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| The Facts |
| Neighborhood: |
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Lincoln Park |
| Of Special Interest To: |
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Families |
| Features: |
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Free Admission |
Lake Shore Park had been in the planning stages for years before the Lincoln Park Commission began construction just before 1900. The Commission was one of three Chicago park boards created by the Illinois state legislature in 1869. Twenty years later, the legislature gave a section of accumulating duneland north of Chicago Avenue to the park commission. The City of Chicago challenged the commission's ownership, but the matter was resolved in the commission's favor in 1895. Shortly thereafter, plans were drawn for what was initially known as Chicago Avenue Park. In 1897, the commission began stabilizing and expanding the site with landfill, a process that would continue for many years. Landscape improvements began in 1900. A running track, baseball diamond, and tennis courts stretched to the west. The Chicago Park District took control of Lake Shore Park in 1934, when the 22 city park districts were consolidated into a single unified district. In 1963, the park district dismantled the 1916 structure and built yet another fieldhouse on the park's eastern border. The armory to the west was demolished in the 1990s, and Lake Shore Park is now bordered by the stepped terraces of the new Museum of Contemporary Art, designed by Josef Paul Kleihues.
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Website:
For additional information please visit, http://www.chicagoparkdistrict.com |
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| Hours: Daily, dawn to dusk |
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| Admission: Free |
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For travel information, visit www.transitchicago.com |
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Copyright © 2010 City of Chicago
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