chicago Spire started way earlier than it really should have. Financing was questionable to begin with and yet they began digging.

 

I will always have a soft spot for pushing height barriers from a purely engineering-fan standpoint. I find solutions to the exaggerated problems that exist by pushing the boundaries of what we can build incredibly interesting. That's why I don't even care how ostentatious many of these buildings wind up being.

 

Although the Miglin-Beitlier was one sexy Mother-F****r. It would have been THE quintessential postmodern tower.

 

m-b_2.jpg

 

So sexy. Then again, so was 7 South Dearborn.

 

7sd_02.jpg

 

That's right, 7 S Dearborn, forgot about that one but I do remember there were a few of these.

There were a handful of other 2,000+ foot tall towers thrown about but beyond Chicago spire I believe Miglin-Beitler and 7 South Dearborn are the only two that were ever serious enough to actually be a possibility.

 

There's that current 2,000' version of the bundled tube structure Sears Tower uses that's proposed by that Brit that owns the old Post Office that has about a .01% chance of ever happening.

 

I'm curious if the rumors of BIG working on a design for the Chicago Spire site will come true. It's a super prominent site and is perfect for something unreasonably tall. But BIG is terrible with making tall buildings. His 2 WTC proposal in Manhattan is one of the worst towers I've seen in recent years and his proposal for the Hudson Yards is almost equally as bad. He just doesn't seem to get skyscrapers. His smaller structures are hit or miss but are rarely offensively bad. His towers are basically all offensively bad w/ the exception of the W57th Pyramid in Manhattan.

  • Author

Work continues at Wrigley Field.  Over the off-season the center field bleacher reconstruction and new Cubs clubhouse space was finished.  Below is a 1/27/2016 aerial photo from http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs/ct-wrigley-field-opening-day-cubs-20160315-story.html that shows the reconstructed center field bleachers.  The left field and right field bleachers were rebuilt last year along with the installation of new left field and right field video boards:

 

25942248431_70b10cbd41_b_d.jpg

 

 

A new visitors clubhouse and concourse work still remain on the list of renovations for the venerable ballpark.  The most visible remaining construction project is a restoration of the historic marquee at Clark and Addison.  Work has been proceeding on that over this off-season.  Below is a 1/27/2016 photo of the marquee from http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs/ct-wrigley-field-opening-day-cubs-20160315-story.html.  According to that article in the Tribune, the Cubs say the marquee work will be finished for their home opener vs. the Reds on April 11:

 

25942258251_527991265c_b_d.jpg

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