Near West Side

National Public Housing Museum

919 S. Ada St.

Cultural/community

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Saturday

10 AM - 5 PM

Sunday

10 AM - 5 PM

Accessibility & Amenities

  • Family Friendly
  • Photography Allowed
  • Restrooms Available
  • Wheelchair Accessible

Architect

John Holabird

Year Completed

1938 (built); 2025 (adaptive reuse)

OHC Appearances

2025

DETAILS:

The National Public Housing Museum is located in the last remaining building of the Jane Addams Homes, a development of linked three-story brick buildings that opened in 1938 as one of the first sites of public housing in Chicago. It exists today because public housing residents organized to save the building from demolition and create a museum to preserve their collective memories and the histories of public housing nationwide. This historic site has been reimagined through an adaptive reuse project into a vibrant new civic and cultural destination on Chicago’s near West Side. The museum mixes the historical with the contemporary, offering recreated domestic spaces, artifacts salvaged from the building, WPA-era sculptures by Edgar Miller, an interactive music room filled with records from musicians who grew up and lived in public housing, and evocative art installations and exhibits.

VISITOR EXPERIENCE:

Visitors can enjoy a self-guided visit that includes special exhibits like "History Lessons: Everyday Objects from Public Housing" and "Living in the Shade: Open Space and Public Housing", Edgar Miller's Animal Court, a scavenger hunt of architectural encounters, and interactive experiences in the REC Room and Demand the Impossible.

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