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Friday, November 26, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

Bits of Chicago to be up for sale on eBay Dec. 2-16

By Tara Burghart
The Associated Press

M. SPENCER GREEN / AP
Joan Greene, project director for a city of Chicago eBay auction, displays a vintage Playboy Bunny costume, one of many items specific to the Windy City that will be sold during an online auction.
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CHICAGO — City officials hope there are people willing to pay plenty of money to own a vintage Playboy Bunny costume, toss green dye into the Chicago River or throw a dinner party prepared by Oprah Winfrey's chef.

The Chicago-related items and experiences — Playboy Enterprises and Winfrey's show are both based in the city, and turning the Chicago River green for St. Patrick's Day is a hallowed city tradition — will be up for sale Dec. 2-16 on eBay.

It's all part of a city effort to raise money for arts and cultural programs and bridge a $220 million budget gap.

"It seems to be one of the most extensive, if not most extensive, [e-Bay auction] of its kind," said company spokesman Hani Durzy, although with 29 million items for sale at any one time, he said it's hard to say.

Other cities and states have used eBay to sell surplus office furniture, and school districts have auctioned off entire buildings. Charities regularly use the auction site to sell only-in-your-dreams experiences such as a lunch date with stock-market sage Warren Buffett, which went for $250,100 last year.

But the Chicago sale is unusual because the money is being directed back to specific city programs and the city is both contributing items and encouraging residents to donate, Durzy said.

Many items up for auction are specific to Chicago, including a walk-on role at the city's Goodman Theatre, a chance to turn on the landmark Buckingham Fountain for the season, a behind-the-scenes tour of Lincoln Park Zoo and a decommissioned city parking meter.

The Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, which is sponsoring the auction, has seen its budget from federal, state and city sources decline from $11.8 million in 2002 to a projected $8.8 million next year, department spokeswoman Anne Dattulo said.

City officials have not estimated how much they expect to raise from the auction. A conservative guess is $250,000 just for items for which there are actually estimated retail prices, such as a stay in a hotel's presidential suite, Dattulo said.
 
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But it's unknown how much a winning bidder will pay for a one-of-a-kind opportunity such as turning on Buckingham Fountain, the centerpiece of lakefront Grant Park.

Consultant Joan Greene, the auction's project director, said she first saw it as a way to sell items donated by businesses but soon realized there also was a way to create unique, Chicago-specific experiences.

A city worker in the mayor's office suggested the Chicago River project; Greene said the Chicago Plumbers Local Union 130, whose members dye the river each year, was excited to help out.

"What we have done is to create a picture album of what is available in the city," Greene said. "We're raising funds, but also we're helping people all over the world get a sense of what Chicago is about. I love that aspect of it."

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

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