Auburn Gresham · Cook County · IL
About the community
Auburn Gresham is a community area on Chicago's far South Side, designated Community Area 71, bounded roughly by West 71st Street, West 87th Street, South Halsted Street, and the Union Pacific railroad tracks. Its housing story is written in brick: bungalow-style homes and brick two-flat apartment buildings line the blocks as lasting evidence of the neighborhood's formative 1920s growth, and the Auburn Gresham Bungalow Historic District preserves 264 brick Chicago bungalows built between 1918 and 1932 on the National Register of Historic Places. The 79th Street commercial corridor is the spine of daily life, anchored now by the Auburn Gresham Healthy Lifestyle Hub. Community institutions run deep here, from the Faith Community of Saint Sabina to the Greater Auburn-Gresham Development Corporation that won the inaugural $10 million Chicago Prize in 2020. Affordability is a defining draw, with a median home sale price around $235,000, far below the citywide Chicago median of roughly $409,000. Transit is practical, with the Metra Rock Island District serving Gresham station at 87th and Vincennes plus CTA bus routes and nearby Red Line stops along the Dan Ryan. It suits first-time and value-focused buyers who want a solid brick home, sweat-equity multi-flat potential, and a neighborhood with genuine civic energy.
About 44,900 residents
The community area is home to roughly 44,878 residents as of 2023 estimates.
Bungalows and two-flats
The housing stock is dominated by bungalows and brick two-flats, including a 264-bungalow National Register historic district built between 1918 and 1932.
79th Street corridor
The neighborhood's main commercial strip scores a Very Walkable Walk Score of 78.
Metra and Red Line
Metra's Rock Island District serves Gresham station at 87th and Vincennes, with nearby CTA Red Line stops at 79th and 87th along the Dan Ryan.
About $235,000 median
The median home sale price was about $235,000, well under Chicago's citywide median near $409,000.
Strong community org
The Greater Auburn-Gresham Development Corporation leads neighborhood development, including the Healthy Lifestyle Hub.
Saint Sabina
The Faith Community of Saint Sabina has been pivotal in transforming the neighborhood with new housing and storefronts.
Dawes Park
Charles G. Dawes Park spans about 16 acres with baseball diamonds, a basketball court, ballfields, and a spray pool.
Auburn Gresham carries a strong civic identity built on community organizing and faith institutions. The Faith Community of Saint Sabina, near 79th and Racine, has been pivotal in transforming the neighborhood, spurring new housing and storefronts. The Greater Auburn-Gresham Development Corporation anchors neighborhood life year-round, including hosting the annual 79th Street Renaissance Festival the weekend after Labor Day. The 79th Street and Halsted corridors form the commercial heart of the community, where everyday shopping and dining are within walking distance.
The newest centerpiece is the Auburn Gresham Healthy Lifestyle Hub, which restored a long-vacant building on West 79th Street into a center offering medical, dental, behavioral health, and wellness services alongside a sit-down restaurant, a pharmacy, and social services. Recreation runs through the Chicago Park District: Charles G. Dawes Park offers about 16 acres of ballfields, a basketball court, and a spray pool, while Renaissance Park's centerpiece sculptural fountain by artist Jerzy Kenar honors significant African American figures including Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, Harold Washington, and Maya Angelou.
Neighborhoods
Browse the listings above. Detailed neighborhood pages with market stats, school info, and lifestyle take-downs land here as we roll them out.
Around town
A handful of the places people who live here actually use. Not a directory.
Auburn Gresham Healthy Lifestyle Hub
A restored West 79th Street building offering health, wellness, dining, and social services, anchored by the GAGDC's Chicago Prize vision.
Faith Community of Saint Sabina
The landmark Catholic parish near 79th and Racine, long central to neighborhood transformation and new housing development.
Charles G. Dawes Park
A roughly 16-acre park with baseball diamonds, a basketball court, ballfields, and a spray pool.
Renaissance Park
A passive-recreation park whose sculptural fountain by Jerzy Kenar honors African American historical figures.
Auburn Park
A Chicago Park District park with a lagoon serving the Auburn Gresham community area.
J. Frank Foster Park
A neighborhood Chicago Park District park offering recreation space for local families.
How Auburn Gresham got here
Auburn Gresham's development traces to the nineteenth century, when the area was defined by small German and Dutch settlements, followed by an influx of Irish railroad workers and others drawn to the South Side by newly extended city services in the late 1800s. The neighborhood boomed in the 1920s as streetcar lines and city growth pushed its population nearly threefold, from 19,558 to 57,381, filling the blocks with single-family bungalows and brick two-flats that still stand today. That building era left a lasting architectural legacy, captured in the Auburn Gresham Bungalow Historic District of 264 brick Chicago bungalows built between 1918 and 1932 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Like many South Side communities, Auburn Gresham underwent a sharp racial transition in the mid-twentieth century. The neighborhood was nearly all white in 1960 but had become roughly 69 percent Black by the 1970 census amid blockbusting and white flight, evolving into the predominantly African American community it is today. Decades of community development efforts followed, and in 2020 a local team led by the Greater Auburn-Gresham Development Corporation, with Urban Growers Collective and Green Era Partners, won the inaugural $10 million Chicago Prize from the Pritzker Traubert Foundation for its Always Growing, Auburn Gresham plan. The Healthy Lifestyle Hub also drew $4 million from the City of Chicago through the INVEST South/West program, layering public investment onto the philanthropic award.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping Auburn Gresham. If yours isn't here, text 815-355-0582, same-day reply.
Your local agent
Most agents will list anything. I focus on the places I actually know, and the things that move value here don't show up in the MLS write-up: which streets and buildings hold demand, what the HOA or assessments really cover, how the comps read once you account for condition and location, and where buyers consistently want to be.
When you're ready to tour or list, you want someone who has read the last 50 closed comps in this specific market, not a national average, and can tell you what they actually mean for your price. That's how I work. Text or call any time, and I'll give you a real take, not a brochure.
Thinking of selling?
Not a Zestimate. A real CMA from someone who's sold this neighborhood, knows the floor plan premiums, and can tell you which upgrades the buyer pool here actually pays for.