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These Chicago Streets Will Be Closed to Make Room for Outdoor DiningLindsey Congeron June 9, 2020 at 6:13 pm

Starting on June 3, Chicago restaurants were officially open for business, but only if they could serve their customers outdoors. This rule severally limited restaurants who didn’t have patio or sidewalk seating, so Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced that the following six streets would be closed to thru traffic to allow restaurants the space for outdoor seating:

  • Chatham: 75th Street from Calumet Avenue to Indiana Avenue
  • Lakeview: Broadway from Belmont Avenue to Diversey Parkway
  • Little Village: 26th Street from Central Park to Harding Avenue
  • Rush & Division: Rush Street from Oak Street to Cedar Street
  • Near West Side: Taylor Street from Loomis Street to Ashland Avenue
  • West Loop: Randolph Street from Expressway no further than Elizabeth Street

According to the Mayor, these streets were selected as part of the pilot program due to the impact of the closures on traffic and how accessible the areas were to pedestrians.

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During specific hours, the restaurants will be closed to vehicle traffic, allowing restaurants to spread out tables in accordance with social distancing rules and the guidelines put out earlier this month.

If these initial closures are successful, it is possible that more roads will be closed to thru traffic as the city continues to move into Phase 3. For restaurants that don’t have outdoor seating already, they can visit the city website to submit an application to be a part of the Expanded Outdoor Dining program.

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Before restaurants can participate, they must sign up for a permit for a sidewalk cafe. According to Rosa Escareno, commissioner of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection, the agency is working as quickly as possible to approve the permits. So far, they have approved 400, and are working on the next 400.

However, Mayor Lightfoot wants Chicagoans to remember this is not a “street festival,” but instead a way for restaurants to have space to provide a service to their customers. Under this new program, restaurants can serve food or drink until 11 pm each evening.

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The restaurants will still have to follow the guidelines, including:

  • No more than six people per table
  • No more than 10 individuals per gathering
  • Tables must be six feet apart
  • Staff must wear face coverings, and customers must wear face masks when not seated
  • Providing sanitizer stations

In addition to closing down space for restaurants, Chicagoans will have more run to walk, run, and ride their bikes while safely social distancing. It’s expected that as more streets open, more people will be able to spend time outside safely.

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At UrbanMatter, U Matter. And we think this matters.

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Featured Image Credit: Shelby L. Bell via Flickr

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These Chicago Streets Will Be Closed to Make Room for Outdoor DiningLindsey Congeron June 9, 2020 at 6:13 pm Read More »

3 Reasons Why Your Business Should Stagger Start Times As Employees Go Back to WorkKali Crameron June 9, 2020 at 7:07 pm

Chicago is easing its limitations on staying at home this June. Businesses are starting to open again, allowing employees back into the office. Restaurants and bars are inviting people to their patios for socially distanced dining. And intimate spaces, like CTA buses and trains, are being filled, once again, with people. While we are entitled to stretch our legs after a long few weeks at home, caution should still be advised. You should, in fact, consult Crain’s Chicago Business on whether or not public transportation is safe at all. Wearing a mask in public, practicing social distancing, and avoiding hand-to-hand contact are all really important, but the problem is that many of these things are unavoidable as we head back into the workforce. One solution to this issue would be to stagger start times for employees so people going back to work don’t clog up the roads with traffic, crowd building lobbies, or overflow parking garages. Here are a few reasons why this might work.

Though our intricate system of trains and buses that takes passengers all over Chicago is up and running, the city is encouraging people to reduce their travel by CTA as much as possible. The problem is that, as businesses start opening up their offices and allowing employees to come back to work, people will see work as essential travel. While some may use this as an excuse to take public transportation, those worried about gathering alongside masses of people again, mask or not, will opt to travel on the roads to avoid contact as much as possible. Regardless of which transportation method you prefer, road congestion will flare significantly as people get back to their regular 9-5 jobs in the office. If you stagger which days employees come into work and when they work from home, our roads will see less traffic, spaced out over the course of the week, instead of clogged highways at certain times of day.

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Even if the CTA doesn’t see full capacity, building lobbies almost certainly will. Chicago is made up of massive skyscrapers, filled with offices that house thousands of employees. If we allow every employee to start again at their usual 9 am, building lobbies will be a hotspot for the virus to thrive, as crowds of people rush through and pack into elevators. Staggering start times for your employees by allowing some to take morning or afternoon shifts, and spacing out which days they come into the office and when they work from home, will help you take precautions in your business to ensure people are socially distanced and, therefore, safe at work.


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View the Best Pizza Restaurants in Chicago, Ranked

Are you trying to find the best pizza places in Chicago to visit? View our list of the top 50 pizza restaurants in the city.

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View the Best Pizza Places in Chicago


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Parking is already an issue in Chicago, as most of us know. It’s too hard to find street parking, so the safest and most reliable option is to find a parking garage with affordable rates. However, as people start coming back to work all at the same time, it’s clear that parking garages will fill up rather quickly. As road congestion increases, and CTA travel decreases, many people will be unable to find parking at all, leaving them stressed about getting to work on time. This is another reason to stagger start times: to ensure that it’s far easier to find parking as traffic on the roads is bound to increase. Currently, InterPark garages are offering their morning special all day at participating locations through the iParkit app! Download today to snag that sweet deal.

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So, what is your business doing as employees come back to work? Are you staggering start times? Are you allowing work-from-home days? Let us know your strategy in the comments below!

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At UrbanMatter, U Matter. And we think this matters.

Tell us what you think matters in your neighborhood and what we should write about next in the comments below!

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3 Reasons Why Your Business Should Stagger Start Times As Employees Go Back to WorkKali Crameron June 9, 2020 at 7:07 pm Read More »

Lollapalooza, Taste of Chicago & More Just Canceled Their 2020 Summer FestivalsNishat Ahmedon June 9, 2020 at 7:53 pm

Table of Contents

With the onset of coronavirus, the city of Chicago took preemptive measures and canceled many of its slated summer festivals. At the time, we had still to get word from major summer festivals and events but as of today, the bad news is here: Lollapalooza, Taste of Chicago, Chicago Jazz Festival, and the Air and Water Show are all officially canceled for 2020. (Yes, this means our Lolla 2020 Survival Guide probably won’t get much use, but just pretend we wrote it for 2021. We’re bummed about it, too.)


Photo Credit: Chicago Cut Steakhouse

View Bars and Restaurants with Open Patios in Chicago

Heartbroken about not getting to see your favorite on stage? We are too. See you at a patio in Chicago.

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View Patios Open in Chicago


As Chicago continues monitoring COVID-19 throughout Illinois’s Phase 3 initiative and hopes for a smooth and early transition into Phase 4, the city moved to cancel all permitted special events through Labor Day.

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Photo Credit: Lollapalooza Facebook Page

Lollapalooza

In the written announcement above, Lollapalooza both canceled their 2020 event and made clear their intention to make the 2021 festival a spectacular celebration to honor their 30th anniversary. In regards to handling this year’s cancellation, the festival says to still keep the slated festival dates on our calendars to join them in a “weekend-long virtual event.” The event will include performances from all over, a peek at archived sets from both the Chicago festival and the international editions, and a whole slew of other surprises. The festival has yet to announce if current pass-holders should seek refunds or hold onto their passes, and it’s unclear if this virtual event will be exclusive to those with passes, require additional purchases, or be free for anyone’s experiential pleasure.

lollapalooza canceled
Photo Credit: Taste of Chicago Facebook Page

Taste of Chicago

Taste of Chicago, though canceled in their normal capacity, is aiming to reimagine this summer’s event as “Taste of Chicago To-Go.” This slightly altered Taste, according to their Facebook, “will include an expanded Community Eats program (July 8–12), supporting about 25 neighborhood restaurants and food trucks while providing free meals to nonprofits serving healthcare and other frontline workers.” In addition to the Community Eats program, July 8th will include a food truck procession while online cooking demos will be organized from the 8th to the 12th.

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Photo Credit: Chicago Jazz Festival Facebook Page

Chicago Jazz Festival

This year’s Chicago Jazz Festival would be the 42nd year for the festival and was scheduled to run from August 28th through September 6th. Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park (which isn’t one of the Chicago parks opening this week) was to be the event stage for the last four days of the festival, usually showcasing the main events. This year’s schedule still hasn’t been posted, and it’s unclear if, like Lollapalooza, the canceled festival has any virtual performances planned to uplift disappointed festival-goers.

lollapalooza canceled
Photo Credit: Chicago Air and Water Show Facebook Page

The Chicago Air and Water Show

The Chicago Air and Water Show, similarly to the Chicago Jazz Festival, has announced its cancellation but hasn’t announced if the show plans any kind of virtual consolation or altered plans to try and reach the 2 million spectators that usually attend the event.

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Are there other events you were looking forward to that got canceled? Let us know in the comments!

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At UrbanMatter, U Matter. And we think this matters.

Tell us what you think matters in your neighborhood and what we should write about next in the comments below!

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Featured Image Credit: Lollapalooza Facebook

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Lollapalooza, Taste of Chicago & More Just Canceled Their 2020 Summer FestivalsNishat Ahmedon June 9, 2020 at 7:53 pm Read More »

Why are the Chicago Bears hiding their quarterbacks?Patrick Sheldonon June 9, 2020 at 3:00 pm

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If you say: “I’m not racist, I have an African-American Friend” read this.Brian C. Thomason June 9, 2020 at 3:07 pm

Your Doubting Thomas

If you say: “I’m not racist, I have an African-American Friend” read this.

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May Chicago Real Estate Market: As Expected, Worst Ever Sales DeclineGary Lucidoon June 9, 2020 at 3:13 pm

Getting Real

May Chicago Real Estate Market: As Expected, Worst Ever Sales Decline

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PHOTOS: Inverness home with 4-car garage, elevator: $1.2MChicagoNow Staffon June 9, 2020 at 3:21 pm

ChicagoNow Staff Blog

PHOTOS: Inverness home with 4-car garage, elevator: $1.2M

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Snoop — Petraits RescueChicagoNow Staffon June 9, 2020 at 3:22 pm

Pets in need of homes

Snoop — Petraits Rescue

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Celebrating Special Occasions during the PandemicThe Look Chicagoon June 9, 2020 at 4:33 pm

The Look Chicago

Celebrating Special Occasions during the Pandemic

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Girls Can Race Toovettegalon June 9, 2020 at 5:17 pm

Girls Go Racing

Girls Can Race Too

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