Service area · 60610

Masonry contractor in Old Town, Chicago.

Old Town (ZIP 60610) is anchored by the Old Town Triangle — a compact Chicago Landmark district designated 28 September 1977. Almost every residential block inside the Triangle sits under that designation, which means Landmarks Commission review is the default for any visible facade work. Pre-Fire and Victorian-era brick with soft lime mortar is the stock, and preservation-grade work is the rule.

  • ZIP 60610
  • Triangle Chicago Landmark district
  • Preservation-grade by default
  • Licensed
  • Bonded
  • Insured
  • License TGC-098-734
  • Est. 2014
  • Landmarks Commission

Approximate boundaries: North Ave (north) · Division St (south) · Larrabee / Sedgwick (west) · Clark St (east). The Triangle landmark district is the tight residential core bounded by North, Wells and Lincoln Park West. Open in OpenStreetMap.

Building stock

Pre-Fire, post-Fire, and Wells Street commercial.

Old Town is one of the few Chicago neighborhoods with a meaningful pre-Fire residential stock.

Type

Pre-Fire workmen's cottages

Surviving 1860s frame-and-brick cottages — rare in Chicago and concentrated in the Triangle. Very soft brick, lime mortar, treated as preservation-grade by default.

Type

Post-Fire Victorian brick

1870s–1880s Italianate brick houses and rowhouses, including the 1885 Crilly Court block — one of the earliest planned rowhouse developments in the city.

Type

Wells Street commercial brick

Late-1800s storefronts and walk-ups along Wells — original storefront detail intact on many blocks. Upper floors carry period brick with original mortar.

Typical work we run on these walls

  • Preservation-grade lime-mortar tuckpointing.
  • Matched-salvage brick replacement on pre-Fire stock.
  • Hidden-bay test panels before any visible work.
  • Crilly Court rowhouse repointing and stoop repair.
  • Wells Street storefront and second-floor brick work.
  • Landmarks Commission submission preparation.
  • Hand-tool repointing on the most delicate facades.
  • Documented before-and-after for owner records.
Local context

The Triangle, Wells Street and St Michael's.

Old Town is one of Chicago's smallest neighborhoods and one of its densest in heritage. The Triangle is bounded roughly by North Avenue, Wells Street and Lincoln Park West, with Crilly Court sitting inside it. Wells Street carries the commercial strip; St Michael's Church on Eugenie anchors the area visually and historically.

Streets we read often

  • Wells St — commercial spine, original storefront brick.
  • North Ave — northern Triangle edge, mixed-use brick.
  • Sedgwick St — Victorian rowhouses and pre-Fire cottages.
  • Crilly Court — 1885 rowhouse interior block, heritage stock.
  • Eugenie / Menomonee — short residential streets, period detail.
  • Lincoln Park West — eastern Triangle edge, larger Victorians.

Anchors in the area

St Michael's Church on Eugenie (built by Chicago's Bavarian community after the Fire), the Second City theatre and Piper's Alley on Wells, the Old Town School building (older site), the Latin School and Walter Payton High borders. The 1885 Crilly Court block is the most-photographed preservation block in the neighborhood.

Permits & the Triangle landmark

What the city asks for in Old Town.

Old Town Triangle — landmark by default, not by exception.

The Old Town Triangle District was designated a Chicago Landmark on 28 September 1977. Almost every visible residential facade in the Triangle sits inside that designation, which makes Landmarks Commission review the default for facade work — the opposite of most Chicago neighborhoods, where landmark scope is the rare case.

  • Triangle facade work — Commission review with submitted photos, drawings, mortar samples and the replacement-material spec.
  • Test panels before scope — Commission expects hidden-bay test panels on cleaning and repointing before full work signs off.
  • Lime-rich mortar by default — pre-Fire and Victorian brick will not survive Type-S; we mix to the original.
  • Submission timing — Landmarks Commission typically responds within several weeks; we build that into the schedule from the first call.

Wells Street commercial buildings, while not all individually landmarked, sit near or inside the district edge and most face the same Commission expectations on the upper-floor brick.

Up close

What the work looks like.

Weathered brick wall with eroded, recessed mortar joints.
Brick wall with clean, even, tooled mortar joints.
Brickwork and mortar joints, up close (illustrative).
Weathered brick wall with eroded, recessed mortar joints.
Brick wall with clean, even, tooled mortar joints.
Weathered brick and matched repointing (illustrative).
FAQ

Old Town masonry questions.

Is Old Town a landmark district?

Yes — the Old Town Triangle, the compact heart of the neighborhood, was designated a Chicago Landmark district on 28 September 1977. Almost every residential block in the Triangle falls inside that district, which means Landmarks Commission review is the default for any visible facade work. Crilly Court, an interior block of the Triangle, has its own preservation reputation as the city's earliest planned rowhouse development.

What kind of brick is on Old Town buildings?

Old Town carries some of the oldest residential brick in Chicago — a mix of pre-Fire (pre-1871) common brick and post-Fire Victorian rebuilds from the 1870s and 1880s, with workmen's cottages and Italianate brick rowhouses still in service. The brick is soft, the mortar was historically lime-rich, and any modern repair has to match those very low strengths or the brick cracks.

How is masonry work in Old Town different from Lincoln Park?

Lincoln Park sits mostly outside landmark control and runs as standard residential greystone masonry. Old Town is the opposite: almost every Triangle address goes through the Landmarks Commission, the brick is softer and older, and preservation-grade methods are the default — test panels first, lime-rich mortar, hand tools where the original detail is delicate. Scope, schedule and cost all reflect that.

Do you handle Crilly Court or Wells Street historic buildings?

Yes. Crilly Court, with its 1885 rowhouses, and the Wells Street commercial blocks from the 1870s–1890s are core Old Town addresses we work on. The approach is conservation-grade: document the wall before disturbance, sample mortar by lab where the budget allows, run hidden-bay test panels, and submit photos to the Landmarks Commission as part of the scope.

What permits does Old Town facade work require?

Visible facade work on Triangle landmark-district buildings requires Chicago Landmarks Commission review and, in most cases, a Chicago Department of Buildings permit. The Commission reviews the proposed scope, mortar mix, replacement materials and any change to original detail. We prepare the submission with photos, drawings and material samples; the Commission typically responds within several weeks.

How much does masonry cost in Old Town?

Triangle landmark-district tuckpointing runs $18–$40 per sq ft because the work is preservation-grade — lime-rich mortar by sample, hand tools on delicate stock, Commission paperwork. Pre-Fire and Victorian brick replacement runs $80–$140 per brick when matched salvage is required. Full Triangle facade restoration is quoted per project after test panels are approved.

Old Town · free estimate

Walk us through your Old Town wall.

Triangle landmark or Wells Street commercial — one on-site visit, one Commission-ready scope, one crew on the job.