Garfield Ridge · Cook County · IL
About the community
Garfield Ridge is the 56th of Chicago's 77 community areas, sitting on the far southwest side roughly 10 miles from the Loop and wrapping around the west and north sides of Midway International Airport. The Encyclopedia of Chicago calls it a relatively young and well-ordered neighborhood of single-family houses, and its blocks are defined by the middle-class brick bungalows that filled in after 1950. Owner-occupancy is high here, the housing stock skews toward detached single-family homes rather than condos, and the community has long drawn working and middle-class families. Once predominantly Eastern European, especially Polish, the neighborhood has shifted over recent decades and was roughly half Hispanic as of 2017. The CTA Orange Line terminal at Midway gives residents a one-seat ride downtown, and quick access to I-55 adds to the appeal. For buyers, Garfield Ridge offers a stable, ownership-heavy pocket of solid older homes at prices well below many north-side neighborhoods, with airport and expressway convenience built in.
Community Area 56
Garfield Ridge is Chicago community area 56, located about 10 miles southwest of the Loop on the far southwest side.
Population
The neighborhood was home to 35,439 residents as of the 2020 Census.
Bungalow character
The area is typified by the middle-class brick bungalows that filled block after block as residential use overtook industrial development by 1950.
Next to Midway
Garfield Ridge wraps around Midway International Airport, whose Orange Line terminal sits in the Garfield Ridge and Clearing area.
CTA Orange Line
The Midway station anchors the 13-mile Orange Line, which runs from Midway to the downtown Loop.
Walk Score 62
Garfield Ridge carries a Walk Score of 62, meaning some errands can be accomplished on foot.
Median home price near 352K
The median sale price was about 352,000 dollars over the three months ending April 2026, up about 7.4 percent year over year.
Neighborhood parks
Wentworth (John) Park totals 15.81 acres with an indoor pool, gymnasium, and ballfields.
Daily life in Garfield Ridge revolves around its well-kept residential blocks of brick bungalows and single-family houses, the kind of ownership-heavy streets that have kept the community stable for decades. As of 2017, about 36,936 people lived here in roughly 12,160 households, with a median age of 38.7 and a median household income of 68,212 dollars, above the citywide figure. The population, once heavily Polish, is now diverse, with Hispanic residents making up about half of the area. Families anchor the neighborhood, and its appeal has been growing thanks to the quality of the housing stock and the location next to Midway with easy access to I-55.
Getting around is a real selling point. The CTA Orange Line begins at Midway, just off the neighborhood's edge, and runs roughly 13 miles to the Loop, while numerous CTA and Pace bus routes connect at the Midway station. Walk Score rates the area at 62, so some errands can be done on foot, with Archer Avenue serving as the main commercial corridor for shopping and dining. For recreation, the Chicago Park District operates several neighborhood parks, including the 15.81-acre Wentworth (John) Park and the 13.31-acre Vittum (Harriet Elizabeth) Park, both offering fieldhouses, ballfields, and playgrounds.
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.
Wentworth (John) Park
A 15.81-acre park named for early settler John Wentworth, featuring an indoor pool, gymnasium, ballfields, tennis and basketball courts, and a playground.
Vittum (Harriet Elizabeth) Park
A 13.31-acre park with a fieldhouse, gymnasium, baseball fields, and an athletic field, named for social reformer Harriet Vittum.
Home Run Inn Pizza
The flagship of a family-owned Chicago thin-crust pizza institution that traces its roots to 1923, just east of the neighborhood.
Midway International Airport
The neighborhood's defining landmark and a major travel gateway right on Garfield Ridge's doorstep.
CTA Orange Line at Midway
The rapid-transit terminal that links residents directly to downtown and is a launch point for exploring the rest of Chicago.
Archer Avenue Commercial Corridor
The neighborhood's main commercial spine, lined with everyday shops, services, and restaurants.
How Garfield Ridge got here
Garfield Ridge takes its name from Garfield Boulevard (55th Street), a main east-west thoroughfare, and from a modest topographic rise left behind by the retreat of glacial Lake Michigan. Formerly known as Archer Limits, the area was for much of the 19th century a place people passed through rather than settled, traveled via Archer Road, the Illinois and Michigan Canal, and the Chicago and Alton Railroad. William B. Archer, the canal commissioner and namesake of Archer Avenue, bought 240 acres near present-day Harlem and Archer in 1835, and former mayor John Wentworth purchased tracts to the east in 1853, on land that a neighborhood park now honors. The soggy prairie saw limited farming, with some of the earliest permanent settlers being Dutch market gardeners. Chicago annexed the area in pieces in 1889, 1915, and 1921, and the first intensive residential development took root in the northeast section known as Sleepy Hollow.
The neighborhood's growth accelerated in the 1920s, when its population jumped from 2,472 to 6,050, driven largely by Eastern European immigrants, especially Poles, drawn by industrial jobs nearby. Archer Avenue, with its streetcar line, became the community's commercial spine, and the 1926 opening of Chicago Municipal Airport, later renamed Midway in 1949, set the area's economic infrastructure in place. Even so, the western reaches kept a rural look into the 1930s, with dirt roads and grazing animals. After the Depression slowed things, the population nearly doubled between 1940 and 1950 and then more than tripled during the 1950s as single-family homes filled the western blocks, peaking at 42,998 in 1970. The later decline of Midway traffic in favor of O'Hare cost the area jobs and residents, and its makeup gradually shifted from predominantly Eastern European to substantially Hispanic.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping Garfield Ridge. 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.