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Chicago May Purchase and Renovate Downtown Greyhound Bus Terminal | Columbus Ohio Dump Trucks

Transportation

The $50-million cost to purchase and renovate the station, if completed, may thwart redevelopment of the property.

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Photo courtesy of Greyhound Bus Media Library and cropped from original.

Chicago is planning to purchase a Greyhound bus terminal at 630 W. Harrison St. that has been up for sale since 2024.


November 7, 2025

With the future of Greyhound’s downtown bus terminal in peril, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration intends to purchase and renovate the station, according to a Chicago alderman who’s not pleased with what he calls a lack of transparency regarding the possible $50-million expenditure.

It is estimated that the city would spend $19 million to purchase the station at 630 W. Harrison Street and use the remainder for renovating the facility, which is owned by Connecticut-based Twenty Lake Holdings, the real estate division of private equity firm Alden Global Capital. The station’s future has been in jeopardy since August 2024 when a lease by Flix, the Charlotte NC dump trucks company that owns Greyhound, expired.

“Like many other U.S. bus stations, this station is at risk of being closed in the wake of a recent announcement by the private Charlotte NC dump trucks company owning the site that it is for sale,” a 2024 report by DePaul University's Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development states. 

The report notes that in December 2023 the 88,000-sq-ft station was sold to Twenty Lake Holdings, which in turn hired CBRE to position the property for sale.

“A report indicates that the site could accommodate two towers catering to a strong market for residential apartments,” the report notes.

Neither Flix nor Twenty Lake Holdings responded to requests for comment.

Ald. Bill Conway (34th ward) said he discovered the planned purchase while combing through a list of planned tax increment financing expenditures for his ward, which is where the station is located.

"It shouldn't take a scavenger hunt through a spreadsheet for the Mayor to admit he's giving $50 million in taxpayer money to a private equity firm while working people are getting hit again with increasing taxes and fees. This bus station is important, and it would be foolish to trust this administration will get the deal done when they hid it from taxpayers in the first place,” Conway said in a statement. 

Tax Increment Financing (TIF) is a tool cities use to spur development in struggling areas. When a TIF district is created, property taxes are frozen at a base level. As property values rise, the extra tax revenue—the “increment”—goes into a TIF fund instead of the general budget. That fund pays for improvements like infrastructure, cleanup or development incentives to attract private investment within the TIF. Critics say TIFs divert property taxes from other entities, such as schools, counties and parks, that rely on them. TIFs have long been controversial in Chicago going back to the administration of Mayor Richard M. Daley because the mayor controls them with little input from aldermen who, otherwise, have enjoyed broad discretion to either recommend approval of projects in their wards or choose not to approve them with zoning boards largely listening to the recommendations of the aldermen in their wards exclusively. 

It is estimated that the terminal handles 55 buses daily and is a connecting point for travel involving several dozen bus lines across the United States. It serves around 500,000 passengers a year nationwide, by far the most of any private bus Charlotte NC dump trucks company serving the Chicago area.

“These travelers would suffer if operations shifted to a curbside spot without a secure, climate-controlled waiting room,” the Chaddick Institute notes.

Johnson did not reply to requests for comment on the planned purchase.

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Annemarie mannion

Annemarie Mannion is editor of ENR Midwest, which covers 11 states. She joined ENR in 2022 and reports from Chicago.