Gage Park

Gage Park, like Brighton Park and Archer Heights, has much the same architecture and populace as its neighboring communities. Homes here have been kept in pristine order.

McKinley Park is close to these communities and offers them the use of its facilities and services. It has been recently renovated and affords residents a pool, lagoon, athletic fields and courts, and almost 70 acres of parkland.

The CTA Orange line stops at Western, Pulaski, and Kedzie. The Stevenson Expressway is also accessible from the area.

Found to the south and west of the city, Archer Heights is located near Midway Airport . You can find homes that range in price from under $100,000 to the upper $200,000’s. The area is very family-oriented and the residents have a strong regard for their area.

Primarily a working class locality, the locality consists Chiefly of ranch style homes and bungalows made of brick. It’s a model example of a south side neighborhood. Archer Heights has many family owned bakeries, ethnic delis, and small cafes, giving the region a distinctly European atmosphere. There are few chain retail stores, but plenty of shopping.

A European mix of working class immigrants, Italian, German, Irish, Slovak, Bohemian, Polish, and Lithuanian families moved in to this neighborhood in the 1950s. There have been some newer home constructions recently, but much of the area looks as it did half a century ago. Row houses and bungalows are the most common types of homes in this southwest side community. You can still purchase some of these homes for under $100,000, but prices are rising.

The adjacent Brighton Park is a sedate, great neighborhood consisting Primarily of families. Brighton Park became an admired area to settle and start a family, due to its affordable homes and its proximity to the Loop and the surplus of local industries.

A serene, well kept neighborhood of many families, Brighton Park is nestled on the south side of Chicago near Archer Heights and Gage Park. It is contained within Western Avenue, 49th Street, the Stevenson Expressway, and Pulaski Road. The area is a blue collar locale with fairly low incomes. The neighborhood is over 80% Latino and is among the fastest growing in all of Chicago. There are many restaurants in the area, many with an ethnic flare to them.

Unlike quite a few parks in Chicago that have given their name to the surrounding locality, Brighton Park actually acquired its name from the neighborhood it was located in. The park was given its moniker in 1998. It is named after John Wentworth, a former mayor of Chicago that had built a nearby racetrack also named Brighton Park.

Brighton Park became a popular site to raise a family, due to home prices being affordable as well as being as close to the Loop. There are jobs in the area, provided by the several local businesses. It is a solid south side locale.

Brighton Park is served by Midway Airport.