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CITY HALL — As Ald. Proco Joe Moreno (1) prepares to leave office, the City Council’s Zoning Committee will consider nine proposals that could add approximately 100 apartment and condominium units to his rapidly gentrifying soon-to-be-former North Side ward.

Ald.-elect Daniel La Spata (1) ousted Moreno in February, and will become one of six members of the Democratic Socialists of America to join the City Council next month.

The largest development (O2019-1346) set to be considered by the committee at its meeting set to start at 10 a.m. would convert an early 1900s-era Logan Square building that currently houses a substance abuse recovery center into a 35-unit apartment complex targeted at millennials.

Four of the units must be set aside for low- or moderate-income residents under the city’s affordable housing rules.

Originally, the plan called for 44 units, as reported by Block Club Chicago, but that ran into opposition from nearby residents concerned that would clog already snarled streets with more traffic and make it more difficult to find a parking space.

Adult & Teen Challenge, which has operated out of the building for more than 25 years, plans to open a new facility with the proceeds from the sale of the building, Block Club Chicago reported.

The proposal would change the property’s zoning designation from RT4, residential two-flat, townhouse and multi-unit district, to RM5, a residential multi-unit district.

The committee is also set to weigh a proposal (O2019-1347) to build a 32-unit transit-oriented development at 1838-44 N. Western Ave.

The new six-story building would replace the former Jensen Plating Works along the Bucktown-Logan Square border, where city officials approved plans for a nine-unit building in 2017 that never materialized.

Shops and stores would occupy the first floor of the building near the 606 Trail, and the building would have 32 bicycle spaces and five parking spaces, according to the proposal.

Aldermen will also weigh a four-story, 20-unit development (O2019-1355) with 20 parking spaces at 1815-21 N. California Ave.

The committee will also weigh Moreno’s request (O2019-1377) to convert his own Wicker Park single-family home to a two-flat. The outgoing alderman converted the building from a two-flat to a single-family home when he got married, Moreno’s chief of staff Raymond Valadez told Block Club Chicago.

Moreno will be required to recuse himself from any vote by the committee because he has a financial interest in the matter. Any final action by the full City Council action is scheduled to come after La Spata takes office.

Aldermen will also weigh a proposal (O2018-8011) to fill the gaping hole at the heart of the Six Corners Shopping District with a 10-story, 248-unit senior living facility at Irving Park Road, Cicero and Milwaukee avenues.

Also set to be considered by the Zoning Committee: