PurpleMustReign wrote:Geoff, Jim: I am staying at the Westin Chicago Northwest. Ever heard of it? Is the Itasca area a good area? Can you recommend some things to do? I want to see Wrigley, Soldier Field, and the Chicago Zoo. And my gf will want to see Chinatown (she is Asian). What else should we look at? We are there until Monday.
Itasca is fine, but it's definitely the burbs. At best 30 minutes, but more likely over an hour into the city. If you're looking to spend most of your time in the city itself, you might be better off with a place downtown. I know that it's often possible to get downtown hotel rooms for cheap off priceline (see biddingfortravel.com for an idea of recent stuff). May be a bit late for that though.
Wrigley is in a neighborhood. If you're there during the day, it'll be easy to find a spot to park on the street within a block of so and walk around. There's a gate on the Sheffield side (east side) that you can see the field through if they don't close it during the winter.
Soldier is right on Lake Shore Drive. If you want to actually park and walk around, you'll have to pay for it.
Two zoos. Lincoln Park Zoo is right off Lake Shore Drive on the north side. It's free, though parking isn't (street parking possible, but difficult). Brookfield Zoo (aka Chicago Zoological Park) is in Brookfield, which is west, kinda on the way in from Itasca.
Other stuff:
Museum Campus (Field Museum of Natural History, Shedd Aquarium, Adler Planetarium), all right by Soldier
Art Institute of Chicago (on Michigan Ave)
Museum of Science and Industry (south side, by University of Chicago)
Chicago Auto Show starts tomorrow if you're into cars. It's not as big as Detroit, but it's pretty big.
If it wasn't winter, I'd recommend the river architecture tour. If it's warm, just wandering around the buildings can be fun.
Window shopping on Michigan Ave
Food - Chicago is a fantastic eating town. One suggestion, don't go to anything you can get at home (chains, etc). There's better food to be had here. Some local specialties include Chicago hot dogs, Italian Beef, Chicago Pizza (Lou Malnati's is my favorite, but Giordano's, Gino's East, and Pizzeria Uno/Due are all popular, Uno's is
not the same as the chain they sold their name to). There are a simply ridiculous number of ethnic enclaves with great restaurants. Some have obvious names like Chinatown, Greektown, and Little Italy, others don't. If you have anything in particular you're looking for, let me know and I can try to point you.