The City
Chicago is an easy city to negotiate: streets form a grid and
numbering is consistent, beginning at State and Madison streets.
State Street - "that great street" in Sinatra's song - is at zero
east and west and Madison at zero north and south. Lake
Michigan , which provides Chicago with some of its most
attractive open space (twenty miles of lakeshore lie within the
city limits), serves as a clear point of reference for getting your
bearings - the lake is always to the east of the urban grid.
Michigan Avenue is the city's main thoroughfare, running
between the lakeside museums and parklands, the densely packed
skyscrapers of downtown and the diverse low-rise neighborhoods that
spread to the north, south and west. It's here that you might
experience the full force of "The Hawk," the nickname given to the
strong wind that blows off the lake. The nickname " Windy
City " was coined by a New York newspaper editor describing the
boastful claims of the city's promoters when pitching for the
World's Columbian exhibition of 1893. The Chicago River ,
which cuts through the heart of downtown Chicago to Lake Michigan,
separates the business district from the shopping and entertainment
areas of the North Side. The latter include the upscale Near
North and Gold Coast neighborhoods and the artists'
lofts and galleries of River North , plus the modestly
charming area of Old Town , the young professional enclaves
of Lincoln Park Wrigleyville and Lakeview and hip
Wicker Park .
In contrast to the wealth and prosperity of the North Side, the
deprived South Side is more like New York's South Bronx: a
huge and, in places, desperately poor expanse with a justifiably
dangerous reputation. But while large areas are definitely unsafe
after dark and dodgy even at midday, a few corners of the South
Side are well worth visiting - particularly the Gothic campus of
the University of Chicago , and neighboring Hyde Park
, site of the Museum of Science and Industry - one of the
largest and most popular museums in the US. Apart from Oak
Park to the west, which holds the childhood home of Ernest
Hemingway and more than a dozen well-maintained examples of the
influential architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright , suburban
Chicago has little to offer.
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