HOLIDAY INN CITY CENTRE Between Navy Pier and Michigan Avenue 300 E. OHIO STREET CHICAGO, IL 60611 NAVY PIER-MICHIGAN AVENUE
The Holiday Inn City Center is a first class, award
wining, hi-rise hotel located in one of Chicago's
most affluent neighborhoods. The hotel is within
blocks of Navy Pier, Chicago's #1 tourist attraction
and Michigan Avenue's Magnificent Mile of Shops.
It is also easy walking distance from three art
museums.
Many of the comfortably furnished,
well-appointed guest rooms have lakefront
and skyline views. The hotel boasts an
indoor pool and fitness center, as well as a
seasonal outdoor pool area. Here you will
enjoy the sophisticated surroundings with a
genuinely warm and friendly staff catering to
your every request. The hotel is minutes to
fine dining, shopping, and entertainment.
Downtown Chicago puts on what is perhaps the finest display of modern architecture in the world, from the prototype skyscrapers of the 1890s to Mies van der Rohe's modernist masterpieces, and the second tallest building in the world, the quarter-mile-high Sears Tower.
The compact heart of Chicago is known as the Loop, because it's circled by the elevated tracks of the CTA "El" trains. For a first impression of downtown, start your explorations by seeing the energy, drive and unmasked greed exposed in the trading pits of the various commodity marketplaces. Half the world's wheat and corn (and pork belly futures) are bought and sold amid the cacophonic roar of the Chicago Board of Trade, housed in a gorgeous Art Deco tower. From the entrance at 141 W Jackson St, where it intersects with LaSalle Street, take the elevator to the fifth-floor visitor gallery (Mon-Fri 8am-1.15pm; free), where displays trace the evolution of the various frantic shouts and signals by which trade is actually carried out. A similarly energetic ballet goes on from the early hours on Chicago's stock options exchange, the largest in the US. At the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, three blocks away at 30 S Wacker Drive (Mon-Fri 7.30am-3.15pm; free), precious metals, currencies and commodities are bought and sold to the tune of some $50 billion a day. The best time to visit the exchanges is just before the close of trade, when the pressure is at its peak and tempers are most frayed.
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