Little Village Multiplex 

3120 S Kostner Ave, Chicago IL, 60623 Find on Google Maps (opens in a new tab)

Chicago Building ID: 157011

Building Info

Square Footage
290,134 sqft
Higher than 79% of all buildings
2.3x median
124,364 sqft
3.0x median K-12 School
97,862 sqft
Built
2005
Primary Property Type
K-12 School
Community Area
South Lawndale
Ward
22
Owner
Chicago Public Schools
View All Tagged CPS Buildings

Note: Owner manually tagged. Logo used under fair use.

Emissions & Energy Information for 2023

Greenhouse Gas Intensity D
8 kg CO2e / sqft
Higher than 77% of all buildings
1.3x median
6.2 kg CO2e / sqft
1.3x median K-12 School
6 kg CO2e / sqft
Total Greenhouse Gas Emissions
2,320 tons CO2e
#11 Highest of K-12 Schools 🚩
Higher than 82% of all buildings
2.8x median
841.4 tons CO2e
4.0x median K-12 School
579.1 tons CO2e

Years Reported 9/10
A Help icon

  • 2014 data reported

    2014

  • 2015 data reported

    2015

  • 2016 data reported

    2016

  • 2017 data reported

    2017

  • 2018 data reported

    2018

  • 2019 data not reported

    2019

  • 2020 data reported

    2020

  • 2021 data reported

    2021

  • 2022 data reported

    2022

  • 2023 data reported

    2023

Energy Breakdown for Little Village Multiplex

Fossil Gas Use (aka Natural Gas)
9,921,289 kBtu
Est. Gas Bill: $118,000 for 2023**
Higher than 72% of all buildings
1.8x median
5,517,828 kBtu
2.2x median K-12 School
4,479,009.8 kBtu
Electricity Use
12,814,615 kBtu
Est. Electric Bill: $537,000 for 2023**
#6 Highest of K-12 Schools 🚨
Higher than 85% of all buildings
3.6x median
3,580,332.6 kBtu
5x median K-12 School
2,489,173.4 kBtu

Energy Mix A

Total Energy Use: 22,735,905 kBTU

Help icon
View Extra Technical & Historic Info
Source Energy Usage Intensity
Not Reported

This data was not reported for this building this year, which likely means a value of zero for this field.

Site Energy Usage Intensity
Not Reported

This data was not reported for this building this year, which likely means a value of zero for this field.

Full Historical Data Table for Little Village Multiplex

Year Overall
Grade
Emissions
Intensity
Sub-Grade
Energy Mix
Sub-Grade
Reporting Mix
Sub-Grade
GHG Intensity kg CO2e / sqft GHG Emissions metric tons CO2eEnergy Mix Electricity Use kBTU Fossil Gas Use kBTUSource EUI kBTU / sqft Floor Area sqft Chicago Energy
Rating
Energy Star
Score
2014 C C C A 13.263,849
58%Electricity
42%Fossil Gas
0%Other
16,030,378 11,819,639 216 290,134 - 26.0
2015 C D B A 13.83,999
65%Electricity
35%Fossil Gas
0%Other
17,425,442 9,371,994 222.5 290,134 - 57.0
2016 C F A A 12.93,751
65%Electricity
35%Fossil Gas
0%Other
17,666,142 9,327,799 225 290,134 - 59.0
2017 C D A A 11.93,461
66%Electricity
34%Fossil Gas
0%Other
16,315,072 8,369,983 206.9 290,134 - 20.0
2018 C F A A 12.43,584
65%Electricity
35%Fossil Gas
0%Other
18,408,620 9,831,878 213.2 290,134 1.0 17.0
2019- - - - 0.0 -
2020 C F A A 12.23,534
64%Electricity
36%Fossil Gas
0%Other
18,968,732 10,805,920 222.2 290,134 1.0 7.0
2021 C F A A 10.83,121
57%Electricity
43%Fossil Gas
0%Other
17,058,004 12,898,850 211.3 290,134 1.0 10.0
2022 C F A A 10.83,147
57%Electricity
43%Fossil Gas
0%Other
18,241,774 14,015,161 226.8 290,134 1.0 8.0
2023 C D A A 82,320
56%Electricity
44%Fossil Gas
0%Other
12,814,615 9,921,290 159.6 290,134 2.0 24.0

* Note on Rankings: Rankings and medians are among included buildings, which are those who reported under the Chicago Energy Benchmarking Ordinance for the year 2023, which only applies to buildings over 50,000 square feet.

** Note on Bill Estimates: Estimates for gas and electric bills are based on average electric and gas retail prices for Chicago in 2021 and are rounded. We expect large buildings would negotiate lower rates with utilities, but these estimates serve as an upper bound of cost and help understand the volume of energy a building is used by comparing it to your own energy bills! See our Chicago Gas & Electric Costs Source (opens in a new tab) for the original statistics.

Data Source: Chicago Energy Benchmarking Data (opens in a new tab)

What Should We Do About This?

Own this Building? Take Action.