Roads and expressways in Chicago explained

Roads and expressways in Chicago summarizes the main thoroughfares and the numbering system used in Chicago and its surrounding suburbs.

Street layout

Chicago's streets were laid out in a grid that grew from the city's original townsite plan platted by James Thompson. Streets following the Public Land Survey System section lines later became arterial streets in outlying sections. As new additions to the city were platted, city ordinance required them to be laid out with eight streets to the mile in one direction and 16 in the other direction. A scattering of diagonal streets, many of them originally Native American trails, also cross the city. Many additional diagonal streets were recommended in the Plan of Chicago, but only the extension of Ogden Avenue was ever constructed. In the 1950s and 1960s, a network of superhighways was built radiating from the city center.[1]

As the city grew and annexed adjacent towns, problems arose with duplicate street names and a confusing numbering system based on the Chicago River. On June 22, 1908, the city council adopted a system proposed by Edward P. Brennan;[2] amended June 21, 1909. The changes were effective September 1, 1909 for most of the city.[3]

Addresses in Chicago and some suburbs are numbered outward from baselines at State Street, which runs north and south, and Madison Street, which runs east and west.A book was published in 1909 by The Chicago Directory Company indexing the old and new street numbers for most of Chicago. This volume is available online in PDF format indexed by initial letter, Plan of Re-Numbering, City of Chicago, August 1909.[3] The opening text of the book says: EXPLANATORY

The downtown area did not conform to this system until April 1, 1911, per an amendment to the law on June 20, 1910. Downtown was defined as Lake Michigan on the east, Roosevelt Road (Twelfth Street) on the south, and the Chicago River on the north and west. The addition to cover downtown was published, and is also on line as a pdf indexed by downtown street name.[4]

This additional paragraph explained the downtown changes:

Chicago house numbers are generally assigned at the rate of 800 to a mile. The only exceptions are from Madison to 31st Street, just south of downtown. Roosevelt Road (previously Twelfth St) is one mile south of Madison with 1200 addresses to the mile, Cermak Road (previously 22nd Street) is two miles south of Madison with 1000 addresses to the mile, and 31st Street (3100 S) is three miles south of Madison with 900 addresses to the mile.[3] South of 31st Street, the pattern of 800 to the mile resumes, with 39th Street the next major street, 47th after that, and so on. Individual house numbers are normally assigned at the rate of one per 20 feet of frontage. Thus the last two digits of house numbers generally go only as high as 67 before the next block number is reached. Higher house numbers are found on diagonal streets and have sometimes been assigned by request.

The blocks are normally counted out by "hundreds," so that Chicagoans routinely give directions by saying things such as "about twelve hundred north on Western" or "around twenty-four hundred west on Division" (which both describe the intersection of Western Avenue (2400 W) and Division Street (1200 N)).

South of Madison Street most of the east–west streets are simply numbered. The street numbering is aligned with the house numbering, so that 95th Street is exactly 9500 South. "Half-block" east–west thoroughfares in this area are numbered and called places; 95th Place would lie just south of and parallel to 95th Street, and just north of 96th Street.

Every four blocks (half-mile) is a major secondary street. For example, Division Street (1200 N) is less important than either Chicago Avenue (800 N) or North Avenue (1600 N), but is still a major thoroughfare. However, this is not always the case; for example, on the city's Far North Side, Peterson Avenue (6000 N) is a more heavily trafficked street than Bryn Mawr Avenue (5600 N), which sits exactly at the 7-mile marker. U.S. Route 14 is routed along Peterson between Clark Street at 1600 W and Cicero Avenue at 4800 W, whereas Bryn Mawr is discontinuous, split into two segments in this part of the city by Rosehill Cemetery between Damen and Western Avenues.

Even-numbered addresses are found on the north and west sides of a street, and odd numbers are found on the south and east sides, irrespective of the streets' position relative to the corner of State and Madison.

Diagonals, even if they were to run exactly 45 degrees off of the cardinal directions, are numbered as if they were north–south or east–west streets. Examples are North Lincoln Avenue and Ogden Avenue, which bends at Madison and changes from North Ogden to West Ogden.

The northernmost street in Chicago is Juneway Terrace (7800 N), just north of Howard Street. The southern boundary is 138th Street. The eastern boundary of Chicago is Avenue A/State Line Road (4100 E) along and south of 106th Street, and the furthest west the city extends is in the portion of O'Hare International Airport that lies in DuPage County, just east of Elmhurst/York Road.

Street names

See also: List of Chicago placename etymologies. While all north–south streets within city limits are named, rather than numbered, smaller streets in some areas are named in groups all starting with the same letter; thus, when traveling westward on a Chicago street, starting just past Pulaski Road (4000 W), one will cross a mile-long stretch of streets which have names starting with the letter K (From east to west: Keystone (North Side)/Komensky (South Side), Karlov, Kedvale, Keeler, Kildare, Kolin, Kostner, Kenneth, Kilbourn, Kolmar, Kenton, Knox, Kilpatrick, Keating), giving rise to the expression "K-town". These streets are found approximately in the 11th mile west of the Indiana state line, and so begin with the 11th letter of the alphabet. A mile later, just past Cicero (4800 W), the starting letter changes to L, and mile by mile the letters progress up to P. Additionally, for most of the first mile west of the Illinois/Indiana state line, streets are lettered from Avenue A at the state line (4100 E) to Avenue O (3430 E), forming the A group. The areas that might otherwise be the B through J groups are the older parts of the city where street names were already well established before this system was developed (although some small groups of streets seem to have been given names intended to conform to the system), and the Q group (8800 to 9600 W) would fall west of the city, as the only land in Chicago west of 8800 West is O'Hare International Airport, undeveloped forest preserve, and a small strip of land connecting O'Hare to the rest of the city and containing only Foster Avenue.

Suburbs

Some suburbs number their east–west streets in a continuation of the Chicago pattern, and even more number their houses according to the Chicago grid. A few suburbs also number their north–south avenues according to the Chicago grid, although such numbering vanished from Chicago itself long ago (the alphabetical naming scheme was devised to help eliminate it). For example, the 54th/Cermak terminus of the Pink Line is located near the intersection of 54th Avenue and Cermak Road (22nd Street) in Cicero. This is 54 blocks west of State Street in Chicago. A minor street blocks west of State Street would be called 54th Court (in reality, that is Lotus Avenue in Chicago).

This pattern continues as far west as Plainfield, which has a 252nd Avenue, as far north as Skokie at Central Street (10100 North),[5] and as far south as the southern edge of Will County. Suburbs that follow the Chicago numbering system include Berwyn, Bridgeview, Brookfield, Burbank, Channahon, Chicago Heights, Cicero, Crystal Lake, Elwood, Evergreen Park, Franklin Park, Justice, Lincolnwood, Matteson, Monee, Morris, Morton Grove, Niles, North Chicago, Oak Forest, Oak Lawn, Orland Park, Oswego, River Grove, Rosemont, Skokie, Westchester, unincorporated parts of Des Plaines, Glenview, and other parts of Cook County, Will, DuPage, Kendall, and Grundy Counties. Other suburbs, including Evanston, Park Ridge, Oak Park, Glenview and Wilmette use their own numbering systems. The six "collar" counties (DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry, and Will) use State and Madison as a base line. For example, 32W000 in DuPage County is 32 miles west of State Street, 38000 in Lake County would be 38 miles north of Madison Street, and is normally used without the direction letter. In these counties, unlike Chicago, numbering is 1,000 numbers to the mile, so in DuPage County miles west is 32W500.

Some Chicago suburbs in adjoining Northwest Indiana also use the Chicago numbering system. These include East Chicago, Whiting, and Hammond. There are even examples further south in Lake County in Dyer and Schererville such as 205th Place through 215th Street (these examples coordinate with the Chicago grid, not the Gary street system). Other municipalities, such as Highland, and Griffith are based on the Gary, Indiana numbering system, beginning with 5th Avenue in Gary and increasing numerically as one travels southward. Examples in Scheider in the far south of Lake County, Indiana go as far down as 244th Avenue.

The aforementioned pattern also occurs in Waukegan, Illinois, with Washington Street being the baseline between north and south. Nearby municipalities such as Gurnee, Park City, and North Chicago continue with the Waukegan numbering pattern, while rural areas in Lake County, Illinois follow the Chicago grid.

Grid

Mile roads

East-West StreetsNorth-South Streets
MileAddress numberStreet nameRoute designationAddress numberStreet nameRoute designation
3939000 W (Kane)
3838000 W Peck Road; Edgelawn Drive (Kane)
3737000 W (Kane) (Kendall)
3636000 W Lincolnway Street; Lake Street
35500 W McLean Boulevard
3535000 W 5th Street; River Street
34500 W IL 31
Mitchell Road (276th Avenue)

3434000 W Ohio Street (272nd Avenue)
33500 W Farnsworth Avenue; Ridge Road (268th Avenue) (Grundy)
3333000 W Kautz Road (264th Avenue)
26000 N 8th Street 32500 W Eola Road (260th Avenue) (DuPage)
(DuPage)
3225600 N 12th Street; McGaw Road 32000 W Beverly Road (256th Avenue)
25200 N 16th Street 31500 W 252nd Avenue (Normantown Road)
3124800 N 20th Street; Townline Road 31000 W 248th Avenue
24400 N 24th Street 30500 W Munger Road (244th Avenue) (DuPage)
3024000 N Buckley Road 30000 W IL 59 (240th Avenue)
2923200 N Erhart Road 29000 W Rickert Drive; Book Road (232nd Avenue)
(DuPage)
2822400 N Dunbar Road 28000 W Plainfield–Naperville Road (224th Avenue) (DuPage)
(Will)
2721600 N Hawley Street (Lake) 27000 W Barrington Road (216th Avenue)
2620800 N Allanson Road 20400 W Bartlett Road
2520000 N Crystal Lake Avenue 20300 W Hough Street
2419200 N Indian Creek Road 20000 W Summit Street
2318400 N Miller Road; Rakow Road18000 W Roselle Road (DuPage)
2217600 N Half Day Road; Prairie Avenue 16600 W IL 53
Meacham Road (176th Avenue)

2116800 N Park Avenue 16200 W Rohlwing Road (168th Avenue)
(DuPage)
20.516400 NAptakisic Road 16000 WBarker Avenue
2016000 NGreenwood Avenue 15800 W Lemont Road (160th Avenue) (DuPage)
19.515600 N Deerfield Road15400 WWilke Road
1915200 N Roger Williams Avenue 15000 W Fairview Avenue (152nd Avenue) (DuPage)
18.514800 N Ridgelee Road 14600 W Williams Street; Fernandez Avenue
1814400 N Commercial Avenue 14200 W Ardmore Avenue; Cedar Road (144th Avenue) (DuPage)
17.514000 N Dundee Road 13800 W Goebbert Road
1713600 N Walters Avenue13400 W Busse Road
Kingery Highway (136th Avenue)
16.513200 N Tower Road 13100 W Linneman Road
1612800 N Palatine Road 12800 W Elmhurst Road; York Road (DuPage)
15.512400 NWillow Road 12400 WGarfield Street; Marshall Drive
1512000 NWinnetka Road12000 W Mt. Prospect Road; County Line Road
14.511600 N Illinois Road11600 W Taft Avenue; Warrington Road
1411200 N Lake Avenue11200 W Wolf Road
13.510800 N Wilmette Avenue10800 W Gilbert Avenue; Willow Springs Road
1310400 N Glenview Road 10400 W
12.510000 N Old Orchard Road 10000 W Scott Street; West Avenue
129600 N Golf Road 9600 W 25th Avenue (96th Avenue)
11.59200 N Church Street 9200 W 17th Avenue; Maple Avenue
118800 N 8800 W 9th Avenue; East River Road
8400 N Main Street 8400 W 1st Avenue
Cumberland Avenue
108000 N Oakton Steet8000 W Pacific Avenue
7600 N 7600 W Oriole Avenue
97200 N 7200 W Harlem Avenue (72nd Avenue) US 66
8.56800 N Pratt Boulevard 6800 W Oak Park Avenue; Newcastle Avenue (68th Avenue)
86400 N (DuPage) 6400 W Narragansett Avenue; Nagle Avenue (64th Avenue)
6000 N Peterson Avenue 6000 W Austin Avenue (60th Avenue)
75600 N Bryn Mawr Avenue 5600 W Central Avenue (56th Avenue)
5200 N 5200 W Laramie Avenue (52nd Avenue)
64800 N Lawrence Avenue 4800 W Cicero Avenue (48th Avenue)
4400 N Montrose Avenue 4400 W Kostner Avenue (44th Avenue)
54000 N 4000 W Pulaski Road (40th Avenue)
3600 N 3600 W Central Park Avenue
43200 N 3200 W Kedzie Avenue (32nd Avenue)
2800 N 2800 W California Avenue (28th Avenue)
32400 N 2400 W Western Avenue (24th Avenue)
2000 N 2000 W Damen Avenue (20th Avenue)
21600 N 1600 W Ashland Avenue (16th Avenue)
1200 N 1200 W Racine Avenue (12th Avenue)
1800 N 800 W Halsted Street (8th Avenue)
400 N Kinzie Street; Hamilton Street 400 W Sedgwick Street (4th Avenue)
00 N/S 0 E/W State Street (Middle Avenue)
600 S Harrison Street (6th Street) 400 E Martin Luther King Jr. Drive (South Parkway)
11200 S Roosevelt Road (12th Street) 800 E
1600 S 16th Street 1200 E Woodlawn Avenue
22200 S Cermak Road (22nd Street) 1600 E Stony Island Avenue
Volbrecht Road
2600 S 26th Street 2000 E Jeffery Boulevard
33100 S 31st Street (Oak Brook Road) (DuPage) 2400 E Yates Boulevard
3500 S 35th Street 2800 E Burnham Avenue
43900 S Pershing Road (39th Street) 3200 E Brandon Avenue
4300 S 43rd Street 3600 E Avenue L
54700 S 47th Street 4000 E Avenue C
5100 S 51st Street; Hyde Park Boulevard 4400 EManor Avenue
65500 S Garfield Boulevard
55th Street
(DuPage)
5900 S 59th Street
76300 S 63rd Street (DuPage)
6700 S 67th Street; Marquette Road
87100 S 71st Street
7500 S 75th Street (DuPage)
97900 S 79th Street
8300 S 83rd Street
108700 S 87th Street (DuPage)
9100 S 91st Street
119500 S
(Will)
9900 S 99th Street
1210300 S 103rd Street
10700 S 107th Street
1311100 S 111th Street
(Will)
11500 S 115th Street
1411900 S 119th Street
12300 S 123rd Street
1512700 S 127th Street
13100 S 131st Street
1613500 S 135th Street;
Romeo Road
(Will)
13900 S 139th Street
1714300 S 143rd Street
(Will)
14700 S 147th Street
1815100 S 151st Street; Lockport Street
15500 S 155th Street
1915900 S
(Will)
16300 S 163rd Street
2016700 S 167th Street
17100 S 171st Street
2117500 S 175th Street (Will)
(Kendall)
17900 S 179th Street
2218300 S 183rd Street
18700 S 187th Street
2319100 S 191st Street
(Will)
19500 S 195th Street
2419900 S Vollmer Road; Jefferson Street
20300 S 203rd Street; Joe Orr Road
2520700 S 207th Street
21100 S
2621500 S 215th Street
21900 S 26th Street (219th Street)
2722300 S 30th Street; Laraway Road
(223rd Street)
(Will)
22700 S 34th Street (227th Street)
2823100 S Delaney Road; Steger Road
2923900 S Stuenkel Road; University Parkway
3024700 S Bluff Road (Will)
25100 S Manhattan Road (Will)
3125500 S Monee-Manhattan Road; Arsenal Road (Will)
(Will)
25900 S Crete-Monee Road (Will)
3327100 S Pauling Road (Will)
27500 S Blodgett Road; Marseilles Road (Grundy)
3427900 S Eagle Lake Road
28300 S Joliet Road; North Peotone Road (Will)

(Will)
3528700 S Beecher Road; Indiana Avenue (Will)
3629500 S Wilmington Road (Will)
3730300 S Coal City Road; Division Street
3831100 S Reed Road; Kennedy Road
(No part of Golf Road, Dempster Street, Oakton Street, Wolf Road, LaGrange Road or 143rd Street to 311th Street actually lies within the boundaries of Chicago. These streets are included for reference, since they are a continuation of the Chicago mile street pattern into the suburbs.)[6]

Downtown

The density of main streets in downtown Chicago is greater than in the rest of the city, with some at half-block spacing (just 50 address numbers or one-sixteenth mile from the next parallel street), or block spacing between main streets, unlike the rest of the city where the main streets are spaced at half-mile and mile intervals:

Secondary streets

The half-mile numbered streets on the South Side are all secondary streets: 35th, 43rd, 51st, 59th, etc.; all are numbered aside from Marquette Road, running at 6700 S, west from King Drive (400 E) to the city's western limit at Cicero Avenue (4800 W), near Midway International Airport. East of King to near Lake Michigan at 2400 E, it is called 67th Street, and Marquette is aligned one block to the north on what would be 66th Street.

(No part of Old Orchard Road, Church Street, or Main Street actually lies within the boundaries of Chicago. These streets are included for reference, since they are a continuation of the Chicago mile street pattern into the suburbs.)

A similar numbering system is also used in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[7]

Diagonal roads

The following streets run diagonally through Chicago's grid system on all or part of their courses. These streets tend to form major 5 or 6-way intersections. In many cases they were Indian trails, or were among the earliest streets established in the city. Diagonals are numbered as north–south or east–west streets. Examples are North Lincoln Avenue and Ogden Avenue, which bends at Madison and changes from North Ogden to West Ogden.

Expressways

The city of Chicago proper contains seven major Interstate highways.[8]

width=200pxRoadway Namewidth=85pxNumbersDescription
Kennedy Expressway
(Northwest Expressway)


Runs from O'Hare east and south to downtown Chicago. It interchanges with the Jane Addams and the Tri-State Tollways near Cumberland Avenue on the city's far northwest side, with the Edens Expressway near Montrose Avenue on the near northwest side, and with the Dan Ryan and Eisenhower Expressways at its southern terminus downtown at the Jane Byrne Interchange. The portion from O'Hare to the Jane Addams and the Tri-State Tollways is I-190; the remainder is signed as I-90. I-94 is overlaid on I-90 south of the junction with the Edens.
Jane Addams Memorial Tollway
(Northwest Tollway)
Runs from its complex interchange with the Kennedy Expressway and the Tri-State Tollway through the northwest suburbs towards Rockford and South Beloit.
Edens Expressway
(Skokie Highway)

Runs south from Park Avenue West in Highland Park to its interchange with the Kennedy Expressway near Montrose. The Edens Spur (formally part of the Tri-State Tollway) splits off near the north end to meet the Tri-State. The Edens south of the Spur is signed as I-94; the section north of the Skokie Road exit in Wilmette is signed as US 41. US 41 continues north as Skokie Highway beyond the northern terminus of the Edens.

Runs south from the Jane Byrne Interchange near the Loop to the Bishop Ford Freeway in the Far Southeast Side in Chicago. In between, the Dan Ryan interchanges with the Stevenson Expressway and the Chicago Skyway near 66th Street. The portion between the Jane Byrne Interchange and the junction with the Chicago Skyway is overlaid with I-90.
Eisenhower Expressway
(Congress Expressway)


Runs west from the Jane Byrne Interchange to an interchange with the Tri-State Tollway and the eastern terminus of the Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway (I-88) near Hillside, Illinois. Further west, I-290 turns northwest and becomes the "Eisenhower Extension". At the interchange with I-90 near Schaumburg, it continues as IL 53 until eventually terminating at Lake Cook Road. East of the Jane Byrne Interchange, the route continues downtown as Ida B. Wells Drive.
Stevenson Expressway
(Southwest Expressway)
Runs southwest from Lake Shore Drive to the Tri-State Tollway in Burr Ridge. Along the way, the expressway interchanges with the Dan Ryan before heading to the south and southwestern neighborhoods of Chicago. The Stevenson then continues past Midway Airport and out of Chicago.
Veterans Memorial Tollway
(North–South Tollway)
Runs south from an interchange with I-290 near Itasca to I-80 near New Lenox. Along the way, I-355 runs through the western suburbs to an interchange with I-88 before continuing south to the interchange with I-55. Then it continues south along 11miles of tollway to its southern terminus at I-80.
Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway
(East–West Tollway)


Runs from a complex interchange with the Eisenhower Expressway and the Tri-State Tollway west to U.S. Route 30 near Rock Falls. Along the way, the tollway meets another complex interchange with I-355. Then it heads through the western suburbs into north-central Illinois.
Interstate 57
(Dan Ryan West Leg)
Runs south from the junction of the Dan Ryan Expressway and Bishop Ford Freeway to the southern suburbs. Known originally as the "Dan Ryan West Leg", the name has since dropped from common usage. As such, it is the only freeway within the city of Chicago lacking a formal name.
Bishop Ford Freeway
(Calumet Expressway)

Runs from the southern terminus of the Dan Ryan Expressway, heads east, then south through the Far Southeast Side in Chicago to the southern suburbs before ending at a junction with the Kingery Expressway and the Tri-State Tollway. South of that point, it continues as IL 394 until IL 1 in Goodenow.

(Calumet Skyway)
The Skyway angles off from the Dan Ryan Expressway near 66th Street and heads southeast toward Indiana. The Skyway ends after a toll bridge over the Little Calumet River and the Indiana state line, at which point it becomes the Indiana Toll Road.


Serves as a toll bypass around Chicago. The tollway runs from a combination interchange with the Kingery Expressway and the Bishop Ford Freeway towards an interchange with US 41 just south of the Wisconsin state line. North of the junction with the Edens Spur the Tri-State is signed as I-94; on and south of this it is signed as I-294, the southern part of which is overlaid by I-80.


Located entirely in Lansing, Illinois, this is a three-mile-long expressway running from the interchange with the Bishop Ford Freeway and the Tri-State Tollway to the Illinois/Indiana border.
A major limited-access highway running along the Lake Michigan shoreline from East 67th Street in southern Chicago to Hollywood Avenue in Chicago's Edgewater neighborhood. For most of its length, Lake Shore Drive is signed as US 41. Portions of Lake Shore Drive were constructed as an expressway.
A five-mile freeway signed as US 20, bypassing Elgin, Illinois. It goes west from the Villa Street interchange, meets IL 25, crosses the Fox River, then meets State Street, McLean Boulevard, and Randall Road before continuing at-grade.
A two-and-a-half-mile bypass in Algonquin and Crystal Lake. It has two exits on IL 62 (Algonquin Road) and US 14.
From Bensenville, the Kingery Highway heads south 18 miles to just south of the Des Plaines River. It is a multi-lane divided limited-access road with grade-separated portions.[9] [10]
A two-mile expressway located entirely in Waukegan, Illinois. It has only one exit at Grand Avenue.
Elgin–O'Hare Tollway
(Elgin–O'Hare Expressway)
Formerly an unnumbered free expressway, it heads west from IL 83 in Bensenville through Itasca, Roselle, and Schaumburg until terminating at an interchange with U.S. Route 20. Until 2017, the expressway ended at IL 53 in Itasca. A one-mile eastern extension to I-490 is under construction.

U.S. Routes

-width=110pxU.S. Routes !Description

The two Routes enter through the southeastern part of the city from Indiana with U.S. Route 41, underneath the Chicago Skyway Toll Bridge. At 95th Street, they head west to an intersection with U.S. Route 45 west of the city. There they go north on LaGrange Road to Lake Street, where US 20 turns northwest through Elgin to Iowa. US 12 and US 45 continue north past O'Hare Airport to Des Plaines, where US 12 turns on Rand Road and goes northwest, then north to Wisconsin.[11]
The route splits off from U.S. Route 41 at Bryn Mawr Avenue by Lake Michigan on the north side of the city. US 14 then recrosses US 41 and eventually exits the city as Caldwell Avenue.
The route originally began downtown and ran west on Ogden Avenue and through the suburbs, continuing through Aurora and on to Iowa. In 1970 the beginning was moved west to Harlem Avenue (Illinois Route 43), where it intersected with US 66.[12] [13]
The route enters through the southeastern part of the city from Indiana with U.S. Route 12 and U.S. Route 20, underneath the Chicago Skyway Toll Bridge. At 95th Street, when US 12 and US 20 turn west, it continues north along the lakefront, especially via Lake Shore Drive. US 41 then departs from Lake Shore Drive at Foster Avenue. From Foster Avenue, US 41 continues northwest on Lincoln Avenue, finally exiting Chicago at Devon Avenue into the suburb of Lincolnwood.
The route comes north from Kentucky and intersects U.S. Route 12 and U.S. Route 20 at 95th Street west of Chicago. The three routes go north on LaGrange Road, then US 12 and US 45 continue north on Mannheim Road past O'Hare Airport and into Des Plaines. Separating from US 12, it follows the Des Plaines River as Des Plaines River Road, then continues north on Milwaukee Avenue towards Wisconsin.
The route started downtown and followed Ogden Avenue west out of the city, then southwest to Joliet and on to St Louis. Status as a U.S. Route in Illinois was discontinued in 1974 largely due to Interstate 55 paralleling the stretch. Some remnants are signed as historic.

County roads

Cook County has a modest amount of county roads after plans were made in 2009 to designate many roads on county ownership as a public service.[14]

Only the designated streets in the townships of Lemont, Palos, Orland, Bremen, Lyons (south of the rivers) and Wheeling have the blue pentagon signs that are used to demarcate county roads.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: McClendon . Dennis . Expressways . . University of Chicago Press . January 3, 2012 . 2005 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20120102140013/http://encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/440.html . January 2, 2012 .
  2. Web site: Curious City: Unsung urban planning hero Edward Brennan made it easy to find your way around Chicago . Chicago . WBEZ-FM . May 20, 2015 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20150523055724/http://www.wbez.org/series/curious-city/unsung-hero-urban-planning-who-made-it-easy-get-around-chicago-112061 . May 23, 2015 .
  3. Book: Plan of Re-numbering City of Chicago . 1909 . Chicago Directory Company . 2022-06-08 .
  4. Web site: Address Conversion Guide . Architecture and Building History . . January 3, 2012 . 1911 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20120225084207/http://www.chsmedia.org/househistory/1911snc/start.pdf . February 25, 2012 .
  5. Community Development Department . May 2009 . Village of Skokie Street Map . Scale not given . Village of Skokie . March 9, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111017063645/http://www.egovlink.com/public_documents300/skokie/published_documents/Skokie%20Street%20Map.pdf . October 17, 2011 .
  6. Web site: Chicago Streets Name Changes . Architecture and Building History . . January 3, 2012 . 1948 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20110725165215/http://www.chsmedia.org/househistory/nameChanges/start.pdf . July 25, 2011 .
  7. Web site: Arrangement of City Streets 113-1 . City of Milwaukee . November 23, 2010 . September 3, 2014 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20130508172831/http://city.milwaukee.gov/ImageLibrary/Groups/ccClerk/Ordinances/Volume-1/CH113.pdf . May 8, 2013 .
  8. Web site: 2022-08-16. A crash course on the names of Chicago’s expressways. 2023-10-24. WGN-TV. en-US.
  9. Book: Rand McNally . Chicago 7-County Street Guide . 2007 . Rand McNally . 978-0-5288-5972-4 .
  10. Book: DeLorme . Illinois Atlas and Gazetteer . 1996 . Yarmouth, Maine . DeLorme . 0-89933-213-7 . 20, 21, 28, 29 .
  11. Web site: Google Maps . Google Maps . 2013 . March 14, 2013 .
  12. Web site: Illinois State Highway Maps . Illinois Digital Archives . March 14, 2013 .
  13. Web site: US Ends.com . 2012 Dale Sanderson . 2012 . March 15, 2013 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20130407074540/http://www.usends.com/index.html . April 7, 2013 .
  14. Web site: New signs point to confusion . Chicago Tribune . January 7, 2023 .