City Cast Chicago logo

Why is Buying a Vacant Lot So Hard?

Posted on July 30, 2024   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Sidney Madden

Sidney Madden

Makema Adkins at her West Side vacant lot in 2022

Makema Adkins at her West Side vacant lot in 2022. (Jacoby Cochran / City Cast Chicago)

City Cast

So You Want to Build a House on a Vacant Lot?

00:00:00

Four years after applying to build a single-family home on a vacant lot bordering West Loop and East Garfield Park, Makema Adkins closed on the lot and broke ground this month.

Adkins first told us about the process and its many challenges in 2022. She caught us up on what took so long.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Last we talked, you said you thought you’d break ground in March 2023. It’s July 2024. What happened?

“Oh my gosh, what didn't happen? When I talked to you guys, we had done phase 1 and 2 [environmental] testing. And then it turns out that we needed phase 3 testing, which is very expensive, very involved.”

What advice would you give to your 2020 self?

“I would tell my 2020 self to be a little more annoying. You turn in the application and you realize that I have to go through different departments, and you want to give people time and grace to do their job. But at the 2-and-a-half year mark, I was so desperate for information that I would just go on LinkedIn to see who worked for the city — who worked in the planning department — and I would just spam all of those people.”

“And sending ‘I need an update’ email every week instead of every two weeks, which is what I was doing. Maybe including more people in the department, maybe including bosses of people who I was talking to would have helped.”

Why go through all of this?

“I love my neighborhood. I've been there for 15 years. My kids go to the Montessori school two blocks away. I love the school. It's close. The lot in my neighborhood is closer to downtown. I've seen a lot of growth in the neighborhood. I see the potential of the neighborhood.”

✅ Plus, what the city could do better

Share article

Hey Chicago

Stay connected to City Cast Chicago and get ready to join the local conversation.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.

3 Questions With

See All
3 Questions WithNovember 10, 2025

3 Questions with Rosie Drumgoole of Deborah's Place

Deborah's Place has been helping women in Chicago find housing and stability for 40 years.

Deborah's Place event
3 Questions WithSeptember 22, 2025

3 Questions With the Guy Who Walked From Rogers Park to Indiana

What did Michael McColly learn in his 63-mile trek along Lake Michigan?

Michael McColly
3 Questions WithSeptember 18, 2025

3 Questions With Carmen — from ‘Carmen’

“Carmen” premieres tonight at the Joffrey Ballet — right in time for the dance company’s 70th anniversary.

“Carmen” rehearsal
3 Questions WithAugust 21, 2025

3 Questions with Chicago’s Youth Poet Laureate

Without poetry, Eila Kittikamron Mora says she would have “turned into a ball of obscurity.”

 Eila Kittikamron Mora
3 Questions WithAugust 12, 2025

3 Questions with ‘Eddington’ Actor — and Chicagoan — Matt Gomez Hidaka

Ari Aster's new film “Eddington” stars a few people you may have heard of, including a local who got his acting start on the North Side.

Matt Gomez Hidaka and Ari Aster
3 Questions WithNovember 12, 2024

Why Chicago's Downtown Needs Help

Downtown office vacancy remains high. So how can Chicago revitalize the Loop?

State Street empty in the spring 2020
3 Questions WithOctober 15, 2024

Will Chicago Actually Replace Lead Pipes?

Chicago now has 20 years to replace more than 400,000 lead lines after President Joe Biden imposed a new deadline last week.

A contractor fixes a leaking lead pipe ahead of service line replacement in Little Village in 2023
3 Questions WithSeptember 23, 2024

Why Chicago Claims Earth, Wind & Fire

Clark Atlanta University professor Trenton Bailey, the author of “Do You Remember: Celebrating Fifty Years of Earth Wind and Fire,” joine...

Earth, Wind & Fire perform in 1975