Facts & Statistics
At a Glance
Welcome to Chicago, the third largest city in the United States, with a population of nearly three million people.
Chicago is home to...
- 2,716,450 residents
- 50 wards
- 77 community areas
- 100 neighborhoods
- 8 major league sports teams, including two MLB teams
- United States President Barack Obama
Chicago is a celebrated melting pot...
- 36 annual parades
- 40 annual film festivals
- 74 music festivals
- 200 professional dance companies
- More than 200 theaters
- 250 live music venues
- 40+ annual film festivals
- 20+ film and filmmaker nonprofit organizations
- 12+ art house and independent cinemas
- 13,000 film and TV production jobs
- 400+ individual film and TV productions
(Sources: DCASE, Choose Chicago)
Chicago is a city in a garden...
- 600 parks
- 500 playgrounds
- 70 nature and bird sanctuaries
- 307 fields for soccer, football, lacrosse and more
- 250 field houses
- 534 tennis courts and 6 indoor courts
- 80 swimming pools
- 29 beaches
- 26 miles of open lakefront
(Source: Park District)
Chicago is a biking city...
- Chicago has the second-highest percentage of commuters riding their bikes to work
- Bicycle commute times in the region average only 23 minutes
- 303 miles of bike lanes
- 19 miles of lakefront bicycle paths along Lake Michigan
- 13,000+ bike racks
- A 40-acre bike path for BMX and trail-riding
(Source: DPD)
Chicago is a foodie destination...
- More than 7,300 restaurants
- 7 AAA Diamond-rated restaurants
- 26 Michelin-starred restaurants
- 40 James Beard Award-winning restaurants, and host of the annual James Beard Awards
- 54 Bib Gourmand winners
- 144 dog-friendly restaurants
Sports: A City for Sports Fans
As much as Chicagoans like to play sports, we also love to watch the pros do it. Chicago has been named the Best Sports City by Sporting News three times and has made TSE’s international Ranking of Sport Cities every year since 2012.
Greatest Chicago Sport Moments
1837: The Invention of Softball
1906: Chicago White Sox win World Series
1907: Chicago Cubs win World Series
1908: Chicago Cubs win World Series
1917: Chicago White Sox win World Series
1935: Chicago Cubs secure a record as the third-longest unbeaten MLB game streak with 21 consecutive wins.
1935: Chicago native, Jay Berwanger was the first recipient of the Heisman Trophy.
1977: Walter Payton Sets Record
1986: Chicago Bears win Super Bowl
1991-1993 Chicago Bulls, 3peat
1996-1998 Chicago Bulls, 3peat
1998: Chicago Fire wins MLS Cup
2005: The Chicago White Sox win the World Series and break 88-year title drought
2010: Chicago Blackhawks win Stanley Cup Championship
2012: Chicago Red Stars win National Women's Open
2013: Chicago Blackhawks win Stanley Cup Championship
2015: Chicago Blackhawks win Stanley Cup Championship
2016: The Chicago Cubs win World Series; break 108-year title drought and broke the “Curse of the Billy Goat”
Sports Locations
- Wrigley Field - Lake View
- GuaranteedRate Field (Formerly Comiskey Park) - Bridgeport
- Soldier Field - South Loop
- United Center – Near West Side
- Wintrust Arena – Near South Side
- Toyota Park – McKinley Park
Major League
- Chicago Cubs - baseball
- Chicago Bears - football
- Chicago Bulls - basketball
- Chicago White Sox - baseball
- Chicago Blackhawks - hockey
- Chicago Fire - soccer
- Chicago Sky - basketball
- Chicago Red Stars – soccer
NCAA
- DePaul Blue Demons
- Loyola Ramblers
- Chicago State Cougars
- UIC Flames
A Melting Pot of Arts & Culture
Dance
Home to more than 200 professional dance companies including the Joffrey Ballet and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, Chicago delivers a packed calendar of performances on downtown stages and in neighborhood venues and parks. The city is the site of an influential hip-hop scene, and it has launched new music and dance styles such as Chicago juke and footwork. For more than two decades, Chicago has hosted Chicago SummerDance, the largest annual outdoor dancing series in the U.S. Don’t forget, every April is ‘Chicago Dance Month’ across the city.
(Source, DCASE)
Film
Affordability, top notch crew and talent, and state-of-the-art facilities and vendors have made Chicago a hotbed for film and television dating back to The Blues Brother. Notable studios include Cinespace Studios, the largest North American soundstage outside of L.A and Music Box Films, one of the leading distributors of foreign language films documentaries in the U.S. For film fans, there’s the free Millennium Park Summer Film Series and film festivals year-round like the Chicago International Film Festival, the Latino, Black Harvest, Reeling (LGBTQ), Underground, Midwest Independent, and Children’s International film fest.
- 40+ annual film festivals
- 20+ film and filmmaker nonprofit organizations
- 12+ art house and independent cinemas
(Source, DCASE)
Music
Chicago is the birthplace of gospel, electric blues, house, juke, footwork, and drill. The unique sounds born in Chicago continue to resonate around the world. We’re also the home of renowned artists including Louis Armstrong, Jennifer Hudson, Earth, Wind and Fire, Chance the Rapper, Common Smashing Pumpkins, Rise Against, Muddy Waters, and Kanye West. Chicago is a city music of festivals, celebrating every music genre. Experience Chicago’s most notable music festivals including the Chicago Blues Festival, the Chicago Jazz Festival, Lollapalooza, Pitchfork Music Festival and Riot Fest.
- 250 live music venues including the world-renowned Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Lyric Opera, and Joffrey Ballet.
- 74 music festivals the Chicago Blues Festival, Pitchfork, and Lollapalooza
- Thalia Hall - Pilsen
- Vic Theater - Lakeview
- Riviera Theater - Uptown
- House of Blues - River North
- Green Mill - Uptown
- Aragon Ballroom - Uptown
- Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Downtown
- Made in Chicago: World Class Jazz
- Ravinia Festival
- Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island
- The Metro – Lakeview
(Sources, DCASE. ChooseChicago)
Theatre
Chicago is the theatre capital of the U.S.— birthplace of storefront theatre and improv comedy, home to long-running Broadway hits and boasting more world premieres than any other city in the country. Chicago’s 250-plus theatre companies take the stage at more than 200 theatres to perform work as varied and diverse as their audiences. Theatre-goers can choose from thousands of performances annually, featuring everything from Shakespeare to variety, in many languages. From the grand historic downtown theatres to those tucked away in a neighborhood storefront or church basement, audiences will find theatre of the highest quality throughout the city. Explore from one of the 150-plus buildings with behind-the-scenes tours.
(Sources, DCASE, ChooseChicago)
Long Standing Chicago Theaters
- Second City - Old Town
- Music Box Theater - Lake View
- Goodman Theater - Loop
- Chicago Theater - Loop
- Mayne Stage - Rogers Park
- Lifeline Theater - Rogers Park
- Blue Man Group at Briar Street Theater - Boystown
- Apollo 2000 (Formerly Marshal Square Theater) - Little Village
- Gateway Theater - Jefferson Park
- Steppenwolf Theatre Company
- Victory Gardens Theatre
- Chicago Shakespeare Theatre
- Lookingglass Theatre Company
A City in a Garden
The beauty of Chicago lies not only in its magnificent architecture, but also in the city's vast preserved green and open spaces. Chicagoans have over 580 parks and 8,300 acres of green spaces at their disposal. With beaches, ice rinks and bike paths, there's no shortage of outdoor recreation for Chicagoans.
Parks district - https://www.chicagoparkdistrict.com/
(Sources: DPD, Park District)
606/Bloomingdale Trail
A $95 million conversion of a former rail line to a 2.7-mile elevated park that extends through four vibrant, Chicago neighborhoods. An expansion will include 32 acres of linear park space along the Chicago River, 10 acres of sports and recreational fields and 17 acres of wetland park.
Chicago Riverwalk
An award-winning $108 million, 1.25-mile promenade along the south bank of the Chicago River downtown. Future expansion will extend the Riverwalk south an additional 1.8 miles from Lake Street to Ping Tom Memorial Park in Chinatown.
Lincoln Park
Lincoln Park, on Chicago’s North Side, attracts 20 million visitors annually. They come to see the nation’s oldest zoo to explore exotic plants at the grand Victorian glass conservatory, enjoy plays at the outdoor theater, row along the canal, stroll through the North Pond Nature Sanctuary and Butterfly conservatory, picnic on the playing fields, and frolic on North Avenue Beach.
Millennium Park
The top tourist destination in Chicago and the Midwest in 2017, Millennium Park offers 25 acres of exuberant architecture, serene gardens, grand pavilions, and dazzling fountains that sculpt light and water, walking paths. The park is home to a constantly rotating schedule of free cultural events for all ages, all year long.
Jackson Park
Jackson Park offers more than 500 acres of mature parkland along the lakefront, containing flower gardens, watercourses to wooded isles, sports facilities, stocked fish ponds, 18 miles of walking and biking paths—and it's the future site of the Barack Obama Presidential Center.
Best Bike City in America
Chicago was named America’s Best Bike City by Bicycling Magazine in 2016. Chicago's dedication to invest in better bike infrastructure made biking it safer and more comfortable for everyone in Chicago, regardless of age or ability.
Since 2011, Chicago has added...
- More than 115 miles of protected bike lanes
- A network of 303 miles
- 255 miles of on-street bike lanes
- 5 miles of off-street trails.
(Sources: DPD, Park District)
Additional Links:
Additional Information
Would you like to plan a visit to Chicago, or find things to do within your City?
Visit ChooseChicago.com, Chicago's Official Tourism Website.