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Chicago Foreclosures

The
process of foreclosures varies from the state to state can be rapid or
lengthy. To avoid foreclosures other options such as refinancing, a short
sale, alternate financing, temporary arrangements with the lender, or even
bankruptcy may present to homeowners. There are websites which can help or
can connect individual borrowers to lenders.
As of last 3 years the city had 10,294 foreclosures according to the one of
the training center in Chicago. Doubled numbers of foreclosures in Chicago
was 36% higher compared with the last 4 years.
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About Lakeview
Lakeview (properly and historically described as "Lake View") is a North
Side neighborhood in Chicago, Illinois, USA. It is located along the shores
of Lake Michigan and runs approximately from Diversey Parkway on the south
to Irving Park Road north of Lake Michigan and Ravenswood Avenue on the east
of the West.
Lakeview was originally outside the boundaries of suburban Chicago and was a
summer Getaway for the residents of the city. The middle of the village was
the Lakeview Hotel. Lakeview was annexed to Chicago in 1889.
Today is the most up-market Lakeview neighborhood is composed of a mixture
of Bungalows, and modern high-rise condominium buildings. This is the home
of Chicago's most visible gay and lesbian communities, known colloquially as
Boystown, and focused on Halsted Street, a major gay entertainment strip.
Another area of Lakeview is Wrigleyville, which is centered on the famous
Wrigley Field Ballpark, the home of Chicago Cubs. Wrigleyville consists of
homes, sports bars, restaurants, theaters, and souvenir shops.
2000 population of Lakeview was 94,817, which means that the second largest
in Chicago's communities.
Boystown is not yet officially accepted the nickname the neighborhood known
as Northalsted. Boystown is bordered by Lake Michigan on the east of Lake
Shore Drive. Although the south of the border have been previously
considered Diversey Parkway (2800 North), and gentrification has become more
a mixture of people of the land, and the majority of gay and lesbian
businesses are now bottom of the Belmont Avenue. To the west of Boystown
ends Clark Street (1000 West) bordering Wrigleyville. To the north, Boystown
stops on the south side of Irving Park Road (4000 North) adjacent to Buena
Park. The area is identified as more gay men than lesbians, who are
culturally more concentrated in the neighborhood of Anderson. Boystown is
considered "center" of gay life in Chicago.
Boystown is the difference between what the United States of America the
first officially recognized gay village. In 1998, U.S. $ 3.2 million
restoration of the North Halsted Street strip, the rainbow-lit Pylons.
Two of the main thoroughfares of this area is dominated by the heart-Halsted
Street and Broadway. Halsted Street serving the nightlife is more than 60
different gay and lesbian bars, restaurants and nightclubs, Broadway offers
a wide variety of specialty shops and restaurants, as well as a few
neighborhood institutions.
Wrigleyville is the neighborhood around Wrigley Field Chicago, the Chicago
Cubs play. It is accessible through the Addison Red Line station. The
population is largely yuppie, many of whom live in low-rise brick apartment
buildings. Some of these buildings is the seating capacity of their roofs,
called Wrigley Roofs, where residents and visitors can watch baseball games.
Wrigleyville is also one of the centers of Chicago's nightlife culture that
is characterized by a large selection of restaurants, theaters and bars.
Wrigleyville is the number of Irish trade in the Irish region of bars,
restaurants and shops.
Wrigleyville exact boundaries, since it has a wider neighborhood of Lakeview
may vary depending on the source, although the limits of Big Stick Chicago
neighborhood map is Irving Park, which lies to the north, Fremont to the
east, Roscoe to the south, and Southport, and the west.
As an immediate presence in the Chicago Cubs during the baseball season,
Wrigleyville residents must be very aware of the home schedule is to get
your car in and out of the neighborhood before, during and after the game is
dangerous, is the best. Residential parking is to the various residential
zones to allow the entire neighborhood and the general prohibition on
non-residential parking at the time of the night games. The city and the
team encourage the use of public transport to go and then Cubs games as
possible.
New Town, is now obsolete term, was the name of the neighborhood around the
intersection Clark Street and Diversey Parkway during the hippie heyday. |
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