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Closer Look: The stories of the year

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The bridge is expected to open to pedestrians and bicyclists next spring.

Batavia moves forward with streetscape plans

BATAVIA – North River Street in downtown Batavia is sporting a new look these days after being under construction for much of the year.

The street was the first downtown street to receive streetscape improvements, which city officials hope will energize the downtown. The Batavia City Council approved a budget of $3.5 million for the project, which was funded with tax increment financing funds generated from the two active downtown TIF districts.

North River Street has been transformed into a curbless street in which pedestrians have priority over cars. Joi Cuartero, executive director of Batavia MainStreet, believes the streetscape improvements will create more buzz for the downtown. The group's mission is to revitalize the downtown.

Batavia Mayor Jeff Schielke, who is running for a ninth term, said he is running again to ensure the completion of the downtown streetscape program.

“I would like to see the streetscape program finished,” Schielke said, in announcing his re-election plans. “I think that is an important enough project for Batavia.”

Schielke, 63, who began his first term as Batavia mayor in 1981, is the longest running mayor in Kane County.

Wilson Street will become the second street to receive streetscape improvements. The project is set to get underway in June in coordination with the Wilson Street traffic modernization and interconnect project that is already underway.

The city’s downtown streetscape advisory committee put together a plan for the downtown with Altamanu, the city’s design consultant company.

Elburn Station plans on hold

ELBURN – As 2012 dawned, village officials believed a vote on the proposed huge project to develop the area around the Elburn Metra station east of the village’s existing borders could come any week.

By the end of the year, however, the fate of the so-called Elburn Station plan and the associated Anderson Road extension remained in limbo.

For years, Elburn village officials and Geneva-based development company ShoDeen had negotiated over the future of Elburn Station.

Planned to be built on hundreds of acres centered on the Elburn Metra station between Route 38 and Keslinger Road, Elburn Station would add more than 2,000 new homes, including about 1,300 apartments and condominiums, to the village.


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