Norwood Park · Cook County · IL
Active listings
About the community
Norwood Park is one of Chicago's 77 community areas, tucked into the Far Northwest Side near O'Hare and split across several ZIP codes. It spans about 4.29 square miles and folds in distinct sub-neighborhoods, including Old Norwood Park, Big Oaks, Oriole Park, and Union Ridge. The historic core, known as Old Norwood, is famous for its curving, diagonal street grid laid out by the Norwood Land and Building Association after it purchased the land in 1868, a deliberate departure from Chicago's standard rectangular blocks. Housing leans heavily toward single-family homes, with classic Chicago brick bungalows and suburban-style detached houses set on green lots, giving the area a quiet, residential feel within city limits. The neighborhood's signature history hook is the Noble-Seymour-Crippen House at 5624 North Newark Avenue, whose 1833 south wing is widely considered the oldest extant building in Chicago. Norwood Park suits buyers who want a settled, family-oriented homeowner community with Metra access downtown but more space and a calmer pace than the lakefront, and it has long drawn city workers such as teachers, police officers, firefighters, and union tradespeople. The community area's median household income was about 107,122 dollars in 2022.
People and density
Population was about 38,895 in 2023, at a density near 9,067 people per square mile across the 4.29-square-mile community area.
Single-family and bungalows
Housing is dominated by single-family detached homes, including classic Chicago brick bungalows, especially through Old Norwood and Oriole Park.
Somewhat walkable
Norwood Park carries a Walk Score of 64, with bus lines and the Union Pacific Northwest Metra stop serving residents.
Chicago's oldest house
The Noble-Seymour-Crippen House at 5624 North Newark Avenue dates to 1833 and is widely considered the oldest surviving building in Chicago.
Home prices
The median sale price was about 430,000 dollars recently, up roughly 1.8 percent year over year, at around 271 dollars per square foot.
Parks with a pool
The 16.23-acre Norwood Park has the Chicago Park District's only North Side outdoor pool with a water slide, while nearby Oriole Park covers more than 18 acres.
Metra to downtown
The Norwood Park Metra station on the Union Pacific Northwest Line offers direct service to Ogilvie Transportation Center downtown.
Deep roots and heritage
Settled by English farmers starting in 1833 and later by Germans, Poles, and Scandinavians, the area has run a Memorial Day parade every year since 1922.
Daily life in Norwood Park centers on quiet residential streets, neighborhood parks, and a strong homeowner culture. Commuters have direct downtown access on Metra's Union Pacific Northwest Line, with the Norwood Park station and the adjacent Edison Park station both running to Ogilvie Transportation Center in the West Loop. The neighborhood is also well connected by the Kennedy Expressway and major arterials, and CTA bus service supplements the rail options. Its position on the city's edge near O'Hare gives the area a suburban feel while keeping it inside Chicago, which has long appealed to residents who want a yard and a single-family house without leaving the city.
Green space is a defining feature. The 16.23-acre Norwood Park at 5801 North Natoma Avenue offers the Chicago Park District's only North Side outdoor pool with a water slide, plus tennis courts, a dog park, and an inline skating area, while nearby Oriole Park covers more than 18 acres with a fieldhouse and ball fields. The community skews family-oriented and civically engaged, hosting a Memorial Day parade every year since 1922. Many residents are city workers such as teachers, police officers, union tradespeople, and firefighters, and the broader area is historically Irish with a notable Serbian-American community that holds an annual Serb Fest.
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.
Noble-Seymour-Crippen House
Tour Chicago's oldest house, whose south wing dates to 1833, at 5624 North Newark Avenue, with tours offered by the Norwood Park Historical Society.
Superdawg Drive-In
A 1948 original drive-in at 6363 North Milwaukee Avenue, with carhops and its famous Chicago-style hot dog topped with a pickled green tomato.
Norwood Park
A 16.23-acre park at 5801 North Natoma Avenue with the only North Side outdoor pool with a water slide, plus tennis courts, a dog park, and an inline skating area.
Oriole Park
A Chicago Park District facility of over 18 acres with a fieldhouse and extensive ball fields, named for the surrounding Oriole Park subdivision.
Illuminated Brew Works (IBW Lodge No. 1)
A neighborhood taproom at 6186 North Northwest Highway pouring experimental beers, with regular events like trivia nights.
Norwood Park Memorial Day Parade
A community tradition that has run through Norwood Park every year since 1922, a hallmark of the neighborhood's civic life.
By the numbers
Property tax rates vary by exact township and assessor district. Confirm per address before pricing a purchase.
Median sold price
$575,000
MRED · last 12 mo (5 sales)
How Norwood Park got here
The first inhabitant of European descent in the area was Mark Noble, an English immigrant who arrived in 1833 and built the farmhouse that still stands today as the oldest building within Chicago city limits. English farmers dominated the 1830s and were later joined by Germans and, to a lesser extent, Poles and Scandinavians. The area's growth accelerated after 1853, when the Illinois and Wisconsin Railroad, later the Chicago and North Western Railway and now Metra's Union Pacific Northwest Line, laid tracks through the area. In 1868 the Norwood Land and Building Association formed and purchased the land, and it laid out Old Norwood with its distinctive curving, diagonal streets rather than a standard grid. The community took its name from Henry Ward Beecher's 1868 novel Norwood, or Village Life in New England, with Park added to distinguish it from another Illinois post office.
Norwood Park was organized as a township in 1873, incorporated as a village in 1874, and annexed to Chicago on November 7, 1893. Upon incorporation the village banned the sale of alcohol, and dry precincts persisted for well over a century, with the first liquor store in 50 years opening only in 2016. During the 1920s major roads including Foster, Milwaukee, Devon, Northwest Highway, and Harlem Avenues were improved, and the fieldhouse at Norwood Park was built in 1928. The neighborhood added roughly 2,000 residents between 1930 and 1940 despite the Great Depression, and although the Kennedy Expressway was built nearby in the 1950s, the historic buildings of Old Norwood were left intact. The City of Chicago recognized the Norwood Park Historical District in 1986 and designated the Noble-Seymour-Crippen House a Chicago Landmark in 1988.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping Norwood Park. 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.