Glenda Spangler wasn’t entirely convinced that she and her husband, Ed, should buy a downtown condo as a getaway from their Glen Ellyn home.
Then she walked into this condo that faces east along the Chicago River from the 55th floor of the Trump International Hotel & Tower.
“I looked out there,” she recalls nearly 10 years later, and ‘I said, OK, I’ll leave Glen Ellyn.'”
The three-bedroom, 3,100-square-foot condo is at one of the rounded corners of the tower, with floor-to-ceiling windows running roughly 90 feet from one end of the home to the other. (See more photos below.)
“The view is spectacular,” Ed Spangler said. “In the morning the sunrise on the lake, then as it comes up it lights up the city all around you. And later the sunset lights up the city in a whole different way.”
That view, the dozens of restaurants and cultural institutions within walking distance and the high level of service in the amenity-rich tower gradually shifted the couple’s allegiance, and two years later the condo became their primary Chicago residence and they sold their Glen Ellyn home of more than two decades.
Ed Spangler, who retired a few years ago from a career in consulting, and Glenda, who retired from a consumer products company several years ago, plan to relocate to Florida. They’ll put their Trump Tower condo on the market in January. Represented by Phil Skowron of @properties, it’s priced at $2.99 million.
See more homes in our Before It Hits the Market series.
The curvature of the outer wall enhances the dynamic nature of the view; nothing is flat and static. Glenda Spangler designed the tile-covered fireplace wall to take it further. Most of the time, it looks neutral, but “it’s a mother-of-pearl tile,” she said, “so when the light hits it, it’s like gold.” She designed this wall, with the cutouts for shelving and a fireplace, to be contemporary with a hint of tradition.
The combination of den and kitchen is a warm, intimate family space separate from the large main room that’s designed for living and dining room functions. The windows here are oriented northeast, toward the towers of picturesque landmarks, the Wrigley building and the former Tribune tower.
Navy Pier’s fireworks, boats cruising along the river, and handsome buildings like the Hancock Center are all “part of the entertainment,” Ed Spangler said. “We’d like to thank the city for doing the Riverwalk,” which brought sculptural forms and countless pedestrians to the water level. “It’s like theater on the river,” he said.