Last-Minute Sale Saves Burnham House

Story by Margaret Foster / Nov. 10, 2005

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Daniel Burnham's endangered Root-Badger
House in Kenilworth still stands; like the Skiff House,
it may be sold to a buyer who will renovate it. (LPCI)
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Talk about a good neighbor.
Last month, a resident of Kenilworth, Ill., rescued
a 95-year-old house designed by Daniel Burnham's architectural
firm when he bought it from the owner who planned to tear it down.
Cameel Halim bought the Prairie-style Skiff House,
built in 1910 for Chicago's Field Museum director Frederick Skiff,
from Antoinette Vigilante on Nov. 1 for $2.35 million.
"That was such a crazy day," says Halim's
daughter, Nefrette Halim, president of Citizens for Kenilworth.
Days after an auction that stripped the house of its original
mantel and banister, a crew began removing the windows of the
house. "In order for her to get her workmen out, we had to
come back with a check."
Vigilante, who bought the two-story stucco house
last year for $1.875 million, rejected several offers from buyers
who wanted to renovate rather than destroy it. It was scheduled
to be demolished on Oct. 27.
Many of Kenilworth's 825 houses, which were designed
by elite architects like Frank Lloyd Wright, Daniel Burnham, and
George Maher, were built on large lots. In the last two years,
22 houses have been demolished for new ones.
"The real problem is that Kenilworth doesn't
have anything in place to protect structures like [the Skiff House],"
says David Bahlman, executive director of the Landmarks Preservation
Council of Illinois, who spoke to town officials about preventing
teardowns in 1999. "This teardown problem has been on the
minds of Kenilworth residents for at least six years, and [officials]
just haven't done anything about it."
The town's building-review committee can delay demolitions
of architecturally significant houses for six months, but after
that, owners can raze any house, despite its historic importance.
Two years ago, the National Trust's Midwest Office
formed a coalition of citizens groups to discuss strategies to
fight teardowns in the Chicago area, and Kenilworth residents
have joined the Chicago Suburban Teardown Alliance.
"If our historically important homes are treasured
by our citizens, then the village ordinances need to be changed
to reflect those values," says resident Beth Baxter. "We
can't depend upon a family to come forward with $2 million plus
dollars each time a historic home is endangered."
As for the Skiff House, "My father is going
to renovate it with white gloves," Nefrette Halim says. "He's
going to take his time with it, and he's going to find a nice
family to live in it."
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