Belmont Avenue

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Belmont Avenue
3200 North
File:From the El (302024520).jpg
Belmont Avenue at Sheffield Avenue, viewed from an "L" station (2006)
LocationChicago, Elmwood Park, River Grove, Franklin Park, Bensenville, Addison
West endAddison
East endLake Shore Drive--(approx. 300 West) in Chicago

Belmont Avenue (3200 N) is a major east–west street in Chicago and several of its suburbs. It begins in the east near Belmont Harbor and is a key commercial street in Lakeview. West of the North Branch of the Chicago River, it passes through Avondale and further west anchors the Belmont-Central shopping district straddling the Belmont Cragin and Portage Park communities. The road enters western suburbs River Grove and Franklin Park before the main segment ends with other parts of Belmont still going west. Then west of the Cook County line parts of Belmont enter DuPage County, specifically in Bensenville and Addison, ending. Belmont Avenue was the southern border of Riverview Park. The amusement park remained open from 1904 until 1967. The park's property is now home to the Riverview Plaza shopping center, the Belmont District Police Station, and DeVry Institute of Technology. One of the landmarks on Belmont Avenue was the Bally Manufacturing Corporation complex located between Washtenaw and Rockwell. The building featured neon signage with the corporate logo that looked beautiful when illuminated. Address was 2640 West Belmont, 60618. Bally also had two buildings on the south side of the street; a Parts and Lithograph (print shop) department. There were numerous buildings in the surrounding neighborhood as well. Bally moved manufacturing and eventually the corporate office to the west side of Chicago and to the western suburbs of Bensenville and Franklin Park starting in the late 1970s. The complex was sold in 1984 and after being occupied by Moloney Coachbuilders, it was sold and demolished to make way for modern luxury housing in 1997. The street was named in memory of the Battle of Belmont during the American Civil War that was fought on November 7, 1861, in Mississippi County, Missouri.[1]

Transportation

File:Chicago trolleybus 9680 on Belmont in 1968.jpg
A trolleybus on Belmont Avenue in 1968, passing the Luna Theater, which closed in the 1980s.

The CTA provides 24/7 service with the 77 Belmont between Sheridan Road and Cumberland Avenue. The 94 California, 151 Sheridan and 156 LaSalle serve short segments of the road. The following CTA lines service Belmont:

Major intersections

The entire route is in Cook County.

Locationmi[2][3]kmDestinationsNotes
Franklin ParkFile:CR W22 jct.svg CR W22 (Wolf Road)
File:US 12.svgFile:US 45.svg US 12 / US 45 (Mannheim Road)
ChicagoRiver Grove lineFile:Illinois 171.svg IL 171 (Cumberland Avenue)
ChicagoFile:Illinois 43.svg IL 43 (Harlem Avenue)
File:Illinois 50.svg IL 50 (Cicero Avenue)
File:East plate blue.svg
File:I-90.svg
File:East plate blue.svg
File:I-94.svg
I-90 east / I-94 east (Kennedy Expressway)
Eastbound I-90/I-94 entrance; westbound I-90/I-94 exit
File:US 41.svg US 41 (DuSable Lake Shore Drive)Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. Maggio, Alice, Punkin' Donuts and the Battle of Belmont, Gapers Block website, Chicago.
  2. "Map of Belmont Avenue (Eastern Segment)".
  3. "Map of Belmont Avenue (Western Segment)".

External links