The windy city is a cornucopia of modern art, fine dining, cutting edge comedy, and die-hard sports fans. Snap a photo of your reflection in the silver Cloud Gate sculpture at Millennium Park before heading to Grant Park to get hit with the refreshing spray of Buckingham Fountain. There are dozens of museums and theater companies in Chicago, so a cultural experience is never hard to find. You’re sure to laugh your head off at the Second City Theater, the professional launch pad of many famous comedians.
Restaurants in Chicago
5.0 based on 88 reviews
Chicago Urban Adventures offers tours with a local expert guide in Chicago. In only a few hours, you’ll uncover back streets and hidden gems as you step into the lives of locals, find out what makes the city tick, and get acquainted with local food, culture, and traditions. This fantastic urban experience is sure to be your Best. Day. Ever. in Chicago.
5.0 based on 462 reviews
The Lookingglass Theatre Company seeks to redefine the limits of theatrical experience and to make theatre exhilarating, inspirational, and accessible to all.Through theatre, which invites, even demands, interaction with its audience, the company's goal is to fire the imagination with love, to celebrate the human capacity to taste and smell, weep and laugh, create and destroy, and wake up where we first fell --- changed, charged and empowered.
The Lookingglass Theatre's performance of the Steadfast Tin Solider is simply delightful and recommended for all. The acting troupe brings to life a wonderful story through the true art of acting and storytelling. Adults and children alike will love this performance.
5.0 based on 2 reviews
Lucent is the mesmerizing and mind-boggling sculpture that hangs in the lobby of Chicago's John Hancock Building, which is located at 875 North Michigan Avenue. It is a wonder to behold. And it certainly lives up to its name. Lucent is derived from the Latin word "lucere," meaning "to shine." Made of 3,115 lights, the number of visible stars in the Northern Hemisphere, the 13-foot artwork depicts a scale map of the stars that shine in the night sky. The sculpture, created by English artist Wolfgang Buttress with the assistance of astrophysicist Dr. Daniel Bayliss of the Australian National University, contains thousands of glass bulbs, all fed light through blue illuminating fiber-optic lines. It represents a 3D map of all the stars in the Northern Hemisphere that are visible with the naked eye. According to Buttress, who also created the award-winning UK Pavilion at Milan Expo 2015 in Italy, this cosmic-inspired sculpture aims to express "the idea of looking up and sensing wonder." All of the piece's glass bulbs were hand blown by artists at a Chicago glass studio. Each one of the 3,115 bulbs is amplified even more against a mirrored ceiling above and a reflecting pool below. The end result is a glorious piece of artwork that seems to go on forever with light looking from sky to ground over and over again. You've never seen anything like it.
4.5 based on 626 reviews
The neo-gothic tower's signature is the exterior collection of stones from other famous edifices, like the Parthenon, St. Peter's Basilica, Notre Dame, the White House and most recently, the Berlin Wall.
As a retired newspaperman who worked for the competitor across the street for more than 30 years, I can't get over the fact that the publishing, editorial and advertising offices of the Chicago Tribune no longer are housed in iconic Tribune Tower. It's like taking Mickey Mouse out of Disneyland or Babe Ruth out of Yankee Stadium. Located at 435 North Michigan Avenue, the 470-foot-tall, 36-floor neo-Gothic skyscraper was built between 1923 and 1925. The tower features carved images of Robin Hood and a howling dog near the main entrance to commemorate the architects John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood and the top of the tower is designed after the Tour de beurre of the Rouen Cathedral in France. While it has been recognized for its classic architecture and has earned a reputation as the most beautiful and distinctive office building in the world, it is most noted for the rocks and bricks that Tribune correspondents brought back from a variety of historically important sites throughout the world at the request of then Tribune publisher Colonel Robert McCormick to be incorporated into the lowest levels of the building. In all, there are 149 fragments in the building, including a piece of steel recovered from the World Trade Center and a rock from the Moon. In addition, there are stones from the Taj Mahal, the Parthenon, Hagia Sophia, Corregidor, Westminster, the Alamo, the Great Pyramid, Notre Dame de Paris, Abraham Lincoln's tomb, the Great Wall of China and Independence Hall in Philadelphia. Today, Tribune Tower is being converted into condominiums with work expected to be completed by 2020.
4.5 based on 15,639 reviews
The Magnificent Mile is one of the great avenues of the world and is at the center of all that makes Chicago an international destination. One of the top 10 hospitality, dining and retail destinations in the world, with endless shopping, international cuisine, top rated hotels, lively entertainment, majestic architecture and natural beauty at every turn, The Magnificent Mile offers visitors to Chicago a one-of-a-kind city experience. The Magnificent Mile is the 13-block stretch of North Michigan Avenue that runs from the banks of the Chicago River to the south, to Oak Street to the north. The Magnificent Mile district extends a full square mile from North Michigan Avenue. The Magnificent Mile is a spectacular showcase of style, flavor, entertainment and fun. With more than 460 stores, 275 restaurants, 60 hotels and unique entertainments and attractions packed and stacked along its length, The Magnificent Mile has an indulgence for every passion and every pocket.
The Magnificent Mlle is certainly magnificent with the high end stores and other shops along with the historic and new architecture for which Chicago is so justly proud. Just walking along the Mile, one can hear languages from many countries. Each season the street is decorated with theme-based decorations. Along with shopping I enjoy people watching.
4.5 based on 303 reviews
This white, terra-cotta landmark was built in 1922 as headquarters for the Wrigley chewing gum company.
My wife and I have fond memories of the Wrigley Building. As a sportswriter for the Chicago Daily News in the 1970s, I once joined a platoon of other sportswriters that gathered at Philip Wrigley's top-floor office to learn about a reported Chicago Cubs trade. My wife worked in an office in the Wrigley Building for more than 20 years. I used to get monthly haircuts in the Wrigley Building's barber shop. We used to enjoy breakfasts, lunches and dinners at the old Press Club, which was headquartered in the Wrigley Building. And I cashed my weekly checks at the bank that once was housed on the first floor of the Wrigley Building's South Tower. Today, it remains a Chicago Landmark, an architectural beauty, one of the city's most distinguished buildings. Located at 410 North Michigan Avenue, on the Chicago River, at the head of the Magnificent Mile, the Wrigley Building was built from 1920 to 1924 to house the corporate headquarters of the Wrigley Company, which sold chewing gum and owned the Chicago Cubs. It was the first major office building north of the Chicago River and the city's first air-conditioned office building. The glazed terra cotta structure was designed by the architechural firm of Graham, Anderson, Probst & White using the shape of the Giralda tower of Seville's Cathedral combined with French Renaissance details. The 425-foot, 30-story South Tower was completed in April 1921 and the 21-story North Tower was completed in May 1924. Walkways between the towers were added at the ground level and the third floor. In 1931, another walkway was added at the 14th floor. A signature feature is the clock tower. Who hasn't walked across the Michigan Avenue Bridge or along the Chicago River and glanced up at the Wrigley Building's clock tower to check the time of day? Today, the bank is gone. So is the Press Club. And the barber shop. But the new owners, who purchased the building in 2011, have added a Walgreen's drug store, Giardelli chocolate shop, coffee shop, fitness center and a nursing room for mothers. At night, bathed in lights, the grace and elegance of the Wrigley Building is beholden to one and all.
4.5 based on 10,847 reviews
Located on the 94th floor of the John Hancock Center, 360 CHICAGO offers breathtaking views of Chicago’s skyline, the lakefront, and four states. It’s the only place you can enjoy Chicago’s highest thrill ride, TILT – a giant moving platform that literally TILTs visitors over the edge of the building. Relax at BAR 94 with local favorites, a large cocktail selection, and front-row seating to the city’s best views from 1,000 feet up. Explore HD interactive touch screens in seven languages and learn more about the Windy City. If you really want to experience Chicago, make your first stop 360 CHICAGO.
I visit the observation deck last week and I have to say it was incredible!, I was there when the sun goes down and the view everywhere you look at was simply amazing, and the tilt experience is also highly recommended!!!
4.5 based on 227 reviews
I first noticed the Fourth Presbyterian Church, when we first stayed at the Westin Hotel, on a previous trip. I could not help but notice it from the Westin Executive Lounge, as one can look down upon it, though many of the lounge’s windows. It is an imposing structure, and dominates a full city block, at the corner of N Michigan Ave and E Delaware Place, directly across from the John Hancock Building, at 875 N Michigan Ave. It was after coffee in that lounge, that I decided to re-visit this magnificent church. I had done a self-guided tour, and was back to do another one, while my wife was in meetings near-by. I walked over to the church, and explored the chapel, and the courtyard, on a cool, damp March day. Much of the church’s structure dates from the early 1900's (though the congregation goes back to the 1870's), in a Gothic Revival style, borrowing on some of the aesthetic aspects of older cathedrals, in Europe, such as Notre Dame, and the Cologne Cathedral. The Gothic Revival elements are everywhere, and quickly establish the visual theme of the building, and from all sides. The exterior deserves a complete walk-around, and will present itself in a different way, with the changing light. Besides the imposing main structure, and also fronting N Michigan Ave, there is a serene courtyard, attaching several administrative buildings. I spent some time in that lovely courtyard, and while those out-buildings are not as grand as the cathedral, itself, they are well-worth the time to study. Again, the chapel was open for viewing, and I took this opportunity to photograph some of the interior, open to the public. Besides its architectural beauty, it is a great place to just relax, and reflect, before heading back out to N Michigan Ave - the Magnificent Mile - for shopping, or more exploring. A gorgeous, and historic (second oldest building on Michigan Ave, after the Water Tower) building, well worth seeing, and spending time both admiring and touring. I probably spent 2 hours on this day, including the walk-around of the entire exterior.
4.5 based on 29 reviews
Ok, there’s every designer you could wish for at this Saks. The store is rather large. Though, all designers are well marked as to which floor they’re located. The salesperson are wonderful. The variety of cosmetic alone can keep you there for hours.
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