|
|
|
Key Attractions
Art Institute of Chicago The bronze lions guarding the main entrance of the Art Institute of Chicago have become true symbols of the city. The Institute is packed with examples of over 5,000 years of human artistry from all over the world. Of particular interest are the collections of African, Ancient American and ‘modern’ American art from the 17th century to present, including two icons of 20th century American art: American Gothic by Grant Wood (1930) and Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks (1942). The Institute can also claim to be the French Impressionist capital of the American Midwest. Its collection includes one of only four surviving Water lily paintings by Monet, as well as work by Mary Cassatt, the only American to be included in the French Impressionist Movement.
111 South Michigan Avenue Tel: (312) 443 3600. Website: www.artic.edu Transport: Adams station: bus 3, 4, 6, 14, 60, 126, 129, 145, 147 or 151. Opening hours: Mon, Wed and Thurs 1030-1630; Tues 1030-2000; Sat and Sun 1000-1700. Admission: US$10; concessions available; free on Tues.
Grant Park In the 1890s, Grant Park was a marshy wasteland earmarked for development, until it was saved by the wealthy Montgomery Ward and transformed by the landscaping plans of the Olmstead Brothers. Its popular landmark, the Buckingham Fountain (on Congress Parkway and Columbus Drive), is modelled after a fountain at Versailles and is a fine example of Beaux Arts landscape design. Between 1 May and 1 October, a brightly-coloured, illuminated water performance takes place from dusk until 2300. The fountain itself flows from 1000 onwards.
From East Randolph Street (north) to Roosevelt Road (south), Michigan Avenue (west) and the lakefront (east). Tel: (312) 742 7529. Transport: Randolph, Madison, Adams and Roosevelt stations; bus 3, 4, 6, 14, 60, 126, 129, 145, 147 or 151. Opening hours: Daily 24 hours. Admission: Free.
Sears Tower Second only in height to the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, this famous 110-floor city landmark stands 443m high (1454 feet). Needless to say, the views are fantastic but so are the queues in the waiting rooms for the Skydeck on the 103rd floor. Every year, 1.5 million visitors come to take the 70-second ride in the lift (‘elevator’). Once at the top, if the weather is clear, the views reach Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana, up to 80km (50 miles) away. The Sears Tower guides are keen to inform people that, by using different criteria – highest occupied floor (469m/1431ft), highest roof (475m/1450ft), highest antenna (567m/1730ft) – this is still the world’s tallest building. The Skydeck has recently undergone a US$4-million renovation, turning it into a multimedia experience aimed at both adults and children. Don’t miss the spiralling Calder mobile, The Universe, on the ground-floor lobby of the Wacker Drive side.
233 South Wacker Drive, entrance on Jackson Boulevard Tel: (312) 875 9696. Fax: (312) 906 8193. E-mail: info@theskydeck.com Website: www.theskydeck.com Transport: Quincy station; bus 1, 7, 60, 126, 129, 135, 136 or 151. Opening hours: (May-Sep) Daily 1000-2200. (Oct-Apr) Daily 1000-2000. Admission: US$11.95, concessions available.
John Hancock Center Not quite as tall as the Sears Tower, the John Hancock Center is still very high at 344m (1127ft). It is usually less crowded and gives a more scenic view of the city’s shoreline. There is an excellent observation gallery on the 94th floor, which also has the outside Skywalk. One floor up is the Signature Room, a good spot to sip a cocktail while enjoying the sunset views to the west and the panorama of Lake Michigan to the east. Architecturally, the building is striking because of its two massive X-shaped cross-braces. It is also possible for visitors to ‘tour’ Chicago without leaving the building, by following the ‘Windows on Chicago’ virtual reality tour of 80 city sights and viewing the Chicago history wall.
875 North Michigan Avenue Tel: (312) 751 3681 or (800) 875 VIEW or 8439. Website: www.hancock-observatory.com Transport: Chicago station; bus 10, 145, 146, 147 or 151. Opening hours: Daily 0900-2300. Admission: US$9.50, concessions available.
Museum Campus The Museum Campus is the park area south of Grant Park, where three museums/attractions (The Adler Planetarium, Field Museum and John G. Shedd Aquarium) explore the world beyond Chicago:
Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum Opened in 1930, the Adler Planetarium was the Western Hemisphere’s first public museum devoted to the stars. It still maintains the traditional in-the-round Zeiss planetarium (Sky Theater) as well as the new state-of-the-art interactive Sky Rider where, with the help of armrest controls, visitors can choose how they would like to journey into space. Other interactive exhibits include 3-D computer animations of the birth of the solar system and of the Milky Way.
1300 South Lake Shore Drive Tel: (312) 922 7827 (STAR). Website: www.adlerplanetarium.org Transportation: Roosevelt station; bus 12, 127, 130, 146 and the Free Trolley. Opening hours: Late May – early Sep: Mon-Thurs 0900-1700, Fri 0900-2100, Sat-Sun 0900-2000, Early Sep – late May: Sat-Wed 0900-2000, Thurs-Fri 0900-2100. Admission: US$5, free Tues, Star Rider and Sky theatres each US$5 additional.
Field Museum Home to 65-million year-old ‘Sue’, the nearest to a complete Tyrannosaurus Rex that has ever been discovered, the Field Museum explores the world’s diverse environments and cultures. The entrance leads into the Dinosaur Hall, which is filled with real and replica skeletons. The ‘Africa’ exhibit experience takes visitors from the city streets into the harsh but magnificently beautiful Sahara and into the galley of a slave ship. ‘Inside Ancient Egypt’ is just that, with 23 real mummies in a recreated burial chamber. ‘Shrink’ to the size of a bug and burrow into the surface of the soil at the Underground Adventure (US$4). Weekends are most crowded.
1400 South Lake Shore Drive Tel: (312) 922 9410. Website: www.fieldmuseum.org Transport: Roosevelt station; bus 12, 127, 130, 146 and the Free Trolley. Opening hours: Weekdays 1000-1700, Sat-Sun 0900-1700. Admission: US$8, free Wed, concessions available.
John G Shedd Aquarium A huge variety of sea creatures dwell within the confines of the world’s largest indoor aquarium at the Shedd. Travel from the great coral reefs of the Pacific to the liquid forests of the Amazon, and visit a lot more watery destinations in-between. Watch divers feed stingrays, sharks and other denizens of the sea at the Caribbean Reef exhibit. The Shedd’s spectacular Oceanarium is home to beluga whales and the dolphin show.
1200 South Lake Shore Drive Tel: (312) 939 2438. Website: www.sheddnet.org Transport: Roosevelt station; bus 12, 127, 130, 146 and the Free Trolley. Opening hours: Daily 0900-2200 (summer); Mon-Fri 0900-1800 weekends (winter). Admission: US$15 (includes Oceanarium), concessions available.
Museum of Science and Industry Designed by Daniel Burnham for the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1892, this museum continues to charm both kids and science buffs. It is hard to visit this it without riding through the coal mine, exploring the World War II German submarine, the U-505, walking through the six metre (20-foot) human heart or trying to catch some fairy dust at Colleen Moore’s Fairy Castle. Families especially enjoy the hands-on Imagination Station and the acoustically perfect Whispering Gallery. The huge screen of the Omnimax Theater features science and space-related films.
5700 South Lake Shore Drive Tel: (773) 684 1414. Website: www.msichicago.org Transport: bus 26, 6, 8 and 51 Opening hours: Late May- early Sep: daily 0900-1730, early Sep-late May: Mon-Fri 0930-1600, Sat-Sun 1730-1730. Admission: US$9, Museum and Omnimax $US15.
Navy Pier The 800m-long (half-mile) pier, built in 1916, was once the city’s municipal wharf and a military pier – the only pier actually completed out of several proposed under the Burnham Plan of 1906. After an extensive refurbishment, it is now one of the city’s most popular tourist meccas and recreation complexes, with over 20 hectares (50 acres) of parkland, gardens, piers, shops and restaurants. Its outdoor facilities include an amphitheatre, a 150-foot high Ferris wheel (the first one ever – not this one – was built in Chicago in 1893, for the World’s Columbia Exposition), and a carousel. Inside the complex is an IMAX film theatre, the Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows, Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, miniature golf and The Chicago Children’s Museum. Here, interactive, hands-on, family, children and school-orientated exhibits are designed to instruct while entertaining.
600 East Grand Avenue Tel: (312) 595 PIER/7437 or (800) 595 PIER/7437. Website: www.navypier.com Transport: Bus 29, 56, 65, 66 or the Free Trolley. Opening hours: Fri and Sat 1000-2400 (late May to early Sep); Mon-Thurs 1000-2000, Fri and Sat 1000-2400, Sun 1000-1900 (Nov-May); Mon-Thurs 1000-2100, Fri and Sat 1000-2300, Sun 1000-1900 (mid-Sep-Oct). Admission: Free.
Ferris Wheel Navy Pier Park Tel: (312) 595 5200. Opening hours: Same as Navy Pier (weather permitting). Admission: US$5 combination with Carousel and Swing Ride US$12. Concessions available.
Carousel Navy Pier Park Opening hours: Same as Navy Pier (weather permitting). Admission: US$4. Concessions available.
IMAX 700 East Grand Avenue Tel: (312) 595 0090. Website: www.navypierimax.com Opening hours: Show schedule varies. Admission: US$9. Concessions available.
Chicago Children’s Museum 700 East Grand Avenue Tel: (312) 527 1000. Website: www.chichildrensmuseum.org Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1700, Thurs 1000-2000. Admission: US$7, free Thurs, concessions available.
|
|