Formation Following the construction of the original
jetty for the
Chicago Harbor Lighthouse, lake currents were affected and soil was deposited at the area now known as DuSable Park. In 1857, the
State of Illinois sold , including the site later to be known as DuSable Park, to the
Chicago Dock and Canal Trust. In 1948, the Chicago Plan Commission passed a resolution excluding use of lakefront property to only recreation or for harbor or terminal facilities for passenger and freight vessels.
A new DuSable Park . In July 2005, Christopher Carley of the Fordham Company announced a new development project called the Fordham Spire. The Fordham Company pledged nearly $500,000 to assist in the development of the park, which was to adjoin the site of their new tower. In late 2006, the
Chicago Sun-Times reported that the project may be going forward with a compromise on the design being reached, but no further financial assistance was promised. In early May of the same year, that offer jumped to $9.6 million. Shelbourne offered their own design of the park which included a northbound ramp onto Lake Shore Drive for the adjacent Chicago Spire. After additional remediation, a new plan was developed in 2023. == Redevelopment concerns ==