Near North Side, Chicago
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Community Area 08 - Near North Side Location within the city of Chicago |
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Latitude Longitude |
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Neighborhoods | ||
ZIP Code | 60611 and parts of 60610, 60622 | |
Area | 7.04 km² (2.72 mi²) | |
Population (2000) Density |
72,811 (up 15.86% from 1990) 10,335.5 /km² |
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Demographics | White Black Hispanic Asian Other |
69.2% 19.1% 3.85% 6.09% 1.77% |
Median income | $67,065 | |
Source: U.S. Census, Record Information Services |
The Near North Side is one of 77 officially designated community areas of Chicago, Illinois. It is located directly north of the downtown central business district (the Loop).
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Neighborhoods
[edit] Cabrini-Green
See main article Cabrini-Green.
Cabrini-Green is one of the most notorious public housing projects in the world. It is located on the North Side of Chicago, near the North/Clybourn Red Line stop along with the Chicago and Sedgwick Brown Line stops. It is made up primarily of mid- and high-rise apartment buildings, many with exterior porches so that residents enter their apartments like a motel room. Though Chicago has many housing projects with crime problems, this one is the most noticeable because it is surrounded by wealthy neighborhoods, notably the Gold Coast and Lincoln Park just blocks away. In fact, residents of Gold Coast high-rise condos whose windows faced to the west could often see the flash of gunfire from Cabrini-Green.
The apartment buildings opened in 1958 (The "reds") and 1962 (The "whites"), while the rowhouses (called the Frances Cabrini Homes) opened in 1943. Cabrini-Green stands on top of what used to be an Italian slum called "Little Sicily" or more sardonically, "Little Hell".
As gentrification began to take hold of the city in the early 1990's, the land on which Cabrini-Green sat on became extremely valuable, and one by one, the buildings have begun to meet the wrecking ball to make way for new development. Destruction of the "reds" began in 1995, and were all completely demolished by 2002. Only 3 of the "white" towers remain standing today, with plans to demolish them before the turn of the decade.
Low to midrise condominium buildings and rowhouses are being constructed, as the Chicago street grid is slowly rebuilt through the area. The redevelopment is riddled with controversy, as the residents are forced out of the complex to make way for the wealthy. Although 20% of the new units must be built as public housing, there is not enough supply to meet the demand for housing, and former residents of Cabrini-Green find themselves forced to less expensive areas of the city or to the suburbs.
[edit] Gold Coast
The Gold Coast is one of the most affluent neighborhoods in Chicago, consisting mostly of high-rise apartment buildings on Lake Shore Drive, facing Lake Michigan, but also including low-rise residential blocks inland. As with many neighborhoods, its exact borders are subject to dispute, but generally extend south to Oak and west to LaSalle, excluding the Carl Sandburg Village housing development between LaSalle, Dearborn, Division, and North (located in Old Town & built as a buffer to encroaching blight in the 1960's).
The Gold Coast was an unexceptional neighborhood until 1885, when Potter Palmer, former dry goods merchant and owner of the Palmer House hotel, built a fanciful castle on Lake Shore Drive. Over the next few decades, Chicago's elite gradually migrated from Prairie Avenue to their new home north of the Loop.
The "Gold Coast Historic District" was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 30, 1978.
Gold Coast is zoned to the following Chicago Public Schools schools: Ogden School and Lincoln Park High School.
[edit] Goose Island
Goose Island is the only island on the Chicago River. It is separated from the mainland by the North Branch of the Chicago River on the west and the North Branch Canal on the east. The canal was dug in 1853 by former Chicago mayor William B. Ogden for industrial purposes, thus forming the island. Because he formed the island, at times, it has been known as William B. Ogden Island. After Irish imigrants moved to the island, it took on the name Goose Island as well as Kilgubbin, which was the immigrants' original home in Ireland. The Goose Island Brewery makes Kilgubbin Red Ale, in honor of this name.[1]
The large facility on the north end of the island (visible from North Avenue, but only reachable from the south: Division Street to North Branch to 1132 W. Blackhawk) is the Wrigley Global Innovation Center, a 193,000 square foot facility, which opened in September 2005 and was designed by Gyo Obata of Hellmuth Obata Kassabaum.
On the south end of the island is Kendall College's Riverworks campus.
[edit] Magnificent Mile
See main article Michigan Avenue (Chicago)
The Magnificent Mile is a stretch of North Michigan Avenue between the Chicago River and Oak Street. Although actually about three-quarters of a mile, the name has been chosen and is likely to stay.
Along this street is a mixture of high-class stores, restaurants, office buildings and hotels. The area has a high concentration of the city's major media firms and advertising agencies, including the Chicago Tribune newspaper.

It is the home of Chicago's famous Water Tower landmark, Water Tower Park with its historic clock, and the eight-level Water Tower Place shopping center which grew up next door to, and overshadowed, the comparatively diminutive landmark. The shopping center is anchored by two department stores: Macy's North Michigan store and Lord & Taylor. North of the shopping center can be found the famous John Hancock Center, the art deco Palmolive Building and the lavish Drake Hotel.
[edit] River North
River North is a neighborhood in the Near North Side community area of Chicago, Illinois. It is bounded by Rush Street to the east, Chicago Avenue to the north, and the Chicago River to the south and west. This neighborhood has the largest concentration of art galleries in the United States outside of Manhattan.[citation needed] Along with hundreds of art galleries, there are many bars, dance clubs, popular restaurants, and entertainment venues. Subsections of River North include:
- the gallery district, primarily along Superior and Huron streets between Wells and Orleans;
- a theme-restaurant area with many tourist-oriented restaurants, surrounding Clark and Ontario;
- "the Cathedral District," an area with many new residential skyscapers surrounding Holy Name Cathedral (Catholic) and St. James Cathedral (Episcopal), both located near State and Huron;
- a design district, with shops and showrooms selling commercial and luxury interior furnishings, in the blocks north of the Merchandise Mart; and
- Kingsbury Park, an area of newly built residential high-rises surrounding Kingsbury Park, at Erie Street and the Chicago River.
[edit] River West
River West is a neighborhood in the west section of the Near North community. It is bounded by Chicago Avenue to the north, to I-90/94 to the west, to Ohio Street to the south, and the Chicago River to the east.
[edit] Streeterville
Streeterville is a neighborhood in Chicago north of the Chicago River. It is bounded by the river on the south, Michigan Avenue on the west, and Lake Michigan on the north and east, and is located east of the Chicago and Grand stations of the Red Line. The reclaimed land on which the neighborhood is built owes its existence, solely, to George Streeter. In the late 1880s, George 'Cap' Streeter's boat hit a sandbar just off the shoreline and there it stayed; he and his wife made this their new home. The Streeters encouraged dumping in this area and, after several years, the debris built up and became solid land. George claimed this 'new land' as an independent territory in respect to an 1821 government survey that declared Chicago, and Illinois, property lines terminated at the shoreline. Under his homesteading rights as a Civil War Veteran, he declared the new land to be the District of Lake Michigan. Naturally, the powers that be eventually got around to seizing this land by force, and it is now home to some of the most expensive real estate in Chicago.[2]
Streeterville houses some of Chicago's tallest skyscrapers and most upscale stores, hotels, restaurants and theaters, as well as Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine and School of Law. The Magnificent Mile portion of Michigan Avenue is part of Streeterville, as is the number one tourist attraction in Chicago, Navy Pier.
[edit] Washington Square
Washington Square is a public square bounded by Dearborn, Clark, Delaware, and Walton streets. It was long known as "Bughouse Square," as orators of varying abilities often used its central platform for speeches. It is fronted on the north by the Newberry Library and partially bounded by the Washington Square landmark district. Immediately west of LaSalle Boulevard, separating this area from Cabrini-Green, is the Moody Bible Institute, and immediately east is Connors Park.
Census tract 811, a four-block (0.04 sq. mi.) area located between State, Dearborn, Chicago, and Division and straddling Washington Square and the Gold Coast, had 3,718 residents in 2000, giving it a population density of 90,614.2 people per square mile -- the highest in Chicago.
[edit] Connors Park
Named after a small, triangular park bounded by Rush, Wabash, Chestnut, and Delaware, this small part of the Magnificent Mile district (west of Michigan, north of Chicago, east of State, and south of Oak) has recently gained attention due to new development spilling over from Michigan Avenue. Much of the Loyola University Chicago Water Tower campus lies in this area.
[edit] External links
- Streeterville Chamber of Commerce
- Chicago Landmarks Commission map of landmarks and landmark districts on the near north side
- Chicago Park District:
- Navy Pier
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