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Posts Tagged ‘chicago’

Cabrini Green’s Last Days

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Once home to 15,000 people, “Cabrini-Green” became synonymous with the problems associated with public housing in the United States. Gang violence and neglect created terrible conditions for the residents.

After too many children fell over the railings of the exterior porches, the porches were completely enclosed with a steel mesh. It became easier for gunmen to see police from inside the building than it was for the police to see the gunmen. By the 1990s many Chicago Police refused to enter the complex for fear of their lives.

During the worst years rotting garbage stacked up in clogged trash chutes (once piling up to the 15th floor), and basic utilities (water, electricity) often malfunctioned and were left unrepaired. Grass was paved over to save on maintenance.

The first Cabrini building was constructed in 1942. In an effort to make the complex safer, then Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne moved into a fourth-floor apartment in 1981. Backed by police and bodyguards, she stayed for only three weeks, and once she left, the violence returned.

More information on Cabrini’s history

Cool New Social Networking Site

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Facebook and Twitter just not cutting it these days?
Wish there was something a bit more candid, that integrated nicknames, locations AND public photos?

Well wait no longer, because the FBI has just launched the Chicago Bandit Tracker website (!)

This site is basically a conglomerate of all the recent bank robberies (apparently there have been a lot). Almost every bandit has a nick name, too. Here are my favs:

  • Orange Gloves Bandit
  • Bomb Lady Bandit
  • Foul Mouthed Bandit
  • Cross Dressing Bandit

It even integrates with google earth so you can, presumably, zoom right down into the Cross Dressing Bandit’s sun hat.

Ever rolling in cash, Chicago has big plans for its downtown

Friday, April 24th, 2009

According to this Chicago Tribune story, there are talks of “revitalizing” downtown and spending 15.5 billion on transportation improvements and parks, commercial improvements, and other perceived goodies.

Ok. Since when does:

  • …Downtown need to be revitalized? We’re not in Detroit or Los Angeles. Chicago’s so loop-centric that the south and west sides are continually ignored and neglected. Now they want to pour more money into downtown? The downtown that already has Millennium Park, the Art Institute, and easy access to tourist destinations and shopping? That downtown needs revitalizing…?
  • …Does Chicago have 15.5 billion dollars to spend on superfluous junk like this? They just leased their parking meters for 75 years to get some quick cash, and i’m sure it wasn’t for a “revitalization plan.” This will all come down on the taxpayers.

As one, I have no problem if funds I give the state and city are allocated responsibly. The article states that “The city’s portion of the $15.5 billion total is $6 billion to $8 billion.” So where’s the other 6 to 8 billion come from?

Improvements and expansions to the CTA? Sure - I’m all for that - but they can’t be redundant (there already ARE trains to both airports!!) and they need to be elsewhere in the city! Chicago is a big place. Let’s consider something more like this - bringing Chicago together by rail and rivaling NYC for a better subway / elevated system. Or at the very least, fill the fucking potholes.

I don’t know how much of this is olympics-centered, the article claims some will move forward regardless of the olympic decision…but it stinks all around of wasteful spending and corruption.

Favorite Chicago Blogs

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Since I know Toner is currently napping prepping for an OOC night, I may as well add a list to the mix.

Chicago is a pretty darn tech-savvy city — as it should be, we’re the 3rd largest in the nation — so here’s a short list of my fav Chicago-based blogs. Most are directly related to Chicago itself. This list is probs gonna grow!

  • Chicagoist - General aggregate news blog with features on local bands , restaurants, etc. Part of of the -ist universe. I read this one more than once a day.
  • CTA Tattler - Good for catching up on the CTA news and alerts. Not updated very often, but a decent once-every-two weeks check. Also links to the CTA Flickr pool.
  • The Expired Meter - Found this one recently. Has had a lot of action lately thanks to the City’s insane plan of leasing out all parking meters to a private company (seriously, insane plan that warrants its own blog post, even though tis been beaten to death). Funny blog, too - and features a weekly feature where you can ask the Parking Geek questions about contesting tickets, etc.
  • Gaper’s Block - Not strictly a blog, but an in-depth site about the city’s offerings and a general opinion site. Well designed too!
  • Second City Cop - I certainly don’t agree with this cop’s politics, but he does offer insider perspective to a notoriously corrupt and misunderstood organization - the CPD. Good to read after police-related scandals (such as the 14 year old kid posing as a cop).
  • The Food Chain - Part of The Reader, Chicago’s alternative weekly rag. I enjoy their reviews and whatnot in the printed magazine, so this is a good resource for when you’re trying to find a place to dine and don’t have a copy of The Reader handy.

I hope to increase this list, and of course, recommendations welcome!

Must’ve Been a Mean Jam Session

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

‘Round The Hood

Monday, March 9th, 2009

I have been seeking an apartment for a few weeks, trying to stay in the Logan Square area, and made some interesting observations around my neighborhood, and in general.
Here they are:

2444 N Talman Belongs In Venice Beach.

Venice Beach

Seriously. This sticks out like a sore thumb. It’s interesting enough, but … there’s a place for this kind of weirdness. It’s called LA.

Logan Square Has Tons Of Neighborhood / Residential Churches
Walk down many of Logan Square’s side streets and you’ll find churches nestled next to greystones and houses. Some streets / blocks have multiple. It’s actually a really unique quality I haven’t seen in any other city.




Oddly enough, this one is for sale. It would be cool to buy a church and renovate it into a home.

I Appreciate The Unique Aspects Of Buildings Around Here
Considering most of the houses in this neighborhood are older (”turn of the century” 3 flats) and we haven’t yet been invaded by the creep of condos from the east and south (too badly anyway…), there are still plenty of little individual aspects to make the “same” building different in some way. I loved the way the street number was painted on this window.

I hope everyone out there takes the opportunity to appreciate and explore their own neighborhoods a little more. There’s nothing cooler than finding something really inspiring that’s just a bit off the beaten track.

I’m going to brunch… I don’t know about you

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

A flat tire Tried to infiltrate brunch today… but we weren’t having it. 4 mimosas later I was ready to tackle putting on the spare… to no avail.

I blame:
Chicago’s pothole problem
The cars tight ass lug nuts
Blustery snow on March 1st
My 145lb body

[Should be a pic here but WordPress is giving me an HTTP Error]

Fortunately the Marathon/AutoTech on Broadway fostered an experience that made everything better.

The cashier, Mariela, is probably the most pleasant station employee ever. Granted that isn’t saying much but she’s delicious still. I learned that Motor Oil with Lucas Stabilizer is far superior to plain and Rockstar energy drinks come in a liter!

“Running On Hope”

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

This video is about 2 minutes too long, but i love the chicaaaago accents these ‘mechanics’ have.


Running on Hope from Douglas Sarine on Vimeo.