- Best Haircut and Record Shop: Del Pueblo Barbers and Records
- Best Place to be Transported to Mexico: La Ordeña
- Best Thrift Store in the City: Village Discount Thrift Store
La Villita neighborhood, located on the West Side of Chicago, has been the site of arrival for many immigrants from Mexico and Central America since the late 1970s. Yet in recent years, the culture of the neighborhood has shifted from one that has supported recent immigrant arrivals to one that is burgeoning with multiracial and multicultural residents, many who are the children of the immigrants that began to adopt this Chicago enclave as a home away from home.
This change is evident, from the businesses to the people walking around buying elotes and goods from the many vendors that line the main strip of 26th Street, as well as Cermak Road on the north and 31st street on the south. Vendors and residents welcome the influx of new visitors who contribute to the economic wellbeing of the community.
Yet due to its central location and proximity to the University of Illinois at Chicago, Little Village is also being heavily impacted by gentrification. Although made up of mostly working class families, recent spikes in property taxes, combined with concerns about street violence and environmental pollution, are driving many long-term residents to sell their homes and move to more affordable neighborhoods where they feel safer.
But even as Little Village residents continue to wrestle with these issues, the neighborhood remains one of the safest spaces for newly arrived immigrants from Latin America and their children. Little Village is a space where people can thrive whether or not they can speak English or are documented; it is a neighborhood where culture and community have been built and preserved over the past four decades.
More and more stores are full of artisanal items such as embroidered blouses, leather shoes and belts, straw and handwoven hats, tapestries, and handmade jewelry. Likewise, there are stores that are stocked with Mexican and Central American products that are a gift to those who left their homeland.
We invite you to visit and enjoy Little Village, admire its street art, eat some of the most delicious Mexican food in the United States, and enjoy an elote or raspa from a street vendor.
Laura Ramírez is a writer and community organizer from La Villita. She recently co-edited an anthology called Never Normal Again with the Hoodoisie collective and also contributed to Best of La Villita 2021.