Where To Live in Chicago
I start in spring and I'm looking for suggestions. First year mm IBD analyst with office near sears tower. Is being close to work important? Should I rely on the L? Looking to spend 1000-1500/month all in and I don't need parking. I'm pretty unfamiliar with Chicago neighborhoods.
I appreciate the help.
A lot of young people starting out do a roommate situation until they get oriented and then branch out when the lease ends.
If you want to be close to work, you could get an efficiency/studio for the range you listed in the South Loop or Printers Row, both are about a mile walking distance to the Loop. Some buildings that support your budget would include: River City Apartments, Dwight Lofts, MDA City Apartments (Streeterville), Presidential Towers (Greektown) are all major buildings with over 50 units. If you are looking for a more "apartment feel" versus a large multi-unit building, I would look at domu.com or craigslist. If you use a apartment search service they are going to tell you you cannot find anything in that range. While that is partially true, it's also true that if you're willing to live outside of downtown and take the L (30-40 minutes to downtown), you could probably find something in a neighborhood like Logan Square, Lakeview/East Lakeview for the amount you're looking to spend.
Keep in mind if you want to go out on weekends, you'll most likely be hanging out in River North, Wicker Park, Lincoln Park or Wrigleyvielle. So maybe give some consideration to those somewhat pricier neighborhoods if you want to have proximity to bars/clubs/restaurants.
Fyi. This subject has been covered prior here: http://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forums/chicago-apartments
i'd avoid the financial district. it really is the definition of dead on the weekends
Lou Mannheim gave a great answer. I'd say for all the press Chicago gets about crime (my family thinks I live in the Wild West), the neighborhoods you want to live in are pretty well established.
Don't live west, far south, or in any neighborhood that's been called "up and coming" for over a decade.
As far as the L - it does the job. If you live in one of the Northside neighborhoods listed above you'll be on the Red or Brown lines, which are fine. Don't use the green line too far from the loop, if at all.
1000-1500 a month if you have a roommate can probably get you a nice 2BR in a high rise in Near North, Gold Cost, maybe River North, etc.
If you want to live alone, you can probably still get a smaller 1BR at these places. If you want to live in the nicer high rises in River North, Streeterville, etc. that Lou Mannheim mentioned, then you'd probably only be able to get a studio.
the loop is absolutely dead on the weekend and after 6pm
I'm doing a studio for ~1k in the Gold Coast. You should spend more though - I literally have a murphy bed. 1.3k-1.4k will get you a nice studio in a good building. Unless you want a roommate, you don't need one in Chicago (unlike NY / SF).
And I will echo, "don't live in the loop". It is much worse than NY's FiDi on weekends - many stores literally close on the weekends because there just isn't anyone there. Do River North / Streeterville / Gold Coast, and you can walk to work.
If you want a more "college" scene, try Lincoln Park, Wrigley or even Lakeview.
And do not go south of Roosevelt.
Don't live in the South Loop, Financial District, the Loop or Greektown unless you are forfeiting your social life for the convenience of work. The area surrounding your residence are older or completely dead.
If you are willing to be spend at the high-end of your range for rent then I would recommend the Cobbler Square building in Old Town. The facility is right on Wells street in one of the most happening parts of town. A large studio or one bedroom should run somewhere in the range of 1400-1600. The building is far from perfect but is newish and filled with young professionals.
Otherwise most new analysts in my group end up in cheaper more outdated buildings off Clark st in Lincoln Park. Also, a pretty good option.
63rd and MLK would be a good place to start...
But in all seriousness, after living here 5 years myself, the following should be helpful - these are the only areas I personally would consider living at the moment:
1) Gold Coast/River North: "Nicest" and most "exclusive" areas. By no means the best for living however, completely depends on what you want - pretty expensive but you get what you pay for. Generally 30+ but a lot of mid 20's finance types there as well.
2) Old Town: More of a bar scene - same age group as GC/RN.
3) Lincoln Park/Lakeview: More college scene the closer you get to Depaul campus. I live west of the campus in a brownstone in a professional neighborhood in LP. I personally love it. Similar pricing to Old Town.
Feel free to PM with other questions.
I Googled Gold Coast. That is nice. It looks more like south FL than the dreary IL. You can see Trump Tower in the middle of the pic.
The Highland Park, Northbrook, and Glencoe area is nice. The crime is much lower there than it is in the Lincoln Park area. The downside is that you will need to pay more.
Thank guys! All very helpful.
whatever you do, don't take silent guardians advice to live in highland park/glencoe/northbrook
Chicago - where should I live? (Originally Posted: 03/12/2014)
I'm hopefully moving to Chicago with work on a short-term transfer and have a few options on where to stay. I'm not too familiar with the best places to live (have been to Chicago once before but quite a while ago) so would really appreciate the views of any locals on the following:
Presidential Towers apartment block - W Madison, West Loop Columbus Plaza apartments - E Upper Wacker Dr, just north of Millenium Park North Harbor Tower, North Harbor Dr, also just north of Millenium Park
All are pretty convenient for work but ideally I'd like somewhere that is pretty safe and secure, convenient for restaurants/bars, getting to the airport, close to the L to get around Chicago / get to Wrigley/US Cellular to catch a few ballgames.
Any thoughts on the pros/cons of each location would be great. Thanks a lot.
I would suggest boystown/lakeview near the Red-line Belmont stop.
im by clark and division, pretty awesome area
I would stay away from the areas you mention; the Loop seems cool at first but sucks in quite a hurry.
Agree with the first two comments - you won't go wrong with the north side neighborhoods like Lincoln Park, Lakeview or even Wrigleyville (the last if you are under 24 years old). Access to the lake and restaurants in those areas is one of the best parts of Chicago, and your chances of being robbed or murdered are relatively low.
Lakeview or Lincoln Park.
Whatever you do, stay away from Presidential Towers. Heard bad things about it
Gold Coast is where the hot girls with money are.
I live in one of those three buildings. It really depends on what you value. The loop is awesome for convenience to work. If you work all the time this is pretty valuable. The pedway makes it that much better in the winter. The blue line takes you right to O'Hare for $2.25 which can't be beat. You can also get to Midway airport from downtown too. There is enough nightlife to sustain you for up to six months in River North, which is a very short walk from these buildings. If you're only a part-time party goer, getting to Lincoln Park, Lakeview, etc. is really quick and cheap in a cab. Also, there are tons of grocery stores so many of the plagues associated with living downtown just don't exist in Chicago.
Pretty much every Chicago native will take you to live in Gold Coast / Lakeview and not the loop. It is all I've ever heard. While I haven't lived in these areas, I can say that there are a lot of pluses to living downtown if you prefer that lifestyle.
While being in the loop is convenient for walking to work, I'd recommend living north of the loop between the river and the lake. River North or Streeterville, Gold Coast or Old Town, or Lincoln Park from south to north, respectively.
Loop is cool and everything for walking to work, but everything closes so damn early and you have to cab or do public transit everywhere. People also seem to like West Loop and the restaurants are above average.
I have lived in two of those buildings mentioned above and I have very good friend who lives in the other one. One advise stay away from Presidential Towers. It is a crap place. If you wanna live somewhere close to your work then fine but if you want to enjoy the city then hells no. Live in the Gold Coast/ Lincoln Park or Lakeview area. And not in the Loop. The loop especially Millenium Park Plaza is littered with tourists.
loop is a ghost town on the weekends and after like 7pm. I live in LP right now and the most south i'll live in is probably river north/streeterville.
Sorry to semi-hijack the topic, but any thoughts on South Loop as a place to live? Headed to Booth in the fall, and no desire to live in main Loop / MPP. Would love to live in those northern neighborhoods, but the commute to Hyde Park seems like a bitch. Oh, and I'll probably be bring my car with (so maybe north is an option, but also need reasonably-priced and accessible parking).
South Loop is pretty nice. Most of them are close to the red line. Has a few restaurants and everything. You are gonna have a neighborhood feel. Also it is closer to Chinatown that is if you like Chinese food.
Thanks for all the comments, very helpful. Get that Lincoln Park and other neighbourhoods north of the river are good but sounds as though if I had to pick from one of the three I listed it would be best to go with Columbus Plaza or North Harbour Tower. Presumably as Columbus Plaza is closest to the river (and therefore Streeterville / River North) and one block from Michigan Avenue this might be the best bet?
go where chief keef's from. bang out with the ops.
Living in Chicago (Originally Posted: 11/15/2006)
Hey guys,
Couple question re: chi-town Where do young professionals/analysts usually live?
How much (monthly) should one spend on rent assuming a bb salary?
How's the public transportation/will I need a car?
Any comments on cost of living/quality of life?
Thanks!
Honestly it depends, I use to live on the Gold Coast and rent there is through the fucking roof(900+ for a small studio)but if you want a more neighborhood feel then try Lincoln Park, Wicker Park, or Lakeview. Rent in those areas will very alot, I can hook you up with one of my buddies who is apartment finding genius. I will say this, you really don't need a car, the CTA will be your best friend. If you like going out, Chicago is the city for it, lots of hot women, lots of clubs and bars that stay open late. Any questions just ask me!
I've lived in Streeterville for several years. It's the lakefront area between downtown Chicago and the Gold Coast. Think Navy Pier. Only recently I moved to east Lincoln Park and I'm not happy :-( It's nice enough, but I much prefer Streeterville and being walking distance from work, theatres, shopping, etc.
You can easily spend $750-900 on rent on an analyst salary. $750 being areas like Bucktown, Wicker Park and $900 being Gold Coast, Lincoln Park etc. However, whatever you consider is going to be far and above what you would find yourself settling for in NYC.
Cost of living/quality of life is great. You can live on the cheap or live lofty. All up to you.
Finally, U DO NOT NEED A CAR. REPEAT. U DO NOT NEED A CAR.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/400_North_Lake_Shore_Drive
Live here, when it gets built of course, or you could try the Trump Tower. I love skyscrapers
900 for a studio??? Is that in the city? Is chicago really that inexpensive???
Is Chicago really that inexpensive?
You think chicago is inexpensive, try Houston. By the way, what are hours like in Chicago BB IB?
from what I hear, the hours at CS/UBS/GS (the top 3 banks in terms of deal flow) the hours are longer than NY, but less face time and other BS involved.
Hours are longer because there are less analysts/associates than NY and seems like just as much if not more work this year.
But someone correct me if i'm wrong, as an analyst hours will be about 80-90 as analyst, 70-80 as an associate.
Yeah, I hear you can get nice pad in downtown houston near their baseball stadium for like 1200 bucks...same thing in chicago will cost you about 2000....in nyc about 3500-4000
houston?
chicago's a great deal, but the women are lacking in looks.
what are you talking about man?
chicago is the city of hot blondes
of "viagra triangle"... where hot blondes hang out hoping to snarl themselves an IB husband such as you fine kids.
i've seen plenty of hot blondes with 55 y/o dudes in upper east side....why are they with those dudes?...hmmm
they need a financier for their botox injections and other "maintenance" and the femme fatales like their baubles and bling-bling.
Ok...so I've narrowed it down to two options. I can live in a 1br in Streeterville/Goldcoast for between 1300-1600/month or I can live with a roommate in a 2br in Lincoln Park/Wrigleyville for around 1800-2000/month of which I would pay 1100-1200. Which would you guys recommend?
Depends on your crowd. If you're more in to the bar scene, wrigleyville; otherwise gold coast is a pretty solid bet. Also depends on where you work, have fun commuting into the fin district if you live in wrigleyville.
Also, how big is the apartment going to be? 1300-1600 in that area would be no bigger than 700 sq ft i'd assume? Probably smaller, huh? There's alot of new developments in the lakeshore east area you might want to have a look at. Nice places, expensive and tiny as hell!
I can't believe that rent. We take it the wrong way in London.
There's more hot women in lincoln park - I lived there last summer and was quite impressed - probably has something to do with the fact that DePaul is right there.
Thumbs down on DePaul girls. It's all about the hot Euros in the clubs/lounges in the franklin/ontario spots.
Yeah, I'm going to have to go ahead and disagree with you on this one.
Depending where in Streeterville you live, you may have to take a cab or the cta buses to get to work each day.
Are you kidding me? ANYWHERE in Streeterville you could walk to work.
I lived in Streeterville for years and walked to work everyday. Except Fridays. By Friday I'd be so f'n tired and running late that I took a cab. A $6 ride.
I own a place in Lincoln Park which I've rented out now but hands down, Streeterville is my favorite place to live in Chicago. So much within arms reach. Really nice lifestyle.
depends where you work, certainly can't walk from streeterville to where i work.
it's at least a mile's walk to get to most of the financial buildings- lasalle st, franklin st, etc.
WizardofOz, do you work in the Loop?
Do you guys think a mile is too far to walk? It's at best a 15-20 min. walk.
Yeah, I'm in the loop. Depends how far east you go though in streeterville, if you are on lakeshore drive, its definitely more than a mile. i dont even like the 5 block walk i have to the el stop in the morning.
all the apts in streeterville are around 700-800 sq ft. I'll be working in the loop--near the sears tower. How's the public transportation between those two areas (Streeterville & Sears)?
There's an express bus line... #120 or #121?... which you only pay $1 or something like that to ride from Streeterville to Sears Tower thru lower wacker in 10 min.
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how's the neighborhood in south loop? I'm thinking about exploring some new areas...which ones would you guys recommend or rather recommend I stay away from?
I don't understand why anyone would live in the South Loop when you can live in one of those nice new buildings near the Michigan/Randolph area and be a lot closer to work as well as the Mag Mile and have far more convenient brown/red line access up north.
As far as what neighborhoods to stay away from, I'd say anything south of Congress, west of Franklin, or north of Irving Park. Once you get outside of those boundaries you are bound to run into minorities. Chicago is one of the last homogeneously white cities in America and it is great to be surrounded by all of god's beautiful chosen people, as long as you stick around Lincoln Park/Lakeview/Wrigleyville. The only minorities you will see in the LP are construction workers and househeld helpers - great feeling. Same thing for any of the bars on Lincoln Avenue or near Halsted/Webster area - you won't see a single colored person in any one of them. Again, great feeling.
how long is the commute from lincoln park to the fin dist?
titan- I think it really depends on where you are in LP. My coworker (lives in wrigleyville) says the el will take you 30 minutes. That doesn;t include waling time, etc... With the el construction everything north can be a hassle.
Also keep in mind a lot of areas in LP aren't really near an el. So, you'll have a long walk or a long bus ride.
if you can afford it, river north really is the place to be.
when i said my boundaries, i meant that the only acceptable placs for a white person to live are lincoln park and wrigleyville. lakeview is okay to visit sometimes. the loop/river north/streeterville/gold coast are great places to work, conduct business, and go out for a meal. but if you want to stay away from the minorities just live in LP. you will never see a colored person at the bars in lincoln park and that is truly a great feeling.
Don't listen to this knucklehead, he doesn't know what he's talking about!
FYI next weekend is the traditional kick-off into summer in Chicago, i.e. the Old Town Art Fair!!
Anyone going to St. Michaels?
Lmao at Patek's comments, I love it.
Dude, the 19th century is over.
That you're a knucklehead? Yup. I know it's true.
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You're going to love it.
Are you doing the Belmont/Sheffield music festival this weekend?
June/July is the best time to be in Chicago... starts with the Old Town art fair, then Taste of Chicago, followed by Venetian Night and the Old St. Pat's block party. Good times :-)
I like Chicago so much better than NYC as a city. Midwest girls are so much better in so many ways.
I'm interested to hear other opinions about the work hours in Chicago. A good friend of mine is working at a top 3 BB out there and says he gets out around midnight on average. A midnight average would be amazing.
I agree with you. I think Chicago is better :-)
The hours are slightly less than in NYC. Quality of life is just overall better in Chicago. I am ofourse biased...
Of course quality of life is better. We have world class shopping, dining, and infrastructure, yet we have the least colored people out of any big American city.
This is off topic, but I'm moving to LP in a couple weeks and wanted to know if anyone knows of any decent places in the area to get furniture at a reasonable price. Thanks.
Domicile at 670 W. Diversey has some decent stuff at reasonable prices.
Chicago Analyst Neighborhood Advice (Originally Posted: 12/16/2015)
Hey everyone, I'll be a first year analyst in Chicago starting this summer and am contemplating which neighborhood I want to live in. I'm leaning towards living alone. I've heard great things about the Gold Coast and West Loop balancing commute and fun outside of work. Is there a general consensus on those two neighborhoods? Is rent comparable? Would anyone strongly recommend a different neighborhood? I know people are happy all over the place but thinking those two make the most sense for what I'm looking for. Thanks!
It all depends on your budget really. I lived in the gold coast for a year and loved it. It's an ideal location. Gold coast is going to be more expensive than the West Loop, which is a newer neighborhood. I'd also check out River North, Lincoln Park, and Lakeview.
Chicago - Old Town neighborhood (Originally Posted: 01/13/2014)
I'm moving to Chicago for an internship this summer. Does anyone have any thoughts on the Old Town neighborhood in Chicago? Specifically, around North & Hudson. It seems the area is generally pretty safe but I've read some reviews that say the Sedgwick "L" stop as well as the surrounding area can be a bit sketchy at times. Does use this stop or live in this area? Thanks!
I've lived in that area for 4 years. Its a great neigborhood with tons of bars and restaurants. The area is going through a rapid gentrification. A decade ago this area was ground zero for one of the most infamous housing projects in the U.S. There are still pockets of housing projects between along sedgwick between North and Division. If you are north of north avenue, you are in an awesome spot. If you are south of north avenue you will be close to some very low-income housing. Not a big deal, but you need to have your wits about you late at night.
PM me if you have any more specific questions.
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