21 September 2011

Windy City

Day 8: Chicago!

Michael decided to take advantage of his relative proximity to a friend from home who was currently attending University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee and caught a train up there. None of the rest of us had expressed any particular sites they wanted to see in Chicago, so I basically mapped out the city based on my favorite movies and TV show: Blues Brothers, Ferris Buehler and ER. It turns out this is a really good way to walk all over the place and see some pretty buildings without trying really hard. Jozef is also a fan of The Blues Brothers, so he was very amused by my ideas, and no one else seemed to mind.

Since we were staying in the suburbs, we took the Metra train in from Joliet to LaSalle Street. From that station, we walked down Van Buren looking for Elwood's apartment, which I was pretty disappointed not to find. From there we walked up State Street for quite a while, veering off to walk through the Honorable Richard J. Daly Plaza, which was definitely an important scene in Blues Brothers. They have a Picasso there! We continued up State Street until we found a visitors center on Pearson by the old Water Works building (quite pretty). This was probably the farthest away visitors center in the city, but one negative thing I have to say about Chicago is that finding a visitors center online was way more difficult than it should have been. Oh well. We saw a lot on our walk, and we got a map. From there:

Michigan Street Bridge, where Drs. Greene and Ross apparently had a late night chat in an early episode of ER. Didn't look familiar to me, but had a lot of lovely bridges and buildings around it and seemed as good a route as any to walk back down.

River Walk Park, not from any movie or TV show in particular but seemed like a good idea. It was a pleasant walk by the river and down to the harbor.

Lower Wacker Drive, which Jake and Elwood Blues sped down in a quickly dying old police car to get the tax money to the aforementioned Honorable Richard J. Daley Plaza. It was actually closed for construction, and not because hundreds of police cars had piled up.

Jozef wanted to see the Opera House, but it was also under construction so we couldn't go in.

We wandered down to the Sears Tower, which is apparently no longer called that, which I didn't know until we got to Chicago. It's now the Willis Tower, but I didn't really care enough to call it that. It's tall. I realized in looking at it that I probably have no concept of buildings that are over 50 stories, or maybe less. Empire State Building, Chrysler Building, the World Trade Center as it once was, other tall things... no clue. This didn't strike me as any taller than those buildings that I grew up looking at. But I saw it, and it was tall.

We spent some time in Millennium Park checking out the Cloud Gate, which was way cool.

Across the street was the Art Institute, which was pretty expensive to go in, but free to take pictures of the steps that Ferris, Cameron and Sloane ran up whilst cutting class.

We rested our feet for a little while at the edge of Grant Park before going to get a drink at a pub called Miller's. I had two pale ales (for comparison!) that were brewed in Chicago, one by Green Line and one by Half Acre called Daisy Cutter. I think I preferred the latter.

So much walking. Lots of great sites, but tired feet. Definitely fell asleep on the train ride back to Joliet and still slept like a champion that night.

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