In the 1920s, University of Chicago sociologists carved up the city into seventy-five squarish sections, basing the boundaries on the neighborhoods that existed at the time. Two more areas were added on the North Side in later decades, yielding a magic number that many Chicagoans are familiar with: 77. Though the South Side’s boundaries have not changed in almost a century, census data and city planning initiatives are still organized around these ancient community areas. When DNAinfo asked Chicagoans to draw the boundaries of their neighborhoods a year ago, there was some disagreement about where exactly they begin and end, but the average drawing looked a lot like one of those familiar community areas.
But when you ask someone where their neighborhood is, or what their neighborhood looks like, their answer will never be as simple as a single square mile bounded by viaducts and big commercial streets. Our sense of home is never as simple as “Bridgeport,” “West Englewood,” or “Brighton Park.” We use these names in the Best of the South Side issue because they’re filled with meaning and history, but we know there’s so much we’re missing—pocket-sized communities, in-between spaces, individual blocks.
Communities are made up of people, not pieces of land. The center of yours might be wherever you wake up in the morning. Maybe it’s bounded to the north by your grandmother’s house, to the south by your best friend’s, to the west by the corner store or the laundromat, to the east by your school or your favorite place to get dessert. Maybe it looks more like one of Chicago’s messy, gerrymandered wards than it does one of the box-shaped community areas.
No matter the shape or form your neighborhood takes, though, and no matter if you’ve been there for six months or sixty years, it’s yours. We at the Weekly hope this year’s Best of the South Side issue gives you a reason to try something new for dinner or visit a neighborhood you’ve never been to before, of course. But more than anything else, we hope you see in these pages a celebration of the places we live in, the people that live around us, and all the good that happens in our communities every day.
We know that these pages don’t include all of the bests of the South Side. Share your favorites with us by emailing editor@southsideweekly.com or by tweeting @SouthSideWeekly with the hashtag #BoSS2016.
Best of the South Side 2016 was featured on ABC Chicago’s Windy City LIVE on Tuesday, September 20. Watch the videos below for an interview with our Editor-in-Chief and a celebration of three South Side eateries featured in this issue!
- • Best Restaurant: Morrison’s Restaurant
- • Best End-Of-Summer Block Party: Annual 79th Street Renaissance Festival
- • Best Art You Can Step On: Adinkra symbols pavement art
- • Best Reuse of a Historic Theater: Highland Theater/AFC Center
- • Best Scents: Perfumes Europeos
- • Best Paletas: Paletearais Lindo Michoacan
- • Best Chinese Food: China Lamp Restaurant
- • Best Pie Filling Material: The Pie Patch
- • Best Can of Worms: Nature’s Little Recyclers
- • Best Twenty-First Century Salon: The Frunchroom
- • Best Local-Global Sweetshop: Sweet Freaks Homemade Chocolate
- • Best Mother/Daughter Shopportunity: Belle Up/Kiddie Kouture
- • Best Irish Castle Turned Activist Church: Beverly Unitarian Church
- • Best Last One Standing: George’s Restaurant
- • Best Respite From the Corporate World: MAKE! Chicago
- • Best Recipe for Love: Augustine’s Spiritual Goods
- • Best Punkin’ Donuts: Daley Library
- • Best Heart: 31st & Western
Brighton Park & Archer Heights →
- • Best Billy Goat For Your Buck: Bierrieria Zaragoza
- • Best Monkey Business: Ed & Annette’s Monkeys & More
- • Best School Singing Session: Musicality Vocal Ensemble
- • Best Home Away From Home: Café El Meson
- • Best Definitely Legal Cannabis Products: Hemp Helps
- • Best Very Old Arts Recreation Hub: Historic Wabash YMCA
- • Best Very New Arts Recreation Hub: Bronzeville Arts & Recreation Hub
- • Best Arts Hub Designed By an MMA Fighter: New Art Gallery and Jazz Lounge
- • Best Place to Exercise Your Free Will: Simple Soups, Salads & Sandwiches
- • Best Benevolence: The Renaissance Collaborative
- • Best Headgear: Bronze Hat Line
Chatham →
- • Best So-Guilty-It’s-Shameless Pleasure: Dat Donut
- • Best Open Mic: #ChurchOnThe9
- • Best Chat & Trim: TNT Barber Shop
- • Best Diner Offering the Opposite of its Name: Captain’s Hard Time Dining & Josephine’s Cooking
- • Best Doppelgänger: The Blue White House
- • Best Reminder: MLK Living Memorial
- • Best Prairie: Ashburn Prairie
- • Best Taste of Belize: Garifuna Flava
- • Best Chinese Grocery Store: Hong Kong Market
- • Best Collection of Under-Chronicled Histories: Chinese-American Museum of Chicago
- • Best(-Kept) Bubble Tea Secret: Hello Jasmine
- • Best Tiny Park: Sun Yat-Sen Playlot Park
- • Best Place to Get Your Trainspotting and Boat-Watching Fix Simultaneously: Canal Street Railroad Bridge
- • Best Great-Great-Great Grandma: Rose Atchison
- • Best Community-Based Healthcare: ACCESS Center for Discovery and Learning
- • Best Tradition: Englewood Jazz Festival
- • Best LGBTQ-Focused Healthcare: Howard Brown Health 63rd Street
- • Best Activist-About-Town: Aisha Butler
- • Best Ecological Redemption & Place to Take Your Bike: Big Marsh Bike Park
- • Best Burial Site of a Waterloo Veteran: Sims Metal Management
- • Best Historical Society: Southeast Chicago Historical Museum
- • Best Way to Spend a Long Weekend: 10th Ward Labor Day Parade and Festival
- • Best Architecturally Unorthodox Church: St. Gall Catholic Church
- • Best Not-What-You’re-Thinking Pizza: Pizza Castle
- • Best Just-Outside-the-Airport Food: Sammy’s Kitchen
- • Best “Representatives”: Ed Burke & Michael Madigan
- • Best True-to-Name Garden: Cornell Oasis Community Garden
- • Best Place to Become a Regular: Café on the Grove
- • Best Two Places to Buy Homespun Goods: The Silver Room & Hyde Park Handmade Bazaar
- • Best Coffee Shop in a Religious School Building: Refectory Cafeteria at the Lutheran School of Theology
- • Best Front Yard Quesadillas: Alex Gonzales, 24th and California
- • Best Crowdfunding: GoFundMe for Fidencio Sanchez
- • Best Place to Outfit Your Dancing Horse: OK Corral VIP Western Bar
- • Best Low-Key Skate Park: Pitrowski Silver Skate Plaza
- • Best Menu For Adventurous Eaters: La Casa de Samuel
Pilsen →
- • Best Art-Coffee Combo: La Catrina Café
- • Best Place to Watch Things on a Screen: filmfront
- • Best Bookstore Already Profiled by the Reader: Open Books
- • Best Record Store With a Thing for Huey Lewis: Pinwheel Records
- • Best Post-Macaroni Arts Nexus: Lacuna Artist Lofts
- • Best Site-Specific Art Project: LaborPaste, mosnart
- • Best Alternative History: A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum
- • Best Place to Feel at Home: Pullman Café
- • Best Weekend Soul Food: Corliss Cozy Corner Restaurant
- • Best Use of Salvage Material: Pullman Free Library
- • Best Ford-Era Nostalgia: Motor Row
- • Best Urban Ecosystem: Northerly Island
- • Best All-Around Dining: Kurah
- • Best Exception: Buddy Guy’s Legend
- • Best History-Infused Dog Park: Fred Anderson Park
- • Best Dedication to Community Gathering
- • Best Old-School Crowdfunding: Black United Fund Illinois
- • Best Name That States the Obvious: That’s-a-Burger
- • Best Food Buying Club: Healthy Food Hub
- • Best Place to Be Full: The New Look Restaurant
University Village & Little Italy →
- • Best Perpetual Cause for Optimism: Little Italy’s Empty Lots
- • Best Fire in a Firehouse: Firehouse Art Studio
- • Best Libations: The Coffee Alley
- • Best Institution: Oscar D’Angelo