Monday, September 28, 2009

Chicago: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours

Introduction

So, you've seen Millennium Park, strolled down Michigan Avenue and probably visited Museum Campus. You've gone for deep-dish. Maybe you'll venture out of downtown to the boutiques and bars of Wicker Park and Bucktown. These are all worth doing, of course. But for a little variety, we've picked 10 places tourists — and even some Chicagoans — don't usually go.


1. Millennium Park
201 East Randolph Street, Chicago, IL 60602; 312-742-1168 41.88432-87.622539 millenniumpark.org

2. The Magnificent Mile
North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611; 312-642-3570 41.892808-87.623664 themagnificentmile.com

3. Museum Campus
1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605 41.862568-87.618689 More Info



1. National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum


After you've hit the Museum of Contemporary Art, or MCA, and the Art Institute of Chicago, keep heading south to see one of Chicago's most compelling yet under-viewed collections. The money-strapped National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum — the only art museum in the U.S. dedicated to exhibiting work by Vietnam vets and, most recently, Iraq War vets — has an almost appropriate vacancy about it. As you step into the main gallery, you're met by a graceful found-metal sculpture that mimics a soldier about to "step off to dance with death," portraying the romantic notion of war; one of the feet is molded using a tricycle part. On the second floor, get close to the softly clinking dog tags that make up Above & Beyond — there's a tag for each of the more than 58,000 service men and women who died in the Vietnam War. Take the back stairs or the elevator to the third floor to see the photos and installations of the Iraq War exhibits.

The museum is kept afloat by a handful of dedicated artist vets who regularly ship pieces out for exhibition, and also restore pieces — like a sculpture utilizing the POW bracelets of pilot (and Sen. John McCain colleague) John Borling, as well as the cup he used while imprisoned at the Hanoi Hilton. Many of the pieces easily stand on their own. But within the context of the museum, they are quite overpowering.

On your way out, stop by the front desk and ask to see the hardcover rendition of the museum — Vietnam: Reflexes and Reflections, which was released in 1996, the year the museum opened. The book offers a colorful and extended review of the larger collection, as well as artist reflections, and is worth a perusal.

1. National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum
1801 South Indiana Avenue, Chicago, IL 60616; 312-326-0270 41.857653-87.622014 nvvam.org

2. Museum of Contemporary Art
220 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611; 312-280-2660 41.897069-87.622603 mcachicago.org

3. Art Institute of Chicago
111 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60604; 312-443-3600 41.880668-87.624241 artic.edu



2. Reggie's Rock Club and Record Breakers


Here's one of the best things about Reggie's Rock Club in the South Loop: If you're not into a set or who you're with, just walk up a couple flights to Record Breakers, a huge record store where you can snag not only new releases, but everything from an Eartha Kitt album and Minor Threat 45s to Rocky and The X-Files on laserdisc. In the rock-and-roll-heavenly reading room, there are old issues of KISS Magazine, tear-out Rolling Stones photo books and imported Zappa and John Cale session recordings from the '60s. And you can listen to anything you want. The downside of the Reggie's experience is that you may be drunk, and so psyched about your finds, that you spend all your money. (Don't ask how we would know that.) But it's an appropriate place to pick up a jazz album, as the South Loop corridor was once a hotbed of clubs — like the relocated Velvet Lounge around the corner.

Back downstairs, there's also Reggie's Music Joint, a restaurant and bar across the hall from Reggie's Rock Club, which is a second place to listen to live acts — did we mention this complex is 16,000 sq. ft.? — while you eat, drink or watch one of 17 plasma TVs. The comfort-food menu is printed on a record sleeve with a real vinyl tucked inside (Hall & Oates, anyone?).

1. Reggie's Rock Club
2109 South State Street, Chicago, IL 60616; 312-949-0121 41.853839-87.626752 reggieslive.com

2. Velvet Lounge
67 East Cermak Road, Chicago, IL 60616; 312-791-9050 41.852765-87.624381 velvetlounge.net



3. Judy Istock Butterfly Haven


The outside of the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum is a museum itself: The extensive prairie, rooftop gardens and solar panels, and water conservation systems make it one of the city's shining examples of green technology. The inside of the building sprouts kid-friendly interactive displays and workshops for adults such as "Geology of the Chicago Region," but the real reason to pay the $9 admission is the year-round Judy Istock Butterfly Haven — unless you hate butterflies (you'll be in an enclosed space with about 1,000 of them).

After watching a short video, you enter a huge room with a wall of windows, a trellis strung with vines, a rocky waterfall, and a curving path lined with benches. At first you may be afraid to move for fear of either stepping on or running into a butterfly. But that's when you realize how many there really are, and how they're able to camouflage themselves — maybe even after landing on your shoulder. The museum regularly rotates species of these winged beauties, featuring about 80 different types at a time.

Just before the exit, there's a mirror so you can check and make sure there isn't a butterfly trying to hitch a ride out on you. In the next hallway there's a glass display where you can watch various species miraculously emerge from chrysalides. Then it's time for you to emerge out of the museum and flap thee to the lakeshore nearby.

1. Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
2430 North Cannon Drive, Chicago, IL 60614; 773-755-5100 41.926369-87.633961 chias.org



4. Paseo Boricua and Humboldt Park


With the threat of gentrification looming from the east, leaders in the Humboldt Park neighborhood worked to solidify the staying power of its Puerto Rican community. And thank goodness. Two huge, arching, steel Puerto Rican flags mark either end of the district known as Paseo Boricua (on Division Street, from North Western Avenue to North California Avenue). This pair of engineering feats — the world's largest monument to any flag — bookend a gauntlet of salsa music, murals and vibrant street life. Grab a guava-cheese pastry from Cafe Colao; at Coco Restaurant, try the passion fruit martini with fresh-squeezed juice, or the house martini topped with oven-toasted coconut shavings.

At North California Avenue is an entrance to Humboldt Park itself, part of Chicago planner Daniel Burnham's "Emerald Necklace" of parks and boulevards. There are gardens, playgrounds, fields, lagoons (including one that's chlorinated for swimming), architectural gems like the Germanic-style stable and receptory, and usually some locals showcasing their custom cars and cruisers. Make your way up Humboldt Boulevard toward North Avenue, the northern border of the park, and you could score a watermelon from the back of a vendor's pick-up, or maybe an elote (roasted corn on the cob slathered with butter or mayo and sprinkled with cheese and hot pepper).

1. Paseo Boricua
W Division St & N Western Ave, Chicago, IL 60622; 773-342-8023 41.903006-87.687093 paseoboricua.com

2. Café Colao
2638 West Division Street, Chicago, IL 60622; 773-276-1780 41.903256-87.693637 More Info

3. Coco Restaurant
2723 West Division Street, Chicago, IL 60622; 773-384-4811 41.902761-87.695801 cocochicago.com

4. Humboldt Park
North California Avenue, Chicago, IL 60622 41.9084-87.696986 chicagoparkdistrict.com



5. Sidekicks


Back before karaoke was hip, there was Sidekicks. Pretend that the vintage marquee outside is glowing your name (instead of "Open Till 4AM" and "Karaoke Every Night"), open the bright red door and prepare for a time warp. You'll half-expect the Blues Brothers to bust in and jump onstage with you for "Livin' on a Prayer" — well, maybe just Jake, since Elwood would probably bolt for the beer-can wind chimes near the bar. If you want to celebrate a special event, like a birthday, call ahead to give the bar a heads-up, and they'll tape you and your friends for free — at the end of the night, you'll get a copy on VHS (sorry, no Beta). The bar also has a serious dart-playing contingent; to check out their game grounds, follow the wood-paneled walls to the back room.

If you get hungry looking at the framed pictures of Italian Beef, pizza and onion rings, don't worry: There's a walk-up counter where you can order food until late. Karaoke starts at 8 p.m. and goes until about midnight during the week, 2 a.m. on Friday and 3 a.m. on Saturday.

1. Sidekicks
4424 West Montrose Avenue, Chicago, IL 60641; 773-545-6212 41.960719-87.739289 sidekicks-chicago.com



6. Robert J. Quinn Fire Academy


Walk into this firefighter training academy — past one of Chicago's original steam-powered engines in the lobby — and you can see a plaque that marks where the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 began. And you may also smell smoke: As part of cadets' training, instructors build live fires. You can often overhear firefighters banter, while you're looking at the monument to the volunteers who have fallen in the line of duty (paid for by Ron Howard after the filming of Backdraft), as well as photos and historical info on landmark fires and inventions. For example, the Iroquois Theater Fire of 1903 was so brutal that it prompted the city to revamp its building code, thus requiring doors to swing outward. And did you know that the sliding pole was invented in Chicago in 1878? (The original was made of wood.)

Academy candidates are allowed to walk through this hallway once when they first start training, and not again until they graduate. It's an issue of respect, so feel honored during your visit. Call ahead if you'd like a guided tour.

The Fire Museum of Greater Chicago (773-863-1405), which is scheduled to open in its new South Side location at 2311 West 57th Street in the spring of 2009, will feature a separate collection.

1. Robert J. Quinn Fire Academy
558 West De Koven Street, Chicago, IL 60607; 312-747-7239 41.868993-87.64189 cpfta.com



7. Brown Elephant Resale Shop


On Chicago's North Side, the Music Box Theatre serves up art-house cinema, live organ music, and horror film fests with guests like George Romero. Nearby, the romantic old Riviera Theater and Aragon Ballroom showcase the likes of Wilco and the Flaming Lips. But the 1920s-era Calo Theater in Andersonville doesn't show movies or host live performances anymore: The huge space — with its vaulted ceiling, sloping tiled entryway, beautifully tattered walls and decorative moldings — now boasts the secondhand wares of the Brown Elephant Resale Shop, whose proceeds go to AIDS research and providing medical services within the gay community. This makes it one of the neatest shopping locales in the city — plus it has a higher-quality selection than other consignment shops, including, say, a wallet (for $5) from the Andy Warhol clothing-and-accessories line and vintage Dunhill lighters. If you're not a thrift-store junkie, grab an old copy of Life magazine from the '60s or perhaps A Legal Guide for Lesbian and Gay Couples and plop down on one of the nearby couches — they're the best seats in the house.

1. Brown Elephant Resale Shop
5404 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60640; 773-271-9382 41.98012-87.668653 howardbrown.org

2. Music Box Theatre
3733 North Southport Avenue, Chicago, IL 60613; 773-871-6604 41.949864-87.663945 musicboxtheatre.com

3. Riviera Theater
4746 North Racine Avenue, Chicago, IL 60640 41.968586-87.660043 More Info

4. Aragon Ballroom
1106 West Lawrence Avenue, Chicago, IL 60640; 773-561-9500 41.969423-87.658009 aragon.com



8. Lutnia Continental Café


Chicago has the largest population of Poles outside of Warsaw, and the area by Belmont and Central avenues is just one of the community's hot spots. If you're just looking for great no-frills food, head to Grota, but for a more romantic Eastern European dining experience, dip into Lutnia Continental Cafe. The dark red carpet, matching fake flowers, gold trimmings and white tablecloths give it a charming decor — we'll call it "18th-century shabby chic à la banquet hall." Go on a Friday or Saturday night when the candles are ablaze and a player is at the white piano.

Many menu items — some with a French flair — are prepared tableside, like the Polish Woods Venison, the Steak à la "Diana" and even the Caesar salad. To prepare the Polish coffee, a server heats a glass containing honey liqueur and brown sugar over a flame, pours in rich coffee, and tops it off with whipped cream, an orange peel and a sprig of mint. The pears and peaches for the ice cream flambé desserts get similar treatment, so save room. And if you're looking for a unique cocktail, try the Zubrowka martini: vodka bottled with neutralized buffalo grass, and a splash of apple juice.

1. Lutnia
5532 West Belmont Avenue, Chicago, IL 60641; 773-282-5335 41.938503-87.765383 lutniarestaurant.com

2. Grota Smorgasbord
3112 North Central Avenue, Chicago, IL 60634; 773-622-4677 41.937295-87.766369 More Info



9. Artis's Lounge


If you can't make it to Artis's Lounge for the crowd-pleasing blues bands that play Sunday and Monday, this corner pub on the South Side is still worth the trip for its DJs, jukebox and friendly neighborhood character. Old-time pictures hang on the wall, like the '70s-era shot of a sharp-looking Artis in a dress and white platforms (she still comes around, just wearing different shoes). The dance floor is small, but that doesn't stop anyone from getting down, even when the band takes up most of it. R & B karaoke happens on Wednesday night, though it's not unusual on any other night for someone to commandeer the DJ's microphone for a song — while the rest of the place sings along. If you find yourself sitting at the centered round bar grooving to some soul or funk number you don't recognize, just ask someone. That's how we found out about "Mississippi Slide" by the Southern Mixers. Now it's time to master the moves.

1. Artis's Lounge
1249 East 87th Street, Chicago, IL 60619; 773-734-0491 41.736784-87.593242 More Info



10. Pick Me Up Café


Chicago may be the "Hog Butcher for the World," but it isn't meat-headed when it comes to feeding its vegetarians and vegans: There's Chicago Diner, Karyn's Cooked and Karyn's Raw (the latter is the longest-running raw-food restaurant in the country), Alice and Friends, Amitabul, Victory's Banner, the Heartland Cafe and the Handlebar — shall we continue? But what if you're a hungry non-carnivore and it's 4 a.m. on Saturday night? Then head to the '50s vintage-style Pick Me Up Cafe in Lakeview. It's open 24 hours on weekends (until 3 a.m. on other nights), has colorfully lacquered tables — and you won't feel like complete crap the day after your binge. Our fave vegetarian option is the Skordalia on a pita, and a good vegan bet is the Vegan Tofu Scram. (Don't worry, the café caters to meat-lovers too.) If you need a pick-me-up, try the Zombie coffee drink: three shots of espresso, two cups of coffee, steamed milk, and whipped cream drizzled with chocolate and caramel. Skip the dairy, and you've created your own vegan monster.

1. Pick Me Up Café
3408 North Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60657; 773-248-6613 41.943827-87.654011 More Info

2. Chicago Diner
3411 North Halsted Street, Chicago , IL 60657; 773-935-6696 41.943979-87.649355 veggiediner.com

3. Karyn's Cooked
738 North Wells Street, Chicago, IL 60610; 312-587-1050 41.896006-87.63452 karynraw.com

4. Alice and Friends
5812 North Broadway, Chicago, IL 60660; 773-275-8797 41.987378-87.660257 aliceandfriends.com

5. Amitabul
6207 North Milwaukee Avenue, Chicago, IL 60646; 773-774-0276 41.994098-87.784243 More Info

6. Victory's Banner
2100 West Roscoe Street, Chicago, IL 60618; 773-665-0227 41.943413-87.681034 victorysbanner.com

7. Heartland Café
7000 North Glenwood Ave, Chicago, IL 60626; 773-465-8005 42.009034-87.666069 heartlandcafe.com

8. Handlebar
2311 West North Avenue, Chicago, IL 60647; 773-384-9546 41.910154-87.685184 handlebarchicago.com

source: time.com

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