Chicago Neighborhoods 2015: Assets, Plans and Trends – A project of The Chicago Community Trust
BRONZEVILLE SOUTH LAKEFRONT Historic Black Metropolis is also home to universities, arts, parks
Chicago’s South Lakefront neighborhoods have been drivers
of the city’s evolution for more than 150 years. Greystone
mansions and magnificent parks built in the late 19th Century,
followed by the 1893 Columbian Exposition at Jackson Park,
attracted huge waves of development and population growth,
marking the South Side as the city’s most powerful area
beyond the central core. By 1920, the Great Black Migration
had brought some 100,000 African-Americans to Chicago from
the southern states, creating an economically diverse, though
racially segregated, area called the Black Metropolis or black
belt. It was and still is the center of African-American life in
Chicago.
Today the South Lakefront is undergoing massive and
widespread redevelopment. Five Chicago Housing Authority
(CHA) developments are being completely rebuilt as mixed-
income neighborhoods. In and around Hyde Park, the
University of Chicago has invested more than $1 billion in
new facilities and partnered with private developers on off-
campus housing and retail projects. With a new Tax Increment Financing District in place, the
Washington Park neighborhood is in line for more investment along Garfield Boulevard. And
Woodlawn’s 63rd Street spine has new housing at Cottage Grove and two new specialized schools at
Ellis Avenue: the Hyde Park Day School and Sonia Shankman Orthogenic School.
Source: Calculations by Institute for Housing Studies at DePaul University using 2010 Decennial Census.
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 2
Supporting these investments are the area’s numerous locational advantages, which include diverse
transportation choices, five miles of lakefront parks and beaches, and a long history of civic activism
among residents, community organizations, and local institutions. Jackson Park and Washington Park
remain major attractions – home to the Museum of Science and Industry and DuSable Museum of
African American History, respectively – while Burnham Park boasts natural prairies along the lake
and a new harbor at 31st Street.
Bronzeville rebirth
At the core of the South Lakefront’s identity is its history as the Black Metropolis, the vibrant group of
neighborhoods that housed most of Chicago’s African-American population into the 1950s. Hemmed in
by racial covenants and often-vicious bigotry, the Black Metropolis became an economically integrated
and severely overcrowded center of black-owned businesses, church life, and social organizations,
creating the rich social and architectural legacy that continues in today’s Bronzeville.
A new era began in 1940, when the U.S. Supreme Court struck
down the covenants that restricted sales or rental of housing to
African-American families outside of the black belt. This
prompted massive outmigration into other South and West
Side neighborhoods. Over the decades that followed, as high-
rise public housing was built and later demolished, the South
Lakefront grew to a 1960 population peak of 369,000 residents
– many of them poor – and then declined to 127,300 by 2010.
Today, the South Lakefront is becoming more economically
and racially diverse, driven by market forces as well as conscious policies of the City of Chicago and
Chicago Housing Authority. Over the last 20 years, the Chicago Housing Authority has demolished all
36 of the 16-story high-rise towers that once stood alongside the Dan Ryan Expressway – the Robert
Taylor Homes and Stateway Gardens developments, being redeveloped as Park Boulevard and
Legends South – plus about 3,200 units at the Ida B. Wells, Madden Park, and Clarence Darrow
developments, where the new buildings are called Oakwood Shores. New mixed-income – one-third
BRONZEVILLE S. LAKEFRONT OVER TIME 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Population 309,167 230,346 171,085 152,749 127,307
Share of population in poverty 31.3% 43.0% 45.0% 36.3% 28.3%
Percent owner-occupied/renter occupied 9/92 12/88 15/85 20/80 27/73
Sources: Calculations by Institute for Housing Studies at DePaul University using U.S. Census data from US2010 Project at Brown University.
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 3
market rate, one-third affordable, and one-third low-income – are under construction at scattered sites
throughout Douglas, Oakland, Grand Boulevard, and Kenwood, including Lake Park Crescent and
Jazz on the Boulevard.
Nodes of renewal
With thousands of housing units coming on line and many acres of vacant land still available, the area
is experiencing renewal across a wide geography. New construction and rehabilitation projects include:
Historic structures: On the 3600 block of South State Street, the landmarked terracotta
headquarters of the black-owned Overton Hygienic company has been rehabbed; two doors
down, the Bronzeville Bee newspaper building has become the Chicago Public Library’s “Bee
Branch.” In between and across the street, mixed-income housing is under construction as part
of the 1,300-unit Park Boulevard. Farther south at 47th and Michigan, the 1929 Rosenwald
Apartments are undergoing a $110 million rehab. Built by Sears magnate Julius Rosenwald, and
vacant since 2000, the complex will return to its roots as quality, affordable apartments, with
retail and office space planned.
Mixed-use developments: Shops and Lofts at 47 opened in late 2014 at 47th and Cottage Grove,
with 96 units of mixed-income rental housing above ground-floor retail that includes a Walmart
Neighborhood Market. The $45 million project resulted from eight years of effort by the
nonprofit Quad Communities Development Corp., with three development partners.
Grocery store: A full-service Mariano’s will be built at 39th and King Drive, bringing 400 jobs to
land vacated by the Chicago Housing Authority.
Athletic facilities: XS Tennis is partnering with the City of Chicago to build a $9.8 million
tennis complex at 51st and State Streets, with eight indoor and 19 outdoor courts. At 61st Street
and Cottage Grove in Woodlawn, Metrosquash has signed a ground lease with the POAH
housing group and is building indoor squash courts adjacent to the new Woodlawn Park
affordable housing development. Both XS and Metrosquash specialize in youth programming.
Recreation: The City Council in November 2014 approved Tax Increment Financing assistance
for the $16.2 million Quad Communities Art and Rec Center to be developed in Ellis Park, 35th
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 4
Street and Cottage Grove Avenue, by the Chicago Park District and The Community Builders.
A $1.2 million investment will expand Buckthorn Park at 44th and Calumet.
These developments build on other long-standing anchors. North of 35th Street, the Prairie Shores and
Lake Meadows high-rise developments have been racially and economically mixed since they were
built in the 1950s and 1960s; in recent years, the area has seen an influx of more than 2,300 Asian
residents. Nearby are the Illinois Institute of Technology, which has invested heavily in its modernist
campus and its University Technology Park, and the Illinois College of Optometry at 3241 S. Michigan.
Farther south, scores of well-preserved greystones and decorative brick houses are part of the
Kenwood-Oakland Conservation District, which grew out of a resident-driven 1988 planning process.
Streets in this area, close to the lakefront, have seen major reinvestment and new construction that is
compatible with the historic homes nearby.
All of the South Lakefront will soon gain improved access to beaches and the Lakefront Trail. An $18
million pedestrian bridge is under construction at 35th Street, and at 41st and 43rd Streets the City of
Chicago will build, in 2016, a pair of new pedestrian bridges with curving ramps to provide views of
the lake and Chicago skyline. The neighborhood also has new protected or buffered bike lanes on
major arteries including King Drive and Drexel Boulevard.
Hyde Park and the University of Chicago
A consistent driver of change and stability is the Hyde Park neighborhood, home to the University of
Chicago and related institutions. With 15,000 students and more than 18,000 non-faculty staff jobs –
one-third of which are held by South Lakefront residents – the university and its medical facilities have
anchored the South Lakefront since the 1890s. The university became an aggressive driver of urban
renewal in the 1950s, partnering with the City of Chicago on slum clearance and redevelopment
intended to combat rapid racial and economic change.
The university’s actions were controversial in that era, with many organizations in Hyde Park and
surrounding neighborhoods perceiving the changes as driving out the poor and creating barriers
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 5
around the campus. Community organizations today are just as active – and sometimes critical of the
university – but relations have improved thanks to better communications and continued investment
by the university in community partnerships, facilities, and job training.
For instance, along 61st and 63rd Streets in Woodlawn, south of the Midway Plaisance, new buildings
and streetscapes present welcoming faces to the community, rather than the fences and parking lots of
previous decades. The university’s Urban Education Institute works closely with four charter schools in
neighborhoods north and south of the campus. And the Arts + Public Life program, under the
leadership of renowned artist Theaster Gates, has opened an arts incubator next to the Garfield Green
Line station in the Washington Park neighborhood.
Within Hyde Park itself, the university led the redevelopment of Harper Court on 53rd Street, adding a
hotel, restaurants, and 12-story office tower; is a partner on the modernistic, 267-unit Vue 53
development on the site of a former gas station; and on 55th Street is building a $148 million dormitory
designed by architect Jeanne Gang. University of Chicago Medicine opened its $700 million
replacement hospital, the Center for Care and Discovery, in 2013.
Source: Easy Analytic Software, Inc., updated January 2014, as displayed on Woodstock Institute Data Portal.
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 6
Challenges and opportunities
Despite the heavy investment across the South Lakefront, the communities continue to face challenges
of income inequality, poor performance at many local schools, and large differences in the street
environment from one neighborhood to the next. The share of the population living in poverty has
declined in recent decades, but remains high, at 28 percent in 2010.
The demolition of CHA properties – and the decades-long attrition of housing in Washington Park,
West Woodlawn, and central Bronzeville – have left far more empty land than is likely to be filled, even
by a rebounding housing market. None of the seven community areas showed population gains
between 2000 and 2010, contributing to the 2013 closing of seven school buildings because of
enrollment declines (see Development Opportunities table). The previously announced phased closure
of Dyett High School, 555 E. 51st Street, was met with strong community protest, in part because of the
area’s limited choices of high-quality high schools. The community pressure resulted in a 2014 decision
by Chicago Public Schools to reopen Dyett in 2016 as an open enrollment neighborhood high school.
The smaller population has also affected retail
corridors. Once lined solidly with storefronts,
today the arterial streets have many vacancies,
even at major intersections and near CTA stations,
as shoppers travel by car to big-box retailers on
Roosevelt Road and in Chatham. In an effort to
bring pedestrians back to 43rd Street, the City of
Chicago in October 2014 issued a Request for
Proposals for seven parcels near the Green Line
station, which now serves about 1,100 passengers a
day.
Parts of the district were affected by the foreclosure
crisis, resulting in 8 percent of all sales of non-condo residential properties at values below $20,000. The
EMPLOYMENT – BRONZEVILLE SOUTH LAKEFRONT
Top six employment sectors (# jobs) 2005 2011
Public Administration 19,547 17,277
Educational Services 14,715 16,331
Health Care and Social Assistance 12,415 11,452
Accommodation and Food Services 1,908 2,692
Retail Trade 1,802 2,070
Real Estate and Rental and Leasing 1,365 1,834
Total # private-sector jobs in district
58,479
57,242
District Citywide
Unemployment rate 2012 18.8% 12.9%
Sources: Calculations by Institute for Housing Studies at DePaul University using Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics data (top sectors) and 2012 Five-Year American Community Survey (unemployment).
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 7
City of Chicago Micro Market Recovery Program targeted two areas in the district, resulting in re-
occupation of 257 vacant units in Woodlawn and 44 in Grand Boulevard. Some areas continue to have
board-ups and vacancies.
These longstanding challenges have been widely referenced in recent plans by neighborhood and civic
organizations, and some counter-strategies are being implemented.
Reusing vacant land. Many plans seek ways to fill vacant land, the most recent being the 2014 Green
Healthy Neighborhoods plan. Urban agriculture zones and community gardens are a preferred use
where market forces are weak. The two-acre Legends Farm at 35th and Federal is a collaboration of
Chicago Botanic Gardens and Brinshore Michaels, which is developing housing nearby. The Sacred
Keepers Sustainability Lab garden at 41st and King Drive includes a butterfly garden, composting, and
raised beds. In Washington Park, the City of Chicago leased a site at 57th and Lafayette to the Sweet
Water Foundation for use as an urban education farm.
The City of Chicago Large Lots program is spurring reuse of vacant lots by selling them for $1 to
homeowners or nonprofit groups on the same block. A pilot sale in 2014, covering Washington Park,
Woodlawn, and Englewood, resulted in 414 applications and the conveyance of 322 lots to nearby
property owners. The Green Healthy plan also recommends use of vacant lots as natural drainage
systems to reduce strain on overloaded sewers.
A larger piece of vacant land, owned by the City of Chicago, is the former site of Michael Reese
Hospital, just west of the Metra tracks between 26th and 31st Streets. Purchased as part of the city’s
2016 Olympics proposal, the 48-acre site is mostly cleared but there are no plans for development.
Reviving retail districts. The 2012 Developing Vibrant Retail in Bronzeville study calls for
concentrated retail nodes near the Green Line transit stations and on the north-south corridor of
Cottage Grove Avenue. The 2005 Quad Communities quality-of-life plan recommends cleanups, street
activities, and branding to “banish the grey” along local streets. Many such activities have since been
mounted – including regular street cleaning, a farmers market, murals, and Bronzeville Nights that
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 8
feature food and music. Three new Special Service Areas, which tax local property owners to pay for
agreed-upon services, will provide resources to continue this work on Cottage Grove, 47th Street, and
53rd Street.
Private investment is also picking up, with new restaurants, coffee shops, and other businesses opening
in recent years. A restaurant owner has restored a stretch of storefronts on 43rd Street at Ellis, and the
development firm Urban Juncture is building the Bronzeville Cookin’ development adjacent to the 51st
Street Green Line station, alongside two “pop-up” activities on vacant lots: a community garden filled
with art (and people) and the Bike Box bike shop, housed in a shipping container, sponsored by
Bronzeville Bikes and the South East Chicago Commission. Urban Juncture also owns the empty but
historic Forum dance hall at the 43rd Street Green Line stop.
Leveraging transit assets. Despite being criss-crossed with transportation infrastructure and serving
26,000 passengers each weekday on the Red and Green Lines, Bronzeville’s transit assets are
underutilized. Red Line stations in the middle of the Dan Ryan Expressway are not pedestrian friendly
and make it difficult to create retail developments. Vacant land and storefronts are available near
Green Line stations, but ridership is lower than on the Red Line. The 2009 Reconnecting
Neighborhoods – Mid-South Study Area plan recommends pedestrian improvements, bicycle parking,
and clustering of businesses at transit stops. Developing Vibrant Retail in Bronzeville, published in
2012, identifies 47th Street as the corridor with the greatest potential to build synergy around existing
retail assets.
CTA Red and Green Line Ridership (weekday boardings, year-end averages, 2009 and 2012)*
Red Line Green Line
Sox
35th 47th Garfield 63rd
35th-IIT- Bronze-
ville Indiana 43rd 47th 51st Garfield
63rd – King Dr.
63rd – Cottage Grove
2009 4,668 3,163 4,081 3,636 2,035 860 970 1,319 1,070 1,334 579 1,220
2012 5,218 3,254 3,819 3,463 2,301 967 1,074 1,380 1,176 1,347 650 1,346
Source: Chicago Transit Authority Annual Ridership Reports. * Red Line South was closed for reconstruction in 2013, so 2012 numbers are used.
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 9
Honoring Bronzeville’s history. The most consistent theme in existing plans is to build on the district’s
historical and cultural assets, in particular the area’s African-American history, cultural institutions,
and landmarks. The citywide 2012 Chicago Cultural Plan recommends creation of appropriate spaces
for art activities (such as the Gallery Guichard and Bronzeville Artists Lofts, opened in 2014); enhanced
transportation to and between cultural venues (as piloted in 2014 by the Museum Campus South
trolley route serving seven locations including DuSable Museum, Oriental Institute, Robie House, and
Museum of Science and Industry); and tours of neighborhood cultural assets (such as those offered by
the Bronzeville Visitor Information Center, in the landmark Supreme Liberty Life Building). Centers for
New Horizons installed murals of journalist Ida B. Wells, musician Louis Armstrong, and others as
part of its Bronzeville Legends campaign.
By pursuing these opportunities and other larger challenges, such as improving local schools and
enhancing safety, Bronzeville South Lakefront can attract new residents while building on the historic
legacies that make it one of the most important districts in all of Chicago.
Examples of development opportunities
Place Location Status Notes
CHA properties Numerous Vacant after demolition of previous properties
Many acres are available on former public housing “superblocks” along Federal Avenue and State Street, and on scattered sites at other developments.
Michael Reese Hospital site
26th to 31st Street east of Vernon Avenue and west of Metra tracks.
City of Chicago paid $91 million for the 48-acre site as part of failed proposal for 2016 Olympics; is cleared except for one building.
Numerous ideas have been presented but there are no firm plans.
Architecturally significant buildings
Numerous Vacant structures are prominent on retail strips
Early 20th Century buildings have elaborate terra-cotta and brick facades.
Attucks School (closed 2013)
5055 S. State St. 3.6-acre site; needs mechanical repair
Served public housing students at now-demolished Robert Taylor Homes.
Drake School (closed 2013)
2722 S. Martin Luther King Dr.
3.48 acre site; needs mechanical and building envelope repairs
Building is adjacent to Prairie Shores and South Commons high-rise developments.
Fiske School (closed 2013)
6145 S. Ingleside Ave. 2.74-acre site; needs mechanical repairs
School is in West Woodlawn, just south of University of Chicago developments along 60th and 61st Streets.
Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 Summary of Assets – Bronzeville South Lakefront – February 2015 – Page 10
Canter School (closed 2013)
4959 S. Blackstone Ave. 2.71 acre site; needs mechanical repairs
CPS announced in July 2014 that Kenwood Academy’s 7th and 8th grade special academic program will move into Canter in fall 2015.
Overton School (closed 2013)
221 E. 49th St. 2.35-acre side; needs mechanical repairs
School previously served students from Robert Taylor Homes, now demolished, and surrounding blocks.
Pershing East School (closed 2013)
3113 S. Rhodes Ave. .57-acre side; no repairs needed Building is across 31st Street from vacant 48-acre Michael Reese Hospital site.
Ross School (closed 2013)
6059 S. Wabash Ave. 2.72-acre site; mechanical repairs needed
Building is in Washington Park near site recently conveyed by the City of Chicago to Norfolk Southern Railroad, for yard expansion.
Data note: Unless otherwise stated, demographic and other information is provided by Chicago Community Area, which may differ slightly from the boundaries of the CN2015 Planning Districts. Community Areas included in this profile are Douglas, Grand Boulevard, Hyde Park, Kenwood, Oakland, Washington Park, and Woodlawn.
Research support for Chicago Neighborhoods 2015: Assets, Plans and Trends was provided by a team convened by The Chicago Community Trust. The summary of assets for this planning district was created by LISC Chicago and Teska Associates with materials from Metropolitan Planning Council, Place Consulting, Institute for Housing Studies at DePaul University, and many other sources. Author: Patrick Barry. Learn more about Bronzeville South Lakefront and Chicago Neighborhoods 2015 at cct.org/CN2015/BronzevilleSouthLakefront. Learn more about data and sources at cct.org/CN2015/DataSources
DOUGLAS
GRAND BOULEVARD
OAKLAND
63RD
47TH
35TH
26TH
55TH
MIC
HIGA
N
ELLI
S
ELLIS
Wabash YMCA
Legend South
Artist Lofts47th Street Corridor
Legends Farm
Burnham Park
Mandrake Park
Oakwood Shores
Lake Parc Place
Promontory Point
St. Elizabeth ES
Truck Marshalling
Little Black Pearl
Lake Park Crescent
Arts + Public Life
Oriental Institute
Former Fiske School
Former Drake School
Komed Health Center
Urban Prep Academies
Chicago Urban League
Rosenwald ApartmentsGuichard Art Gallery
Former Overton School
New Pedestrian Bridge
University of Chicago
Jazz on the Boulevard
Eighth Regiment Armory
Metro Apostolic Church
Liberty Baptist Church
Quad Communities CWF The Cara Program
New Pedestrian Crossing
New Pedestrian Crossing
Donoghue Charter School
Center for New Horizons
Genesis Housing Dev. Corp.
Ctr for Care & Discovery
Lugenia Burns Hope Center
Lake Meadow Shopping Center
Overton Hygienic BuildingPark Boulevard Apartments
Renaissance Collaborative
Bronzeville Comm. Dev. Partners
Quad Communities Dev Corp.47th Street Corridor
St. Edmund's Episcopal Church
Former Michael Reese Campus
Catechesis & Youth Ministry
Church of the Good Shepherd
Corpus Christi Church
Museum Science and Industry
Illinois Institute of Technology
Washington Park Chamber Comr.
51st St Business Association
South Side Comm. Art Center
Lou Jones Bronzeville Station
Bronzeville Visitor Info. Center
Harold Washington Cltrl Ctr.
Ray ES
King HS
Williams ES
Drake ES
Price ES
Ariel ES
Dyett HS
Burke ES
Harte ES
Fiske ES
Dumas ES
Dunbar HS
Fuller ES
Reavis ES (Elev8 School)
Murray ES
Carter ES
Dulles ES
McCosh ES
Attucks ES
Wells Prep
Attucks ES
Beasley ES
Robinson ES
Mollison ES
Carnegie ES
Woodlawn ES
Beethoven ES
Shoesmith ES
Hyde Park HS
WellsPrep ES
N. Kenwood ES
Woodson South ES
Kenwood Academy HS
Perspectives Charter
Woodlawn Health Center
Greater Grand/Mid-SouthMental Health Ctr
Hall
Coleman
Blackstone
West Woodlawn MMRP
Grand Blvd MMRP
See StockyardsPlanning District
Dusable HS
Mccorkle ES
Doolittle ES
Kozminski ES
Pershing East
Bronzeville HS
Ace Tech Charter HS
CICS Washinton Park
Phillips Academy HS
YCCS Charter Houston
Little Black Pearl HS
YCCS Charter McKinley
Excel Academy Woodlawn
U of C Charter Woodson
Young Women’sLeadership
Lindblom Math & Science
U of C Woodlawn Charter
Chicago Military Academy HS
Youth Connections Charter HS
Bronzeville Lighthouse Charter
Urban Prep Charter Bronzeville
WOODLAWN
HYDE PARK
KENWOOD
WASHINGTON PARK
NEAR SOUTH SIDE
43rd
47th
51st
Indiana
King Drive
Cottage Grove
59th St.
47th St.
27th St.
Mercy
U of Chicago Medical Center
KOCO
Walmart Mariano's
XS Tennis
Unity Hall
PICB, Inc.35th Street Corridor
Sunset Cafe
Metrosquash
Harris ParkPreservation of Affordable Housing (CWF)
NEIU- CCICS
Robie House
KLEO Center
Raber House
Lake Meadows
Harper Court
Jackson Park
Woodlawn Park
Prairie Shores
DuSable Museum
Parkway Gardens
Washington Park
Mount Carmel HS
Victory Monument
Midway Plaisance
Masjid Al-Faatir
Life Center COGIC
The Ancona School
Blanc Art Gallery
Orthogenic School
31st Street Harbor
Hales Franciscan HS
Supreme Life Center
Network of Woodlawn
Former Canter School
Hyde Park Day School
Hyde Park Art Center
Olivet Baptist Church
Shops + Lofts at 47th
Pilgrim Baptist Church
Statue of the Republic
King Dr. Walk of Fame
Metra Englewood Flyover
Apostolic Church of God
IL College of Optometry
South East Chicago Commision
Friend Family Health Center
Chicago Defender Building
Washington Park Consortium
62nd Street Farmer's Market
Former Pershing East School
St. Thomas the Apostle SchoolGarfield
47th
Garfield
LAKE MICHIGAN
35th Street Corridor
Calumet-Giles-PrairieHistoric District
63rd St.
53rd St.
55th-56th-57th St.
JACKSON PARK
Provident
La Rabida
63rd
Sox-35th
See South SidePlanning District
See Stony IslandPlanning District
See Central Planning District
2ND
CPD HQ
Hyde Park/Kenwood Historic District
King
Chicago Bee
63rd Street Corridor
94
90
41
41
DATE | 01.16.2015
BRONZEVILLE SOUTH LAKEFRONT PLANNING DISTRICT ASSET MAPCHICAGO NEIGHBORHOODS 2015
Stockyards Industrial Corridor
See StockyardsPlanning District
See South SidePlanning District
See CentralPlanning District
LAKE MICHIGAN
47th/Halsted
47th/King
Woodlawn
47th/State
West Woodlawn
26th/King
Bronzeville
35th/State
53rd Street
Madden/Wells
71st/Stony Island
Lakefront
67th/Wentworth
43rd/Cottage Grove
Pershing/King40th/State
49th/St Lawrence
Drexel Boulevard41st/King
South East Chicago Commission
Chicago Urban League
Quad Communities Development Corp
Hyde Park Chamber of Commerce
The Renaissance Collaborative, Inc
51st Business Asssociation
4th Ward
3rd Ward
5th Ward
20th Ward
47TH
63RD
PERSHING
STAT
E
VINCE
NNES
DR
MART
IN L
UTH
ER K
ING JR
STONY ISLAN
D
ELLI
S
SSA#47
BRONZEVILLE SOUTH LAKEFRONT PLANNING DISTRICT WARD/TIF/SSA MAPCHICAGO NEIGHBORHOODS 2015
DATE | 01.16.2015
*This planning area is located within the North Business & Industrial Council and the Calumet Area Industrial Council (LIRI)
(NBDC) serves this district but main o�ce may be located o� the map
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