The Run Down
Travel south along the Lakefront Trail and you'll eventually reach the entrance to a South Side palace. Sitting on over 70 acres, this public space, dubbed "a palace for the people," is the focus of this guide. We'll visit a historical landmark and take a stroll through a nature reserve where we uncover stone fire pits overlooking Lake Michigan.

As you enter the grounds, you’ll come upon a long entryway that takes you to the front of the South Shore Cultural Center. Built in 1905 as an exclusive country club, this served as the center of social life for the community’s elites. Over the next 70 years, the demographic make up of the community changed, but the club’s insistence that it exclude the community’s largely Jewish and then African-American residents, never wavered, and it ultimately led to the clubs dwindling membership.
Today, it’s a community space for the arts, music, and cultural programs that are open to everybody. With current COVID-19 restrictions in place, the building itself is closed off to the public, but you can still walk the grounds and admire the structure’s Mediterranean Revival style architecture from the outside.
As you continue to walk the grounds, you’ll immediately notice that a majority of the property is set aside for a 9-hole golf course. This is operated by the Chicago Park District and open to the public. It’s about $18 per golfer, which seems like a good deal — I wouldn’t know, because I’ve never golfed a day in my life but that seems legit.

As you make your way from the beach and into the nature santuary, the sand gives way to a path that leads you to a wooden boardwalk surrounded by native grasses and wildflowers.
Keep following the path as it meanders across 6 acres of dune, wetland, woodland, prairie, savanna and shrubland habitats
At a certain point, the path will take you towards the tip of the peninsula where you’ll uncover two limestone fire circles available for anyone to use.
One of the fire circles sits near the edge of the water, where the just past the natural vegetation, you can find an unobstructed view of the Chicago skyline.
If you come better prepared than us, bring along a few logs and make use of the fire pit as the sun sets across the city. 