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Read the press release here.

Want A Grant To Help 'Challenged' Neighborhood? Deadline To Apply Is Friday

 Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Ald. Danny Solis, and executives of CMK Cos. and Lend Lease break ground on Riverline, a South Loop development that paid $8.7 million to opt out of providing affordable housing.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Ald. Danny Solis, and executives of CMK Cos. and Lend Lease break ground on Riverline, a South Loop development that paid $8.7 million to opt out of providing affordable housing.
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DNAinfo/David Matthews

DOWNTOWN — The deadline to apply for a business and development grant is Friday, as city officials begin using fees paid by Downtown developers to invest in projects on the South, Southwest and West sides.

The first grants from the $4 million Neighborhood Opportunity Fund are expected to be awarded this spring. The fund was created in May by charging developers additional fees in return for allowing them to build bigger and taller buildings Downtown. About a dozen developments have already paid into the fund.

With the first applications available Monday at neighborhoodopportunityfund.com, the grants will cover as much as 65 percent of a project's costs, according to the Mayor's Office.

More than 150 applications have already been received, according to the Mayor's Office.

"This is a unique opportunity for us to drive economic development and job growth in our most challenged neighborhoods, and make sure the entire city is benefiting from the growth downtown," Mayor Rahm Emanuel said in a statement.

The projects must be located in areas identified by the Census Bureau as the home of low-to-moderate income residents. Priority will be given to projects that bring new stores to struggling commercial corridors, grocery stores to areas defined as food deserts, and cultural establishments in areas where there are none.

Grants of more than $250,000 must be approved by the City Council.