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Brands Park

Phone

(not available)

Address


3285 N. Elston Ave.
Chicago, IL 60618

Jurisdiction

Chicago Parks

Description

Located at Elston and Henderson in the Avondale community, Brands Park totals 5.73 acres and features a large gymnasium and couple clubrooms. Outdoors, the park features an ADA accessible playground, tennis and basketball courts and ballfields.

Brands Park is known for their Early Childhood Recreation, Basketball, and after-school programs.

 

Young park-goers can participate in activities such as, Cubs Care Baseball, Teen Club, Table Tennis, Indoor Soccer and Mightyfitkidz at the facility.  Brands Park offers summer fun, youth attend day camp, and enjoy the open green space and playground.

History

Brands Park bears the name of the German-American family that owned the site for many years. Formally established as a park in the 1920s, the property was used as a picnic grove for years before. The Brands grove had local notoriety as the site of many Clan-na-gael, Schwabenverein, and old settlers' picnics. Shortly after the 1917 with the formation of the River Park District, (one of 22 independent park commissions later consolidated into the Chicago Park District in 1934), residents of the Avondale neighborhood petitioned the new park board to purchase the Brands Picnic Grove site.  In 1925, the River Park District initiated acquisition of the property, but negotiations with the property owner proved difficult, and land acquisition was not completed until 1927.

Improvements began in 1928, following plans developed by the Chicago Landscape Company.  The new facilities included a playground; basketball, horseshoe, and tennis courts; and an athletic field that was flooded for ice-skating in winter. These recreational features were set in an attractive landscape of lawn and trees. The River Park District adapted an existing building on the site for fieldhouse purposes. Shortly after the Chicago Park District took over Brands Park in 1934; Chicago architect Clarence Hatzfeld enlarged and remodeled the fieldhouse to include club, game, and shower rooms; a workshop; and a community hall. In the mid-1970s, the park district demolished the old brick structure, which had deteriorated significantly. In its place, the district built a new, larger fieldhouse, redesigning the surrounding landscape. More recent improvements included rehabilitating the playground, tennis courts, and plantings.