Northbrook’s 2024 in Review: Tesla, centennial, golfers, downtown
Dec 31, 2024
Northbrook residents received a wide range of news during 2024, from two high school golfers placing first and second in the state tournament to the popular Hometown Coffee and Juice announcing plans to open downtown.
The Northbrook Park District started the year off with a bang in February, receiving a $2.8 million state grant to overhaul recreation space inside the Leisure Center and a $600,000 state grant to renovate the Meadowhill Aquatic Center.
The $2.8 million grant will enhance the Leisure Center with a variety of new areas: a new lounge, additional art spaces, and a technology and training room, among others, according to a written statement.
Areas slated to be renovated or reconfigured included multi-purpose rooms, the demonstration kitchen, the costume shop/programming space, the early childhood center, and the dressing rooms, it said.
According to a statement issued by the Park District, the $600,000 grant was to go towards upgrading the existing aquatic facility with both visible and behind-the-scenes improvements to the bathhouse and mechanicals.
Park officials said a major goal was to enhance the public’s entry and admissions experience into the bathhouse, with updates to the locker rooms and restrooms, such as inclusive individual changing rooms.
The plunge pool and leisure/lap pool will get a fresh coat of paint, and the lap pool deck concrete and shade areas will be improved, they said.
Late July and early August marked the 100th anniversary of the Northbrook Days Festival as an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 people flocked to the west Metra commuter lot over five days.
The Northbrook Civic Foundation set a fundraising goal of $100,000 to benefit community projects and provide scholarships.
Also in July, Tesla opened a 50,000-square-foot dealership in Northbrook, waiting until August for a formal grand opening featuring a ceremonial ribbon cutting with community leaders.
Trustee Dan Pepoon said the site of the Tesla dealership, 1200 Skokie Blvd., was once considered as a potential location for a Walmart.
“I am so pleased to have Tesla in Northbrook and all this traffic you see going by, seeing a Northbrook gem. It’s fabulous,” Pepoon said. “I like Tesla a little bit better than having Walmart on this property.”
A staff member washes a Tesla model at the grand opening of the Northbrook Tesla on Aug. 9, 2024 in Northbrook (Karie Angell Luc/Pioneer Press)
In October, after being charged with a strangulation murder in Northbrook in 2016 and spending eight years on the run, a 57-year-old man on the “15 Most Wanted List” was apprehended in Mexico, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.
John Panaligan was charged with the Dec. 7, 2016, murder of an attorney, Victor Jigar Patel of Prospect Heights, who was found strangled in his Northbrook office, said Northbrook Deputy Police Chief Marc Fainman.
Panaligan’s motive for the murder stemmed from the results of a lawsuit, Fainman said. Patel’s client had been suing Panaligan and three other defendants in a lawsuit filed in Cook County Circuit Court in 2009.
Later that month, Glenbrook North High School golfers Martha Kuwahara and Alexis Myers finished first and second, respectively, in the 2A Illinois state tournament at Hickory Point Golf Course in Decatur.
Glenbrook North High School golfers Martha Kuwahara and Alexis Myers pose for a portrait at Glenbrook North High School in Northbrook on Monday, Oct. 28, 2024. Kuwahara finished first in Class 2A at the state meet and Myers finished second, helping the Spartans to a team title too. (Audrey Richardson/for the Pioneer Press)
Kuwahara’s winning two-day total was 5-under-par 139, and Myers was just two strokes behind her.
As a team, Glenbrook North also won its second straight state championship while breaking a state record in the process. The Spartans shot 585, which smashed the previous record low of 595, set by Barrington in 2021.
Despite some opposition to the package, in November the Village Board approved sales tax breaks that will bring the popular Hometown Coffee and Juice to downtown Northbrook.
Village officials said a $1.5 million development loan, expected to be repaid mostly with sales taxes generated by the new coffee shop/restaurant, will help bring a vibrancy to the downtown area that residents and business owners have long desired.
“Unfortunately, these types of incentives are what surrounding communities do in order to bring these types of anchor businesses within their business corridors,” Trustee Michelle Kohler said. “Hometown is a proven business with a model we’ve seen play out elsewhere. The goal is to create traffic so more people visit more places.”
In December, former Deputy Police Chief John Ustich was named chief after serving two months as interim chief and 28 years with the department. Former Chief Chris Kennedy left in October.
Village officials said in a news release that the process of selecting the chief involved interviews with senior village leadership, representatives from the labor unions for sworn personnel and dispatchers, and an evaluation of leadership, command and strategic management skills.
Meanwhile, Northbrook School District 28 community leaders presented information to the Board of Education on Dec. 18 about whether to seek up to $94.9 million in bonds via an April referendum to replace one school and renovate its three others.
Plans call for the Board to decide at its Jan. 8 meeting whether to put a referendum on the ballot in the April election.
District 28 would use the potential bond revenue and $20 million in existing funds to cover the costs of rebuilding Meadowbrook School and overhauling Northbrook Junior High, Greenbriar School and Westmoor School, said Terry Ryan, spokeswoman for the district.