Building in Highland Park — What We Know About This Community
Highland Park is one of the most architecturally rich communities on the North Shore — home to Wright's Willits House, mid-century modern landmarks, deeply established historic neighborhoods, and a residential context that ranges from preserved estate properties to vibrant infill development. Forest Heart Builders has worked across Highland Park on substantial renovation, historic-property work, and selective new construction.
Highland Park's Architectural Diversity
Highland Park's architectural inheritance is uncommonly diverse. Prairie School houses by Frank Lloyd Wright and his contemporaries, mid-century modern landmarks by Keck & Keck and others, traditional Tudor and Georgian Revival homes from the 1920s, post-war ranch neighborhoods, and contemporary new construction all coexist within the city's residential fabric. The architectural response that works depends entirely on neighborhood, lot, and surrounding context.
Building or renovating successfully in Highland Park demands real architectural literacy. The community recognizes good design when it sees it and is unforgiving of design that misses the mark.
Historic Preservation in Highland Park
Highland Park's Historic Preservation Commission reviews work on properties within designated historic districts and on individually landmarked properties. For these properties, renovation, addition, and demolition proposals require formal review. We have completed multiple Highland Park projects through this review process.
Site Considerations in Highland Park
Highland Park properties range from deep ravine-adjacent lots on the eastern edge to standard suburban lots in newer neighborhoods. Mature tree preservation, ravine setbacks where applicable, and the city's building code are all factors we coordinate during Discovery.
Projects We Build in Highland Park
Comprehensive renovation of historic homes; sensitive additions to mid-century modern properties; ground-up custom homes on appropriate sites; renovations of mid-twentieth-century ranches and split-levels; and architectural millwork commissions.