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Commercial real estate recovery seen

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The former home of Westlane Bowl sits vacant in Crystal Lake. (Mike Greene - mgreene@shawmedia.com)

CRYSTAL LAKE – McHenry County's commercial real estate market remains in a slump, but local experts see signs of recovery on the horizon.

A glut of supply combined with continuing foreclosures have depressed prices, but rental and leasing activity has picked up as the broader economy grows.

Commercial real estate prices have fallen by at least 30 percent since the recession. In some places, space is going for about $5 per square foot compared to pre-recession prices of between $8 and $10 per square foot, said Mike Deacon, of RVG Commercial Realty in Crystal Lake.

Prices have started to stabilize more recently, several local real estate agents said.

"We feel like we may have bottomed out," said Bruce Kaplan, senior broker associate with Premier Commercial Realty in Lake in the Hills. "This may be the beginning stages of recovery, but we've still got a long way to go."

Stabilization is welcome after a spate of high-profile commercial foreclosures.

For years, the county's most visible sign of the troubled real estate market was the unfinished Riverside Square building. Dubbed the “Tyvek Tower,” it loomed over downtown Algonquin at the corner of routes 31 and 62.

The developer that broke ground on the luxury condominium project filed for bankruptcy in 2008 shortly after construction began. That kicked off two years of court battles between the village of Algonquin and banks over fixing what village officials called a blight and a safety hazard.

Last summer, after it was purchased by a new owner, workers transformed the once Tyvek-covered structure with leaky roofs and mold issues into a watertight building with a brick facade.

But four years later, the building remains empty. The owner is now planning to fill it with smaller apartments rather than condos as the market for the latter has dried up.

Foreclosures have dotted all sectors of county's commercial landscape. A foreclosure notice was filed against the company behind the 644-home Tall Grass subdivision planned for Prairie Grove in 2008. In late 2009, the private Turnberry Country Club in Lakewood went into foreclosure. And Harris Bank filed a mortgage foreclosure on Galt Airport in Greenwood in 2010.

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