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Under the Chicago Skyline
By Paul Pence
When you visit Chicago,
you can't miss its remarkable skyline, dominated by architectural wonders
like the 1454-foot Sears Tower and the still-futuristic-looking Marina City
"corncobs" built in the early 60's. The skyline jumps out at you from every
window, leers over you as you shop Michigan Street's "Magnificent Mile", and
reaches up at you from below when you ride up 100 floors to the observation
level on the John Hancock building. But under the skyline, under the streets
even, lies another city.
Unlike Boston and
Indianapolis with overhead walkways connecting hotels to convention centers
to malls, Chicago connected its buildings underground. If you go to a
convention in Chicago, you're likely to find yourself in the mammoth Hyatt
Regency hotel, with over 2000 rooms, sitting right on top of one of the an
underground "mall", the Illinois Center.
Illinois Center
stretches from Michigan Avenue, halfway to Lake Michigan. You'll probably
never eat at all of the restaurants, but if you're staying at the Hyatt,
you're just upstairs from their Stetson's Chop House, with incredibly thick
juicy steaks and hot sourdough bread. If you're located in one of the
Swissotel's 600+ rooms, you're at the east end of the Illinois center. From
there, you can catch an elevator to their steak-house, the Palm, overlooking
the Navy Pier.
Or maybe you'd like a
little more relaxed atmosphere, like the Hyatt's sports bar, Knuckles. Or
maybe Hoolihan's, where you can enjoy dishes like their original "Irish pot
roast" -- a kind of an inside-out shepherd's pie with a huge mound of
seasoned mashed potatoes topped with pot roast and mushroom gravy and
surrounded by crisp veggies.
Illinois center has
enough restaurants to keep you through any convention stay you're likely to
encounter. Christi's has seafood and pasta dishes in generous helpings.
Fakurr's Urban market's always close and always popular, with dishes ranging
from simple sandwiches to roasted meats. Boudin's Bakery serves great
sandwiches and salads, and Bennigan's is always a decent choice for dinner
and a beer.
Still too fancy? You
can even find a Burger King, Sbarro's and Dunkin Donuts inside the mall.
In theory at least, you
could take up residence in this city-within-a-city and never be exposed to
outside air. Live in the hotel, preferably in one of the Hyatt's spectacular
penthouse suites. Work in one of the connected office buildings. Dine at the
many restaurants. Relax at the spa. Buy cameras and get your film developed
in the mall. You can even shop for Pop-Tarts and toothbrushes at a grocery
hidden underground beneath the Hyatt's half-acre glass-topped atrium.
Unlike other
undergounds, Illinois center is technically above ground. People exiting the
Hyatt at "ground level" find themselves on a normal street that's actually
three levels above lake level. It looks and feels like a normal street, and
there is even an aerial walkway overhead connecting the Hyatt's two 30+
story towers. One level below is the "concourse level" which is part of
Illinois Center. One more level is the hotel's ballroom level. One more
level down is the hotel's huge exhibit hall at riverside level. But it's
still a good six feet or more above lake level. It's this odd arrangement
that makes it possible for you to start out underground at the Hyatt, wander
through the Illinois center, and then look out a window to see yourself one
level above the shops on Michigan Avenue.
So now that you know
that you're not really underground, you shouldn't feel buried. Dig yourself
out and go outside -- enjoy yourself. Here's a few ideas on how to spend a
day in the Chicago sunshine. Shop the "Magnificent Mile". Take in a baseball
game in Wrigley Field. Walk to the shops, restaurants, and museums on the
3000-foot-long Navy Pier, catch a water taxi to chill out with the beluga
whales at the Shedd Aquarium, and ride a cute little red trolley back. Or,
if you can't resist that skyline after all, take a tour-boat on the Chicago
river, sit back, and enjoy the scenery.
Contact Information:
Chicago Convention and
Tourism Bureau http://choosechiago.com
Hyatt Regency
http://www.hyatt.com/usa/chicago/hotels/hotel_chirc.html
The Navy Pier
http://www.navypier.com
Shoreline Sightseeing
http://www.shorelinesightseeing.com
Chicago's First Lady
tour boat http://cruisechicago.com
Sears Tower
http://www.the-skydeck.com
Houlihan's Restaurant
http://www.houlihans.com
Top Photo Copyright Erin Levy 2002
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