Contemporary Chicago Archives - Chicago Detours /category/contemporary-chicago/ Custom Private Neighborhood and City Tours for Curious People Wed, 16 Nov 2022 16:26:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 Chicago’s Sustainable Food Movement: The Plant Chicago /the-plant-chicago/ Fri, 04 Nov 2022 18:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/the-plant-chicago/

The HISTORY of the Plant Chicago

On the South Side of Chicago, a former meatpacking plant has figuratively been turned upside down on its unsustainable head. The Plant Chicago, created in 2011, is a model for alternative energy and sustainable food production.

With global warming, droughts, and fires rampant, people are paying more attention to the climate footprint of meat. No more symbolically impactful of a site could have been chosen for a successful demonstration of a circular economy.

Founder John Edel honed his chops in green business incubation around the corner from The Plant at the Chicago Sustainable Manufacturing Center. Both are located where the stinky old stockyards once was, which is now the Stockyards Industrial Corridor. The Plant Chicago also was Chicago’s first vertical farm (possibly the first in the entire United States of America in fact).hydroponic plants chicago

The 95,000 sq ft vertical farm has impressive systems for energy production and waste disposal. The original plan was to process 32 tons of food waste every day, including waste from factories next door. It also projected to ultimately integrate natural materials and gas emissions from brewing, office, hydroponics, and agriculture so that no waste would leave the property.

The entire system comprises a “circular economy.” Today The Plant a hub for education, small business, and sustainability. It’s pretty complex, and the diagram on this page better explains it.

The Plant offers numerous public programs and tours – go check it out!

–Amanda Scotese, Executive Director

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How to Become a Virtual Tour Events Company /virtual-tour-company/ Sun, 03 May 2020 05:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/virtual-tour-company/

All of the sudden Chicago Detours is temporarily a virtual tour company! It’s a new and unexpected change for our small business, as are many things for everyone right now .

We are now into a month and a half of lockdown during the COVID19 pandemic. When that was announced, it spelled a (temporary) end to our tour company business of providing walking tours and private group tours for locals and visitors. So, we had to figure out how to adapt in a real hurry. Within two weeks Chicago Detours began to offer virtual tours.

The weeks since then have been a whirlwind of planning and preparation to become a virtual tour company. Our workload is dominated by designing the tours and marketing them. We’ve gotten some great press from Chicago Tribune, Block Club, TimeOut, and NBC. That said, we’re thoroughly enjoying this new line of work and have some really exciting virtual tour topics lined up. We have a virtual boat tour of the Chicago River planned for May 9th, which is already piquing interest across town.

Zooming Through Virtual Tours

Ellen giving a virtual tour of Chicago building types in neighborhoods

The biggest challenge in become a virtual tour company in all honesty, was not content. We have tons of stories, ideas, and facts that we have cultivated from 10 years of sharing tours, public talks, and blog articles. Our challenge as a now virtual tour company was to figure out how to bring all these stories of history, architecture and culture to people’s couches. Just like countless other small businesses, we turned to Zoom as the solution to the problems presented by social distancing.

We chose to host Zoom meetings that would run 30 minutes on weekday evenings and 50 minutes on weekday afternoons. We had to just guess at what time of day people might want to join our tours while we had been thrust into an entire disruption of regular daily schedules. Then we had to figure out: How can you create an online tour experience that replicates the distinct pleasure of walking and talking through town?

Virtual Tour Formats

On that first week, we had big swings that taught us a lot about guiding tours from an online platform. Our Executive Director, Amanda, hosted the initial couple of Historic Happy Hours and Virtual Tours.

As she led us into temporarily becoming a virtual tour company, she worked out approaches to the digital tours that we now consistently use: Google Street View, slideshow presentations, and creating an interactive dynamic through the chat functionality. The former allows us to skip up and down thoroughfares like LaSalle Street, or just regular neighborhood boulevards. Such an experience, even through a Zoom screen share, helps provide a tangible sense of the physical layout of the cityscape. The latter always us to display historical images and videos, just like we do with iPads on the walking tours.

But really, we can’t explain how fun it is to interact live with a group of 60-120 people for each of these digital experiences. We have for a limited time the videos on our Youtube channel if you’d like to see for yourself how a virtual tour works. Or, if you follow us on Facebook you can easily access the livestream.

Thanks for Supporting Us!

We’re incredibly grateful for the support that Chicago Detours has received since the lockdown began. The initial days were immensely stressful, as we reckoned with the sudden disappearance of our entire source of revenue. The online tours have not replaced our lost income. We are offering most of them for free and accepting donations to keep us afloat in the meantime. A band of “regulars” is signing in every day and new faces appear for each virtual tour. Corporate groups, families, and universities have started signing on for private virtual tours.

It means the world to draw people’s interest in these uncertain times. Your support has kept our business operating and it means the world to us. Please register for a virtual tour here!

See you on Zoom!

– Alex Bean, Content Manager and (Virtual) Tour Guide

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The End of the Chicago Trolley Era /chicago-trolley/ Mon, 17 Feb 2020 06:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/chicago-trolley/ The Chicago Trolley and Double Decker Company ceased their tour operations at the end of 2019.  That marks the end of an era in Chicago’s transportation history. The Chicago Trolley Company mostly offered general sightseeing tours and “party bus” services, but the history of actual Chicago trolleys goes back much further. In one form or another, vehicles that at least looked like trolleys had graced Chicago’s streets since the 1800s.

We are sad to see an icon of Chicago tourism go, and thank Chicago Trolley Company for having expanded Chicago tourism over the years. Over our past 10 years in business, we have found that today’s travelers want tours that go beyond dates and names. Our private group tours are designed as curated experiences. Our tour guides are not actors, they are highly trained professionals. We are happy to bring private tour groups to experience the city’s highlights, delve into some of its lively and diverse neighborhoods, or roll through a custom route exploring a topic like the history of Chicago jazz and blues. While we don’t have party buses, we do have educational pub crawls by foot! If you’re planning an event for a wedding, corporate team building, or birthday party, we hope to be your go-to tour company for private bus tours for the 2020s!

We research Chicago history and architecture like this while developing our live virtual events and custom corporate events. Join us for our public virtual events or book an exclusive team-building event for your private group. We can also create custom tours and original content creation about this Chicago topic and countless others.

chicago cable cars power plant LaSalle Street
This diagram from the 1880s shows how the power plant on LaSalle pulled cable cars all over the city. Image via loopnorth.com.

Trolleys are the Roots of Chicago’s Mass Transit

Chicagoans have relied upon one form of mass transit or another since the 1850s. The very earliest method was horse-drawn streetcars, which ran on tracks through downtown. Cablecars and trolleys controlled by Charles Yerkes eventually replaced the horsecars. If that name rings a bell, guests from our Loop Interior Architecture Walking Tour learn about his robber baron ways.

The first his attempts to monopolize mass transit in Chicago was the conversion of old horse-drawn streetcars into cablecar lines. Working just like the famous system in San Francisco, these streetcars moved about the city by clamping onto a cable that was pulled beneath the street’s surface. Chicago boasted the world’s largest such system in the 1880s. Interestingly, the building which housed some of the cable engines is still standing at 500 North LaSalle. The engines in this Chicago landmark pulled cable cars through a tunnel below the river and across the Loop and North Side. Hard to imagine for the Gino’s East diners in there today.

Yerkes turned around and started converting his cable cars lines to electric traction in the 1890s. These electric-powered street cars were Chicago’s actual trolleys. “Cable car” means that a steel cable underneath moves the vehicle. A trolley pulls power from overhead wiring. These streetcar trolleys snaked across hundreds of miles of Chicago’s streetscape. A Geoffrey Baer article says the system Yerkes built had “a fleet of over 3,200 passenger cars and over 1,000 miles of track.” The authentic Chicago trolleys were replaced by buses in the 1940s and ’50s because a CTA chief didn’t like the sight of overhead trolley line. Well, maybe I don’t like the sight of him, so there we go.

Chicago trolley streetcar
One of the “Green Hornet” streetcars, the last of Chicago’s mass transit trolleys, zips through the city. Image via Wikimedia.

The Chicago Trolley is Reborn for Tourism

As Baer wrote, the last true Chicago trolley “click-clacked down Vincennes Avenue on June 21, 1958.” Trolleys became museum pieces from then until the ’90s. The Trolley Company started operations in 1994, right after the Chicago Architecture Foundation moved into the Railway Exchange Building. The modern Chicago architecture tourism trade was really beginning to develop in the ’90s. The Chicago Trolley Company was among the big players. The Chicago Trolley Company offered hop-on, hop-off tours, along with chartered outings. You may recall the familiar sight of a trolley packed with “woo girls” rolling through Wrigleyville on a bachelorette party, for example.

Chicago Trolley Company also came to be an icon for Chicago’s biggest sporting events and parades.  Now, strictly speaking, the vehicles themselves were not trolleys, but buses dressed up like trolleys. Functionally, the Chicago Trolley Company was a fleet of diesel buses which merely looked like the old streetcars. The appearance was a huge part of the charm, though. Rolling through town on a vehicle that looks straight out of the Gilded Age is romantic. I can’t even guess how many wedding parties I’ve seen on trolleys for this very reason.

Chicago double decker bus
The closing of the Chicago Trolley Company means we’ll no longer see their double-decker tour bus fleet around town. Photo via pxhere.

Will We See Chicago Trolleys Again?

The sudden closure of the Chicago Trolley and Double Decker Company caught us all by surprise. We’d actually had a private tour client who insisted we charter one of them for an event this past fall. Some corporate groups and school groups called us now that their tour with Chicago Trolley is cancelled. As stated before, our private group tours by bus can do highlights and more. Even if the fleet of familiar red vehicles never hits the streets again, Chicago Detours’ tour guides can provide a fun, engaging experience with the city’s history and architecture by a comfortable luxury coach. Contact sales@chicagodetours.com for details and rates.

– Alex Bean, Content Manager and Tour Guide

About Chicago Detours

In business since 2010, Chicago Detours is a passionate team of educators, historians and storytellers. We applied a decade of experience as one of Chicago’s top-rated tour companies to become a virtual event company in 2020. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact about Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through custom tours, content production, and virtual events.

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Eat These Six Chicago Holiday Foods /chicago-holiday-foods/ Wed, 11 Dec 2019 06:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/chicago-holiday-foods/ A curious gourmand can find no shortage of interesting and diverse Chicago holiday foods. Our city’s many ethnic communities have gifted hungry folks with a wide variety of seasonal specialties. Tracking down these delicious dishes this holiday season is a grand way to celebrate the season while filling your stomach and experiencing the city’s rich diversity.

We research stories from Chicago history, architecture and culture like this while developing our live virtual toursin-person private tours, and custom content for corporate events. You can join us to experience Chicago’s stories in-person or online. We can also create custom tours and original content about this Chicago topic and countless others.

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Andersonville is the heart of Chicago’s Swedish community. Photo via Wikimedia

Lussekatter in Andersonville

Let’s start off with a treat available for a very limited time. Swedish holiday traditions begin with St Lucia Day on December 13, and Chicago’s Swedish neighborhood, Andersonville, celebrates in style. Candle-bearing “Lucia Girls” lead a procession down Clark Street to kick off this wintertime festival of lights. A huge party at the Swedish American Museum invites Chicagoans to learn more about Swedish traditions and to sample Lucia Day treats, like pepparkakor, or ginger snaps.

The star of the Lucia Day celebration is the lussekatter, or saffron bun. For a limited time you can pick some up at Lost Larson, an Andersonville bakery and cafe that features Swedish classics.

Arroz con Gandules y Pasteles in Humboldt Park

This Puerto Rican classic is a combo dish, blending together two favorites into one of the great Chicago holiday foods. Gandules, known in English as pigeon peas, are the key addition to the arroz, or rice. These nutty-flavored legumes ripen just as the holiday season begins in Puerto Rico. The other half of the dish is Puerto Rican pasteles. Somewhat similar to tamales. The masa, made from plantains, is wrapped in plantain leaves and then boiled.

The balance of these two dishes on one plate creates a wonderfully tropical culinary experience in the depths of Chicago’s winter. Humboldt Park is the heart of the Puerto Rican community here in Chicago, with plenty of restaurants to choose from. Arroz con gandules y pasteles is a house specialty at La Plena, on Division Street. Perfect place to grab a bite if you’re sticking around town during the holidays.

Lechon in Ravenswood

Let’s jump to the opposite end of the old Spanish Empire for our next Chicago holiday foods. Lechon is a Filipino favorite, deep fried pork belly. A Filipino gravy or dipping sauce is almost always part of this dish. The most traditional of these is based upon toyomansi, which blends soy sauce with lime. Which, yes. I want to go to there.

Filipinos prepare huge meals during the Nochebuena feast on December 24th. While traditions may differ from family to family on what must be on the table, lechon is a pretty good bet. A distinct Filipino neighborhood never really developed here in Chicago, but there has been a Filipino community in the city for about 100 years. Our Marketing Manager Marie loves Filipino food and recommended this dish to us. Her favorite version is found at Isla Pilipina, out on the Northwest Side.

Feast of the Seven Fishes in River North

Christmas Eve is celebrated in style all over the world. Italian-Americans made it their own with the Fest of the Seven Fishes–another of these tempting Chicago holiday foods. The tradition comes from the Italian Vigilia di Natale, awaiting the beginning of the liturgical feast day on Christmas. The day before church feasts were traditionally fasting days, which meant no meat. So Italian-Americans went all out with a huge variety of seafood dishes on Christmas Eve.

Many Italian restaurants are closed on Christmas Eve, of course. Not all, though! You’ll have to venture beyond Chicago’s Little Italy to try this particular Chicago holiday food. David DiGregorio, the Executive Chef at River North’s Osteria via Stato is holding a Feast of the Seven Fishes. If you feel like taking a day off from slaving away in the kitchen, well, now you know where to make a reservation.

Melomakarona in Greektown

Not all Chicago holiday foods have to be a full meal. Indeed, the holidays are the time of year when I most often indulge my sweet tooth. Greek sweets are an especially unique treat at this time of year. Their bright, Mediterranean flavors are a wonderful contrast to the heavy Germanic chocolates, cakes, and pies which predominate.

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A stop in Greektown is a must when seeking the best Chicago holiday foods. Photo via Wikimedia

Melomakarona, a honeyed cookie with walnuts, is a longtime favorite for Greek families at the holidays. Appropriately enough, these cake-like cookies (flavored with brandy, orange, and honey–YUM!) are a specialty at Artopolis. We visited this Greek bakery, cafe, and agora near the end of our Neighborhoods and Cultural Diversity Bus Tour. They’re a lovely spot to stop in for a bite and carry out some cookies, right on Halsted in the old Greektown.

Gluhwein at Christkindlmarket

It shouldn’t shock too many people if I suggest that alcohol is an essential part of a Chicago holiday experience. Long a part of holiday season traditions in Germany, Glühwein is a warmed, mulled wine. Perfect for cold December nights in the Midwest. Hence, it’s become a must-get for the countless people who visit Christkindlmarket, Chicago’s faux-German Christmas village. Now, what goes into Glühwein?

You know what Don’t worry about what’s in it. Just grab a mug and drink with some Chicago holiday foods.

Happy Holidays!

– Alex Bean and Marie Rowley

ABOUT CHICAGO DETOURS

Chicago Detours is a boutique tour company passionate about connecting people to places and each other through the power of storytelling. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact with Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through in-person private group tourscontent production, and virtual tours.

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2019 Chicago Detours Holiday Gift Guide /2019-chicago-detours-holiday-gift-guide/ Wed, 13 Nov 2019 06:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/2019-chicago-detours-holiday-gift-guide/

Our annual holiday season gift guide is back, chockfull of recommendations for the Chicagoans on your nice list.

While you’re here, check out our Badass Women Journal and Virtual Holiday Stories Happy Hour. The former is perfect for gift-giving and the latter is a wonderful way to spend time with family and friends this holiday season.

Chicago Detours Gift Cards

Chicago holiday tour palmer house holiday things to do in chicago
Grab a gift card soon and you can use it on the annual Holiday Tour of Drinks, Daleys and Dead Guys.

Starting off with the hometown favorites (of course). Chicago Detours gift cards are excellent stocking stuffers, even if you are nowhere near the stockings in question. Available in several different increments, these gift cards enable you and yours to book a spot on any of our tours of Chicago’s history, architecture and culture. You can also apply gift cards towards booking a private tours. Don’t forget that we can create custom tours for private groups, too!

Some early gift-giving would enable you to use these on our Virtual Holiday Stories Happy Hour.

“El: The Chicago Transit Adventure” Board Game

El chicago transit adventure board game holiday gift guide
We can’t help loving the nerdiness of “El: the Chicago Transit Adventure.” Image courtesy of Transit Tees.

We featured local favorites Transit Tees in last year’s gift guide. Seemingly determined to be in all such Chicago-centric listicles, they just debuted a new CTA-themed board game. “El: The Chicago Transit Adventure” challenges players to strategically ride the bus or the ‘L’ (that sound was your author coughing pointedly about the correct spelling of the elevated train system’s name) to see Chicago’s sights and return to the State/Lake stop before anyone else. A perfect gift for Chicagoans who love trains, games or all of the above.

Chance the Snapper Swag

Okay, first things first, the cold-blooded tropical monster that we all fell in love with has the wrong name. Chance the Snapper is cute and has a nice local touch, but Snapper connotes turtles, not gators. The proper name should have been Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Alligator von Humboldt. Obviously.

Anyway, Chicago loves its now-departed gator (and his bearded captor), so show some local pride with Chance the Snapper swag, like these t-shirts. Such gear has the added bonus of becoming completely inscrutable to most people within a decade.

Dearborn Denim

The Detours office’s resident fashionista, our Private Tour Coordinator Ellen, is all abuzz about Dearborn Denim. This local company creates all of their products, made from American materials, in their Chicago factory. No out-sourcing or fast fashion–these are jeans that come straight from the hard-working folks of the Windy City. Incredibly, Dearborn Denim also custom hems every single order. They take your personal measurements and produce a pair of locally-made jeans tailored directly for your body. An ideal gift in the City of the Big Shoulders.

Adopt a Catfish (!)

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The Adopt a Catfish program is a great program and delightfully surreal. Image courtesy of Friends of the Chicago River.

We’re big fans of Friends of the Chicago River, an advocacy group that has done tremendous work restoring our eponymous waterway. They also run one of the best off-the-beaten path museums in the city! This holiday season, they offer one of the most unique additions to our gift guide: Adopt a Chicago River Catfish.

God bless us, every one.

Your adoption fund will support one of the most important creatures in the Chicago River system. According to FotCR, “Adoption kits include a personalized certificate with a photo of your fish, a welcome letter, catfish stickers, fact sheet, a Friends’ membership, and more.” Perfection. Get one for all your friends.

Chicago Public Library Online Shop

The Chicago Public Library, whose early history and fabulous former homer we explore on the Loop Interior Architecture Walking Tour, is one of the great institutions in the city. It’s also not the sort of place one expects to show up in a gift guide since, ya know, you can’t buy library books. That’s where the CPL’s online shop, full of branded clothing and other swag, comes in. A perfect spot for all the local bibliophiles in your life who need a new shirt.

A Shopping Spree at the Broadway Antique Market

Located in Edgewater, the Broadway Antique Market is two floors of vintage goodness. Countless treasures from decades past, including some very fetching retro-modern furniture, beckon history lovers and hipsters alike. The market also has a huge collection of antique postcards, which have been slowly filling up the margins of the Detours office. A shopping spree at BAM, especially if you’ve just moved or are redecorating, is always a surprising adventure into the past.

Celebrate the Season with Us!

The holiday gift guide is only the start of our seasonal offerings. You can book a spot on our annual Virtual Holiday Stories Happy Hour, which runs through the end of December. Check back in the next few weeks for Chicago book recommendations and more posts about local holiday traditions.

– Alex Bean, Content Manager and Tour Guide

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Four Unconventional College Student Group Activities in Chicago /college-student-group-activities/ Wed, 16 Oct 2019 05:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/college-student-group-activities/ We often hear from guests that it’s tricky finding interesting college student group activities in Chicago. Our private tours are popular with university groups looking to explore the other side of the Windy City, beyond the downtown museums and attractions. So our Private Tour Coordinator Ellen knows a thing or two about recommending unconventional college student group activities in Chicago. Here are four fun Chicago activities for your college-aged group that will challenge and engage them.

You can also get travel inspiration from Kayak’s Chicago Travel Guide.

We research stories from Chicago history, architecture and culture like this while developing our live virtual tours, in-person private tours, and custom content for corporate events. You can join us to experience Chicago’s stories in-person or online. We can also create custom tours and original content about this Chicago topic and countless others.

1. Instead of staying in the Loop… book the Neighborhoods and Cultural Diversity Bus Tour.

pilsen neighborhoods and diversity college student group activities
Experiencing the huge range of cultural diversity in Chicago’s neighborhoods is one of the best college student group activities in Chicago. Photo by Pawel Skrabacz.

Downtown Chicago boasts tons of attractions for university trips, including big museums, but the true soul of Chicago lies in its neighborhoods. We have at least 60 neighborhoods to explore, though the exact number is hotly contested. That means the “city of neighborhoods” leaves visitors overwhelmed with choice!

For this reason, one of our most popular tours for university group trips is our custom tours of Chicago neighborhoods. The tour includes visits and historic background on 9 neighborhoods in Chicago. We go through the South Loop, Bronzeville, Hyde Park, Washington Park, Bridgeport, Chinatown, Pilsen, UIC/Little Italy, and Greektown. The tour guide also celebrates the rich social diversity of the people and communities on our South and West Sides. University groups often love incorporating a meal into the experience, either in Pilsen at the celebrated Canton Regio, or Ricobene’s on the outskirts of Chinatown.

2. Instead of going to the Art Institute… experience dynamic public art.

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An explosion of ghost signs and street art in the South Loop, part of the Wabash Arts Corridor. Image by Alex Bean.

We love the Art Institute. Everyone should visit the Art Institute. However, the Art Institute isn’t the only place downtown to experience quality art.

A newer, but still major, cultural destination downtown is the Wabash Arts Corridor. Launched in 2013 by Columbia College Chicago, WAC runs down Wabash Avenue from Van Buren to Roosevelt, framed to the east by Michigan Avenue and by State Street to the west. This “urban living canvas” currently comprises 19 galleries, 14 performance spaces, five major hotels and more than 40 restaurants. The variety of art immerses students in the creative spirit of the South Loop. The Wabash Arts Corridor’s ultimate goal is the transformation and revitalization of the surrounding urban space into a major resource for art of all kinds in the heart of the city. 

Other slept-on options for art exploration downtown are the Chicago Cultural Center, currently hosting the Chicago Architecture Biennial, and the Museum of Contemporary Photography. Both options are perfect alternatives for the worthy Art Institute.

3. Instead of going to Museum Campus… visit an under-the-radar museum.

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The Oriental Institute Museum, at the University of Chicago, is one of the city’s best spots for unconventional college student group activities. Photo via Wikimedia.

This is a piece of advice that we’re big fans of. I’ll go ahead and quote myself:

Chicago has some massively impressive museums. The world-renowned trifecta down on Museum Campus draws huge crowds. History nerds, like myself, also have the Chicago History Museum and the Museum of Science and Industry. Unfortunately, those museums tend to suck up all the attention from visitors and locals alike.

Just to name some of our favorites from that piece, the Oriental Institute in Hyde Park, the Clarke House Museum in the Prairie Avenue District, and the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum in Pullman are excellent. Well worth taking the time to make them one of your college student group activities.

4. Instead of visiting Navy Pier… learn about urban ecology at The Plant.

An afternoon of sight-seeing does a lot to introduce university groups to the city, but college kids may grow tired of just sight-seeing on days two or three. Plus, Navy Pier, for all its recent improvements, is more family and kid-oriented. College students will likely walk to its end and back and be ready to go.

Alternately, you can arrange a visit to The Plant. Located on the ground of the old Union Stock Yards, The Plant is an incubator which develops new, sustainable technologies and strategies. Their website says it best: “Waste is an opportunity – The best natural resource is the one that has already been extracted. Our work begins where others’ consumption ends, where energy would be otherwise lost to landfills or abandoned.” You can arrange a visit for your college student group activities, perhaps right before or after one of our neighborhood tours.

Tons of Unique College Student Group Activities

Ellen’s list is a great starting point, but we’re only scratching the surface. Chicago holds tons of activities, including ones that might scratch some very specific itches. As always, give us a ring if you want to make a private group tour part of that experience.

– Ellen Bushong and Alex Bean

ABOUT CHICAGO DETOURS

Chicago Detours is a boutique tour company passionate about connecting people to places and each other through the power of storytelling. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact with Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through in-person private group tourscontent production, and virtual tours.

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Mysteries Solved on Our Wicker Park Neighborhood Tour /mysteries-wicker-park-neighborhood-tour/ Wed, 25 Sep 2019 05:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/mysteries-wicker-park-neighborhood-tour/ We’re going to answer some questions and solve some mysteries from our Old Polonia and Wicker Park Neighborhood Tour. Sometimes our tour guides get questions from curious tour guests which stump us, despite all the research we do! Being responsible and honest folks, we never fib. Instead, we take the time to do research and discover more about Chicago history. This neighborhood tour explores the half-century of transformations which changed the old “Polish Downtown” on the Northwest Side into the hippest neighborhood around. It’s a walking tour featuring food stops, the interior of a stunning Polish cathedral and an excursion down Beer Baron Row.

On to the questions!

We research stories from Chicago history, architecture and culture like this while developing our live virtual tours, in-person private tours, and custom content for corporate events. You can join us to experience Chicago’s stories in-person or online. We can also create custom tours and original content about this Chicago topic and countless others.

Where does the name Podhalanka come from?

This question arose at the lovably old-fashioned Polish restaurant named Podhalanka which we visit for some home-cooked Polish food on the tour. Our tour guide, Marie, had a moment to ask Greg, one of the family members who runs the joint with the owner Halina, about the name. He said it’s the region of Poland the family is from. He says it’s beautiful and that we should all visit it! While that sounds very nice, searches of that term didn’t bring up any Polish regions–just our local restaurant.

podhale poland region
Turns out the family who runs Podhalanka hails from the stunningly beautiful region of Podhale. Photo via Wikimedia.

I did a bit more digging and found an answer in Whet Moser’s recent book (one of our beach reading suggestions). Moser clarifies that “Podhalanka” translates as “Girl from Podhale.” Podhale is the name of the region we’re looking for! Turns out this southern highland region, in the Carpathian Mountains, is indeed quite beautiful. Some confusion, but no lies detected! “The girl from Podhale” might therefore be Halina herself. If you haven’t met her and tried her delicious hand-made pierogies, come on our Old Polonia and Wicker Park Walking Tour (or just drop by Podhalanka, tell them we said hello!)

Wicker Park Food Tour Podhalanka Chicago Detours
Is Halina the namesake for Podhalanka Photo by Pawel Skrabacz

Were Wicker Park mansions, like Beer Baron Row, raised to street level?

This question arose from the below-grade workers’ cottages which tour guests see early on in the tour. Seemingly-sunken homes abound in Noble Square, which was home to working-class immigrants in the 19th century. You can spot the same thing in South Side neighborhoods like Pilsen and Bridgeport, both of which we visit on our Chicago Neighborhoods and Cultural Diversity Tour.

Chicago raised its street grade several feet during sewer construction in the late 1800s. The city built sewers at the existing ground level and then built streets atop the new embankments. The sunken buildings were typically built before the sewer construction and never raised to the new street level. Wealthier families or property owners who could afford to raise their buildings often did so, to sometimes spectacular effect.

All that being said, it does not seem that the mansions of Beer Baron Row were ever raised up. Noble Square and Wicker Park were within Chicago’s city limits all the way back in 1837. It’s a little hard to find definitive answers, but the new sewers almost certainly would have extended there by the early 1870s, when the local population boomed. The mansions were built later – the Raap House is 1879, for example. Considering the timing, and the fact that the bigwigs who built the mansions were not likely to construct them without modern sewage connections, the mansions were more likely built on landfill, not raised up.

moat overlooked beautiful buildings in Chicago beer baron row Rapp House
The mansions of Beer Baron Row, like the Raap House, lead to lots of questions on the Wicker Park Neighborhood Tour. Photo by Pawel Skrabacz.

Speaking of the Raap House, its builder was murdered?! When Where Was it in this house DOES HE HAUNT THIS HOUSE?!

On our Wicker Park neighborhood tour we visit and admire the Raap House. While there, guides may mention that John Henry Raap, the man who built it, was murdered. Naturally, this leads to the sort of tour questions we see above.

Raap was one of those great immigrant success stories of Chicago’s early days. He arrived here from Germany as a young man and served briefly in the Union Army. Then he became a leading retailer, especially in alcohol. By the middle of the 1870s, he had become a liquor wholesaler, saloonkeeper, and importer of fine wines. Raap was one of the most successful German businessmen in Gilded Age Chicago and held some sway over the local Republican Party.

That all came to an end on April 23, 1897. Raap accused his employee George H. Braunschweig of embezzlement and fraud. The accusation was to the tune of $2300. That’s over $70k in today’s money! In an effort to settle the case, Braunschweig offered Raap undeveloped properties in suburban Park Ridge and Kensington. Raap, perhaps overplaying his hand, insisted on either cash or Braunschweig’s own plush home. Braunschweig responded by going to Raap’s business and asking for a meeting with his accuser. He then shot Raap in the head before turning the revolver on himself. Holy Scheisse!

So we knew about the murder, but the scene of the crime isn’t featured on the tour. That structure, the Raap Block, is long gone. It stood at what’s now 906 North Milwaukee Avenue in the Noble Square neighborhood. Today, that’s the middle of the Milwaukee Avenue bridge over the Kennedy Expressway. The ghost of John Raap is more likely wandering the highway than his Wicker Park mansion.

Wicker Park Neighborhood Tour Beer Baron Row John Rapp murder
The drawing which accompanied the story John Raap’s murder in an 1897 copy of the Tribune.

Only a Few Weeks Left for the Old Polonia and Wicker Park Neighborhood Tour!

Your chances to tour the old Polish Downtown with us in 2019 are getting pretty slim. The final Old Polonia and Wicker Park Tour with Food will be on Halloween, which is Thursday, October 31st. Much of the tour is outdoors as we explore the area around Noble Square and circle Wicker Park (the park itself, that is.) With the winds of winter starting to bite, we wrap up this and our other warm-weather tours by October’s end. So time is of the essence!

Of course, you can always sign up for our three year-round downtown walking tours (Loop Interior Architecture, Historic Chicago Walking Bar, and 1893 World’s Fair Walking Tour). We’re also bringing back our Holiday Tour of Drinks, Daleys, and Dead Guys in November and December. Make sure to think up your best questions for those tours–it’ll lead to more fun posts like this one!

– Alex Bean, Content Manager and Tour Guide

ABOUT CHICAGO DETOURS

Chicago Detours is a boutique tour company passionate about connecting people to places and each other through the power of storytelling. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact with Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through in-person private group tourscontent production, and virtual tours.

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Peek Behind the Scenes of Chicago Theatre History /chicago-theatre-history/ Wed, 18 Sep 2019 05:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/chicago-theatre-history/ 2019 is the Year of Chicago Theatre, so we’re looking back on Chicago theatre history in all its varied forms, from its legendary improv to neighborhood storefront spaces.

We research stories from Chicago history, architecture and culture like this while developing our live virtual tours, in-person private tours, and custom content for corporate events. You can join us to experience Chicago’s stories in-person or online. We can also create custom tours and original content about this Chicago topic and countless others.

Chicago Improv

Second City facade SNL Chicago Tour Louis Sullian Garrick Theater Chicago theatre history
Chicago improv fully blossomed at the iconic Second City venue in Old Town. Perhaps the most influential spot in Chicago theatre history. Photo by Alex Bean

Our city’s most famous contribution to theatre history revolves around the Second City. The famous comedy club in Old Town has its roots in Hyde Park back in the ’50s. A group of UChicago students started performing commedia dell’arte shows in the Compass Bar on 55th Street. The Compass Players created highly-structured prompts and games which the performers improvised within, which became the touchstone of Chicago’s improv comedy scene. Helped along by some truly incredible talent, not least the world-famous duo of Mike Nichols and Elaine May, these young performers helped start The Second City and shaped 20th-century American comedy.

Tony-Winning Theatre Companies

No slight against our improv impresarios, but comedy clubs are not what people think they see “theatre” spelled with an re. For that sort of high culture, we look to our bevy of Tony-winning companies. The Steppenwolf, Goodman, Victory Gardens, Chicago Shakespeare, and Lookingglass companies represent the biggest concentration of high-profile professional theatre outside Manhattan. No other city comes close to our collection of Regional Theatre Tony Awards.

Many of these companies occupy fascinating historical spaces. The Goodman sits in the beautifully revived Harris and Selwyn Theaters. Victory Gardens performs in the iconic Biograph Theater, where Dillinger met his end. Chicago Shakes, of course, performs in their fabulous Navy Pier venue, and Lookingglass calls the historic Water Works its home. Seeing shows at these fantastic spaces is also a trip into the history of Chicago’s theatre architecture.

Biograph theater Victory Gardens Lincoln Park Chicago
The iconic Biograph began its life as a movie theater in 1914. Tony-winning Victory Gardens has called it home for over a decade. Photo via Wikimedia.

Neighborhood Theatres

The Tony-winning heavyweights didn’t start out as Chicago theatre colossi, of course. With the exception of the Goodman, these companies began as storefront neighborhood theatres. “Off-Loop” theater companies sprang up throughout the city in the 1960s and ’70s. Inspired by the Compass Players, spurred to action by political and social unrest, and permitted to operate in small spaces for the first time thanks to relaxed building codes, suddenly small theaters were in every Chicago neighborhood. Non-profit theater companies like The Body Politic paved the way for the vibrant Off-Loop Chicago theatre that still exists.

These tiny theatrical companies, often operating on minimal budgets, are the beating heart of Chicago theatre. Often dedicated to esoteric, avant garde, or socially conscious causes, they offer abundant creative freedom. The 200 or so storefront companies also provide the most common starting point for Chicago’s theatrical talent. Actors, writers, designers and directors can cut their teeth and build their resumes in this thriving scene.

Experimental Theatre

Chicago Little Theatre
The Chicago Little Theatre only lasted a few years in the Fine Arts Building, but it had an enormous influence. Image via Chicago Public Library.

Those tiny storefront theaters also represent another of Chicago’s major contributions to theatre history– experimental theatre. Mind-bending experimentation abounded in the 1960s and ’70s small companies, like when Organic Theatre Company mounted a “DIY sci-fi play” called Warp! in 1971. Chicago’s history with experimental theatre is way older than that though. Around the 1910s, Chicago was a center of the Little Theatre Movement, a rejection of the crass commercialism of more mainstream theatre at the time.

The legacy of the experimental theatre companies is carried on today by  The Neo-Futurists, a wildly successful experimental company in Andersonville. Founded back in 1988 and inspired by the Italian Futurist movement, the Neo-Futurists perform with reckless abandon. They embrace immediacy and energy, creating “[w]ork that embraces those unreached or unmoved by conventional theater – inspiring them to thought, feeling and action.”

Youth Theatre

Children’s theatre has a long history in Chicago too. It can trace its roots to the experimental theatre of the Little Theatre Movement in the Progressive Era. Alice Gerstenberg, a feminist playwright and active member of Chicago’s Little Theatre, established the Junior League Children’s Theater in 1921. Chicago children were treading the boards at Hull House around the same time too, with youth drama classes and performances an integral part of the settlement house’s services for Near West Side children.

Today, drama programs in Chicago schools continue the tradition, and community-based programs like the inimitable Albany Park Theater Project represent some of the best theatre in the city. As we detailed last year, our tour guides proudly donate 50% of their gratuities to support APTP. Their mission, bringing young people of every background together to create luminous and rich theatrical experiences. Their work perfectly dovetails with our own ethos. APTP is between shows right now, but we know that a new production is in the works. Can’t wait to see it and share it with the world.

Albany Park Theater Project Ofenda Chicago Detours
Our guides are proud to support the vibrant productions of Albany Park Theater Project. Photo courtesy of Albany Park Theater Project.

Black Theatre

Black Chicagoans created a robust theatre scene in the Black Belt in the early twentieth century. The famed Pekin Theatre opened in 1905 as the country’s first black-owned and operated vaudeville theatre in the country. Later, black playwrights and actors used theatre to challenge segregation and inequality. Langston Hughes founded the Skyloft Players ensemble in 1941 as “a theater OF the people FOR the people BY the people.” In the 1970s, Chicago’s legacy of black theater was continued with the creation of the Black Ensemble Theater, located in Uptown. Founded by the inimitable Jackie Taylor, BE’s mission is “to eradicate racism and its damaging effects upon our society through the utilization of theater arts.” The Black Ensemble Theater’s shows are often jukebox musicals celebrating overlooked or under-appreciated black performers. Common consensus is that the shows are so joyful and entertaining that the audience is dancing by curtain call.

Black Ensemble Theater Chicago Theatre history
A still from BET’s production of “Black Pearl: A Tribute to Josephine Baker.” Photo by Michael Courier, courtesy of Black Ensemble Theater.

Celebrating Chicago Theatre History in 2019

The Year of Chicago Theatre affords a great opportunity to appreciate Chicago Theatre history. Sponsored by City Hall and the League of Chicago Theatres, it’s the first citywide theatre festival of its kind. Events include theatrical performances in all 77 community areas, plus major funding and visibility boosts for the city’s 200+ theaters and companies. Inevitably, these celebrations highlight just how much great theatrical work is done here. From the biggest Broadway in Chicago venues to the smallest indie storefronts, this is a town that puts on a great show. We might not have the Great White Way, but Chicago theatre can go toe-to-toe with any other toddling theatre town.

– Alex Bean and Marie Rowley

ABOUT CHICAGO DETOURS

Chicago Detours is a boutique tour company passionate about connecting people to places and each other through the power of storytelling. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact with Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through in-person private group tourscontent production, and virtual tours.

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Detour: Take an Indiana Dunes Day Trip /detour-indiana-dunes-day-trip/ Wed, 11 Sep 2019 05:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/detour-indiana-dunes-day-trip/ For over a century, an Indiana Dunes day trip has been one of the best detours from our big city. Many Chicagoans still make this delightful trek every summer. In fact, some of the Detours tour guides took an Indiana Dunes day trip recently. We did not plan these separate excursions as research for this post. We just happened to head to the same vacation spot at nearly the same time. It’s not a big surprise that we’re all flocking down the Skyway, though. An Indiana Dunes day trip gives you beautiful natural environments, historic architecture and a relaxing time with friends and family. What’s not to love?

We research stories from Chicago history, architecture and culture like this while developing our live virtual tours, in-person private tours, and custom content for corporate events. You can join us to experience Chicago’s stories in-person or online. We can also create custom tours and original content about this Chicago topic and countless others.

Indiana Dunes poster Quincy Station
This vintage poster for the Indiana Dunes in the Quincy ‘L’ station points towards its historic role as Chicagoans’ vacation destination. Photo by Alex Bean

History of Indiana Dunes Day Trips

The Indiana Dunes are the southern-most manifestation of a long stretch of sandy beaches and soaring dunes. This natural landscape stretches all the way up the eastern coast of Lake Michigan. Tourists have flocked to the area’s beach towns and the famous Sleeping Bear Sand Dunes for over a century.

Strong winds from the lake formed the dunes. When wind whipping off the lake hits obstructions, like vegetation, sand particles drop. Over time (a very long time, in fact), these sand deposits grow ever higher – rooted in place by vegetation and their own accumulated weight.

The natural beauty of this landscape, as well as the difficult prospect of constructing solid foundations on heaping piles of sand, preserved the Indiana Dunes from major development. We still might have lost the dunes, though, if not for the parks movement. Both Chicagoans and Indianans were alarmed at the prospect of losing the Indiana Dunes to creeping industrialization in nearby Gary. So the preservation movement swung into gear to save this natural wonderland. Today the Indiana Dunes State Park and Indiana Dunes National Park contain over 17,000 acres of natural landscape.

Ironically, Chicago’s industrial infrastructure provided the essential element for this preservation: people. An Indiana Dunes day trip is made possible by the South Shore Line, which deposits riders directly at the dunes. It was the regularity and convenience of the train service from the Loop which created a market for vacationers and turned the Dunes into a preserved landscape.

The Varied Environments of the Dunes Parks

Indiana Dunes natural landscape hiking trails
Hiking is a must during an Indiana Dunes day trip. Photo by Amanda Scotese.

When you take an Indiana Dunes day trip, you’re literally within sight of Gary and Chicago, yet you can see the world before industrialization. Modernity almost slips away while you swim on the beach, climb to a dune’s peak or stand on a lakeside bluff. Being the Chicago history nerd that I am, it was hard not to reflect that this was the type of landscape on which Chicago was built 200 years ago. In fact, the site which is now the State Park’s beach was once City West – a potential boomtown rival of Chicago. That never came to pass, obviously, but it fascinated me while visiting.

Simply being in nature is enough for many Dunes visitors. Yet there’s a surprising amount of ecological variety in the state and national parks. The sandy beaches, with their stunning views, are the star attraction, of course. Daytrippers fill the beaches to bursting on warm summer weekends. Just behind the beaches are the dunes themselves. Covered in scrub grasses on the lake side and forests on the inland side, these natural wonders provide the perfect venue for hiking and sightseeing. Hiking can take you through all the wonders of the Dunes landscape. The trails within the state park alone take you through dune peaks and ridges, marshes, overlooks, blowouts and boardwalks.

A Forgotten Piece of Chicago’s Architectural History

Florida Tropical House century of progress architectural district Indiana Dunes
The Florida Tropical House in the Indiana Dunes National Park is a beautiful piece of Chicago’s architectural history. Photo by Alex Bean.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I like being able to experience the natural world and go on a good hike. But historic architecture is almost always going to be my favorite part of any detour from Chicago. The new National Park has several historic districts, including an 1820s fur trading post and a Swedish farming enclave that was active for 80 years. I was also surprised to discover that the state park beach was the site of a Revolutionary War skirmish. Who knew?! Fascinating spots, to be sure, but the Century of Progress Architectural District takes the cake.

These five historic houses were constructed for the 1933 Century of Progress Expo’s “Homes of Tomorrow” exhibition. Architecture firms used Modernist aesthetics, like Art Deco and Art Moderne, new building techniques, notably prefabrication, and new-fangled materials, like Rostone. The results never actually became the mass-produced homes of the post-WWII suburban building boom, but they fascinated and inspired fairgoers. After the Expo’s conclusion five of these houses were loaded onto barges and floated 50 miles down Lake Michigan. They’ve gazed the inland sea from dune bluffs for 75 years now. Seeing them before heading home was the highlight of my Indiana Dunes day trip.

The Detour from Chicago Par Excellence

Trips to the Indiana Dunes are a tradition for Chicagoans. Generations have taken the South Shore Line or Skyway across the state line to escape the city. It is our region’s version of the Hamptons or Palm Springs and for good reason. No other area is so close to the city and yet so tangibly distinct. It harbors vast stretches of beautiful terrain and hidden historical curios. Little wonder that half of our guides wind up taking an Indiana Dunes day trip each summer.

– Alex Bean, Content Manager and Tour Guide

ABOUT CHICAGO DETOURS

Chicago Detours is a boutique tour company passionate about connecting people to places and each other through the power of storytelling. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact with Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through in-person private group tourscontent production, and virtual tours.

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You Will Love This Creative New Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook /chicago-neighborhood-guidebook/ Wed, 04 Sep 2019 05:00:00 +0000 http://jhc.ryb.mybluehost.me/chicago-neighborhood-guidebook/ Belt Publishing, a Midwest-based independent book label, is publishing its new Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook on September 10th. They’ll host a launch party at The Hideout on September 11th at 5:30pm. We hope to see you there because The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook is awesome. Led by editor Martha Bayne, the contributors to The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook created a stirring, entertaining and informative collection of works. This is not the standard “guidebook,” packed with names, dates, facts and figures. Instead, each essay in The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook is a highly personal, nuanced snapshot of the authors’ own neighborhoods. Taken together the collection presents a sometimes idiosyncratic but always insightful portrait of the City of Neighborhoods.

At Chicago Detours our mission is to share stories and places even locals don’t know through private tours of Chicago’s history, culture and architecture. So The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook’s creative approach to sharing the Chicago’s neighborhood stories was an instant hit with us. The whole book is a delight and I recommend you check it out. Here’s a few selections which provide particular insight into some of the Chicago neighborhoods we visit on those custom private neighborhood tours.

We research stories from Chicago history, architecture and culture like this while developing our live virtual toursin-person private tours, and custom content for corporate events. You can join us to experience Chicago’s stories in-person or online. We can also create custom tours and original content about this Chicago topic and countless others.

Bridgeport Neighborhood

Big Shoulders Historic Bar and Food Tour Bridgeport Chicago
The Big Shoulders Historic Bar and Food Tour explores Bridgeport on September 15th. Photo by Pawel Skrabacz.

We lead custom tours in Bridgeport frequently, so I’ll start with Ed Marszewski’s essay, Bridgeport: The Community of the Future. This neighborhood tour uses food and drink to connect with the migrations of different groups into Bridgeport. So Marszewski’s insights into the city’s oldest neighborhood outside downtown felt timely, smart and honest. “Living here has taught me what segregation can do to a city, as Bridgeport’s prejudicial reputation went way beyond the neighborhood boundaries.”

Marszewski describes how the arrival of Asian and Mexican communities and a bubbling hipster presence has dissolved that bigoted reputation. The proprietor of Maria’s Packaged Good and Kimski, Ed has helped this transformation along personally. Ed recommends a bevy of other contemporary Bridgeport institutions, like the Co-prosperity Sphere and Zhou B. Center. We share these harbingers of the “Neighborhood of the Future” on a private in-person tour.

Wicker Park Neighborhood

Wicker Park Food Tour Chopin Theater
Kevin Coval’s “milwaukee avenue” explores the transformations visible all over Wicker Park and Noble Square. Photo by Pawel Skrabacz.

Another favorite neighborhood of ours gets very unique treatment from the poet Kevin Coval. The artistic director of Young Chicago Authors and a UIC professor, Coval is one of the most notable poets in Chicago these days. It’s basically him and Eve Ewing vying for the title of Chicago’s poet laureate. His contribution to The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook is a poem titled “milwaukee avenue.”

In the poem, Coval skips up and down the thoroughfare of the Northwest Side. Starting at Noble Square, he examines the remnants of the working class Polish and Latino neighborhood that’s disappeared into today’s hipster heaven. It’s much the same transformation we engage with on our private neighborhood tours.

Coval’s vivid imagery captures Wicker Park’s neo-Bohemian days:

“The Avenue was avant-garde and pedestrian, pedestrians
by the hundreds. we’d wait for the clock on the bank
that is now a walgreens on the northwest corner
of the Avenue and Damen to strike ten and then
for ten minutes we’d put on a guerilla variety show”

The South Loop Neighborhood

Lightner Building Printer's Row South Loop Ghost Sign street Art Chicago Detours
The old and the new, the scuzzy and the scrubbed, blend together in the South Loop. Image by Alex Bean.

Several of our tours are based in and around downtown. Happily, The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook covers the city center along with the outlying areas. I was particularly taken with Megan Stielstra’s essay, South Loop: Michigan and Harrison. Much like Marszewski and Coval, her writing focuses on the transformative changes of the past few decades. Stielstra arrived in Chicago in 1995 and attended the creative writing program at Columbia College. Her essay begins right there, in an old greasy spoon diner at Michigan and Harrison. She checks back in on herself and the South Loop neighborhood every five years, in a different establishment each time. Diners give way to dive bars which are replaced by coffee shops and Cuban restaurants.

Along the way, Stielstra notes her own changing status and feelings. Each half-decade reveals a growing unease with the corporatization of the South Loop until her eventual departure in 2015. She captures how much of the city’s somewhat lovable scuzziness has been scrubbed away these past decades. The march of progress must always leave some behind, of course, even highly-educated and reflection writing professors. Hers is not necessarily a tragic story, but it is an emblematic one.

Track Down the Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook!

Chicago Neighbrohood Guidebook Belt Publishing
The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook from Belt Publishing is an instant favorite. Cover art courtesy of Belt Publishing.

Obviously, I have only scratched the surface of what The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook has to offer. The full book contains dozens more essays, covering every quadrant of the city. I was particularly impressed by the works tackling Garfield Park, Mount Greenwood, Roseland, Pullman, Bronzeville and the epilogue about Rezkoville. Those works, along with all the others, bring to vivid life the diverse people and wildly divergent experiences that populate Chicago. The Chicago Neighborhood Guidebook is a symphony of the city that is unharmonious, often tragic, sometimes ridiculous, and yet always home.

– Alex Bean, Content Manager and Tour Guide

ABOUT CHICAGO DETOURS

Chicago Detours is a boutique tour company passionate about connecting people to places and each other through the power of storytelling. We bring curious people to explore, learn and interact with Chicago’s history, architecture and culture through in-person private group tourscontent production, and virtual tours.

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