Neighborhoods
The Loop
Downtown in Chicago is
synonymous with the Loop. The Loop refers to a core of primarily commercial,
governmental, and cultural buildings contained within a looping of elevated
train tracks in the center city,
Downtown
Greater downtown Chicago
extends beyond the Loop and is bounded by the Chicago River to the north and
west, by Michigan Avenue to the east, and by Roosevelt Avenue to the south.
The North Side
North Michigan Avenue is known
as the Magnificent Mile, from the bridge spanning the Chicago River to its
northern tip at Oak Street. Many of the city's best hotels, shops, and
restaurants are to be found on and around elegant North Michigan Avenue.
Old Town West of LaSalle
Street, principally on North Wells Street between Division Street and North
Avenue, is the residential district of Old Town, with some of the city's
best-preserved historic homes.
Chinatown, Chicago
Chicago's large Chinese
neighborhood is full of popular restaurants, nightclubs, and shops displaying
Asian wares.
Lincoln Park
Chicago's most popular
residential neighborhood is home to two major museums and one of the nation's
oldest zoos. The area also contains many of Chicago's most popular nightclubs,
restaurants, retail stores, and off-Loop theaters, including the nationally
acclaimed Steppenwolf Theatre Company.
Wrigleyville
is the name given to the neighborhood in the vicinity of Wrigley Field, home of
the Chicago Cubs.
The South Side
South Loop was Chicago's
original "Gold Coast" in the late 19th century, with Prairie Avenue (now an
historic district) as its most exclusive address. Cermak Road (where Chinatown
begins), and from Lake Shore Drive west to the south branch of the Chicago River
is one of the fast-growing residential neighborhoods in the city.
Attractions
Adler Planetarium and
Astronomy Museum
1300 South Lake Shore Drive
312-922-STAR (7827)
The first planetarium in the Western Hemisphere, Adler has hands-on and
historical exhibits as well as sky shows.
Art Institute of Chicago
111 S. Michigan
Avenue, Chicago
312-443-3600
Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday; 10:30 a.m.
to 8 p.m. Tuesday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday; noon to 5 p.m. Sunday
Admission charged.
Masterpieces from Monet and Degas are housed in a vast, world-class collection
that also features African, American-Indian and Asian works, decorative arts and
sculpture, photography, prints, textiles, and contemporary American painting.
Free lectures are open to the public on Tuesday evenings.
Balzekas Museum of
Lithuanian Culture
6500 South Pulaski Road
582-6500
Dedicated to the preservation of Lithuanian art, history, customs, and
traditions, Balzekas also has a Children's Museum of Immigrant History.
Brookfield Zoo
First Avenue and 31st Street
Brookfield
708-485-2200
Admission charged.
Located 14 miles west of the
Loop, it is accessible by Metra. A number of large
exhibits. Includes dolphin
shows.
Buckingham Fountain, Chicago
Chicago's landmark is
considered one of America's finest fountains due to its Beaux-Arts-style design,
finely wrought bronze sculpture, and innovative use of technology.
Burnham Skate Park
31st Street and Lake Shore Drive
312-742-PLAY
Admission is free; the park is
closed in winter.
This 20,000-square-foot park for skateboarders and in-line skaters features
benches, curbs, rails, and smooth, curved metal surfacing for protection.
Chicago Children's Museum
700 East Grand
Avenue
312-527-1000
Located on Navy Pier.
The exhibits encourage children
to look, touch, and explore.
Chicago Architecture
Foundation
Address: 224 South
Michigan Avenue
Phone: 312-922-3432
Free admission to enter
More than 40 different architectural tours, varying in price.
Clarke House Museum
Address: 1827 South
Indiana Avenue
Phone: 312-326-1480
Chicago's oldest surviving building, and the only place to see how an early
Chicago family lived.
Chicago Botanical Gardens
100 Lake Cook Road,
Glencoe
847-835-5440
Admission charged per car.
Hours: 8 a.m. to sunset daily
Whatever your taste in gardens, you will find it here. The 385-acre property
includes a suitably romantic English Garden, a thoughtful Japanese paradise, and
indoor greenhouses that duplicate the atmosphere of the desert as well as the
rainforest. A 45-foot waterfall cascades through the Waterfall Garden and the
pools in quiet areas. A visit to the Chicago Botanical Gardens is a learning
experience as well. Courses and lectures are almost always available, and a
walk through the Endangered Species Garden teaches about preservation of plant
species.
Chicago Public Library
Harold Washington
Library Center
400 South State Street
The world's largest public library has more than two million shelved volumes
available to the public.
Chicago Cultural Center
78 E. Washington St., Chicago
Phone: 312/346-3278 or
312/744-6630
The Loop
Elegant, ornamental details
abound in this building, including sparkling mosaic tiles, sculptured ceilings,
inscribed literary quotations, and a sweeping white Carrara marble staircase.
The Preston Bradley Hall,
on the third floor has the world's largest Tiffany stained-glass dome. Another
magnificent stained-glass dome is on the second floor in the GAR rotunda. The
structure was constructed in 1897 to serve a dual purpose. The Randolph Street
and Washington Street sides are different for this reason One was the entrance
to the city's central library, and the other to the Grand Army of the Republic
museum. The Cultural Center houses public spaces, with free concerts and
performances of all kinds, including live music every weekday at 1 in the
Randolph Café.
Citicorp Center
500 W. Madison St., Chicago
Near West Side
Across the Chicago River from
the Civic Opera House, the functions of commuter train station and office
building unite. The center combines a boxlike office tower with glass
half-cylinders rising from the lower levels. Horizontal and vertical bands of
mirrored and smoked glass alternate up the building for a ribbon effect. It
looks very much like the grand old European railroad stations. The gates to
the tracks are elevated above street level to allow traffic to proceed east and
west via underpasses.
Daley Center
Bounded by Washington,
Randolph, Dearborn, and Clark Sts., Chicago
Named for the late mayor
Richard J. Daley, the father of the current holder of the office, this boldly
plain high-rise is the headquarters of the Cook County court system, but it also
draws visitors' attention because of what stands outside: a sculpture by
Picasso. Known simply as "The
Picasso."DuSable Museum of
African-American History
740 East 56th Place
947-0600
The DuSable Museum is dedicated to the collection, preservation, and
interpretation of the history and culture of Africans and Americans of African
descent. The museum sponsors a film series, jazz and blues concerts, and film
and theater events geared to children.
The Field Museum
1400 S. Lake Shore
Drive, Chicago
312-922-9410
Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
Admission charged.
The Field is Chicago's crowning
museum of natural history, with exhibits on everything from dinosaurs to African
culture to gems and minerals. Visitors can observe as geologists work on a
million-year-old fossilized dinosaur, painstakingly removing its bones from the
rock and assembling them for display. The "Life Over Time" display documents the
changing weather patterns that contributed to the formation of the earth's
environment, and other exhibits explore the various cultures of the world's
population.
Frank Lloyd Wright Home and
Studio Foundation
Address: 951 Chicago Avenue, Oak Park
Phone: 708-848-1976
Admission charged.
This building served as both the Wright family residence and Wright's studio
around the turn of the century.
Frank Lloyd Wright Preservation Trust
931 Chicago Avenue, Oak Park
60302
708-848-1976
The Frank Lloyd Wright
Preservation Trust operates two historic house museums: The Robie House in Hyde
Park and the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio in Oak Park. The Frank Lloyd
Wright Home and Studio was the architectural laboratory for the architect. The
Preservation Trust offers guided architectural tours of these buildings daily,
along with special educational programs for youth and adults.
Robie House
5757 S. Woodlawn St., Chicago
60637
773-834-1847
Robie House represents the
culmination of Wright's renowned work in the revolutionary architectural genre
known as the Prairie Style. This spectacular structure features 174 exquisite
art glass windows and doors. Tours offered daily, as well as public programs and
special events-all of which focus on Wright's legendary creativity.
Glessner House Museum
1800 S. Prairie Avenue, Chicago
60616
312-326-1480
Glessner House Museum is a
National Historic Landmark, designed by Henry Hobson Richardson and built in
1887. Guided tours of Glessner House and the neighboring Clarke House Museum are
available, Wednesday-Sunday at noon, 1 and 2pm. Museum programming examines the
architecture, art, history and culture of the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries through lectures, discussions, performance events and
exhibits.
Grant Park, Chicago
Dedicated in 1844, this park
covers 319 acres along Lake Michigan and is home to the Shedd Aquarium, the
Adler Planetarium, the Field Museum and the Art Institute.
Attraction type: Park
The Hancock Observatory
875 N. Michigan Avenue
John Hancock Center, Chicago
888-875-8439
Admission charged.
Hours: 9 a.m. to 12 a.m. daily
It's not the tallest building in Chicago, but the 100-story Hancock Tower is
worth a visit for its magnificent cityscapes and the interesting interactive
exhibits on its 94th floor. Visitors take a speedy elevator ride to the
observation level, where "Soundscope" viewers give a narrated account (in one of
four languages) of what you're seeing through the telescope. Adults will enjoy
the Signature Lounge, a 96th-floor watering hole with a lakeside view.
Harold Washington Library Center
400 S. State St., Chicago
Phone: 312/747-4300
The Loop
The center's holdings include
the Chicago Blues Archives, the Jazz/Blues/Gospel Hall of Fame, and the Balaban
and Katz Theater
Hull House Museum
800 S. Halsted
Street, Chicago
312-413-5353
Cost: Free
Hours: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday; 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday
Honored with the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931, Jane Addams did what no one before
her had thought to do. She moved into one of Chicago's tenement neighborhoods
and opened a "settlement house" to help meet the economic and social needs of
her neighbors and to encourage their involvement in improving their own
community. During the height of its activity, Hull House included a library,
gymnasium, theater and an art gallery. The museum, snuggled in the heart of the
University of Illinois-Chicago, consists of two of the original 13 buildings,
one an Arts and Crafts-style dining hall built in 1905.
Hyde Park, Chicago
This neighborhood, located
south of the downtown area, is best known for being the home to the University
of Chicago.
John G. Shedd Aquarium
1200 S. Lake Shore
Drive, Chicago
312-939-2438
Hours: June-August, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily; September through May, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. daily
Admission charged.
Visitors to the Shedd Aquarium
should be sure to stop by around feeding time to watch divers distribute dinner
to the various eels, rays, sea turtles and fish that make its Tropical Coral
Reef home. Nearly 8,000 aquatic animals - fresh and salt-water alike - are part
of the Shedd's collection, and nearly 2 million visitors make the journey to the
world's largest indoor aquarium each year.
Kohl Children's Museum
165 Green Bay Road
Wilmette
847-512-1300
Admission charged.
Children ages 1—8 can touch and explore the exhibits and participate in planned
daily activities.
Lincoln Park Zoo
2001 N. Clark
Street, Chicago
312-742-2000
Admission charged per car.
Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
The oldest zoo in the country, Lincoln Park Zoo is still free to visitors. But
its greatest asset is its vast collection - 1,200 animals - and its dedication
to teaching conservation and protection of wildlife. The zoo's Lester E. Fisher
Great Ape House is considered one of the finest gorilla exhibits in the world.
Other visitor favorites include the Sea Lion Pool, the Bird House (where
feathered friends surround their homo sapiens visitors) and the Penguin and
Seabird House. And of course, there are plenty of elephants, giraffes and rhinos
Magnificent Mile
North Michigan
Avenue, Chicago
800-232-5558
A mecca for shoppers, Magnificent Mile runs along North Michigan Avenue to
Lincoln Park and rivals Rodeo Drive and Worth Avenue for world-class shopping
and restaurants. Comforting names like The Gap accompany upscale Armani on the
list of 60 well-known retail establishments to line this spending paradise.
Three shopping malls are also nearby, and each is worthy of the Magnificent
Mile's high-class shopping reputation, and magnificent restaurants and five-star
hotels.
Millenium Park
Located in downtown Chicago on
Michigan Avenue between Randolph and Monroe Streets, the 24.5-acre park is an
unprecedented center for world-class art, music, architecture and landscape
design, where you can experience everything from interactive public art and ice
skating to al fresco dining and free classical music presentations by the Grant
Park Orchestra and Chorus. Among the park’s prominent features is the dazzling
Jay Pritzker Pavilion, the most sophisticated outdoor concert venue of its kind
in the United States, designed by Frank Gehry, one of the world’s greatest
living architects. A pedestrian bridge, also designed by Mr. Gehry and spanning
Columbus Drive, provides access to the pavilion, acts as an acoustical barrier
between the audience and traffic noise, and links Millennium Park to the rest of
Chicago's lakefront park system.
The park also is home to one
of the world’s largest outdoor sculptures by the British artist Anish Kapoor;
the tradition-setting Lurie Garden designed by the team of Kathryn Gustafson,
Piet Oudolf, and Robert Israel; and the Crown Fountain designed by Spanish
artist Jaume Plensa.
Mexican Fine Arts Center
1852 West 19th
Street
312-738-1503
Exhibits on traditional and contemporary Mexican art range in medium from prints
and drawings to papier-mâché and from ceramics to historically significant
photographs. Every autumn the museum hosts the city's most visited Day of the
Dead exhibit.
Museum of Broadcast
Communications,
Michigan Avenue at Washington
Street
(in the Chicago Cultural Center)
312-629-6000
Free admission
Building tours are offered Tuesday-Saturday at 1:15 PM.
Open Mon.-Wed. 10-7, Thurs.
10-9, Fri. 10-6, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 11-5.
The MBC examines popular
culture and contem-porary American history t