

Pullman
Barely 15 years after architect Solon Spencer Beman and landscape designer Nathan Barrett laid out a model community for the workers of railcar magnate George Pullman’s empire, those workers went on strike, having borne the brunt of reduced demand for Pullman’s venerated product -- the Pullman sleeping car. By 1898, the Illinois Supreme Court had ordered the Pullman Palace Car Company to divest itself of its residential properties and the community was absorbed by the city of Chicago.
Pullman today encompasses that historic nexus of labor rights and urban planning as well as larger areas to the west of Lake Calumet and north to 95th Street, filled in by population growth and new developments throughout the mid-20th century.
Visitors to the neighborhood today can explore the Pullman National Park (designated under President Joe Biden in 2022), which encompases the Administration Building and grounds, as well as the National A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum and the neighborhood's many historic residential blocks.