Explore Chicago’s iconic architecture and vibrant culture with a self-guided audio tour. Discover hidden gems and historic landmarks at your own pace.
Explore Chicago’s iconic architecture and vibrant culture with a self-guided audio tour. Discover hidden gems and historic landmarks at your own pace.
- Millennium Park. Cloud Gate - Chicago’s cherished lakefront park has transformed a former railyard into one of America’s most successful public spaces. Its free concerts, public art, and gathering spots attract millions annually to the downtown area. Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate, affectionately known as ‘The Bean,’ reflects and distorts the skyline…
- Millennium Park. Cloud Gate - Chicago’s cherished lakefront park has transformed a former railyard into one of America’s most successful public spaces. Its free concerts, public art, and gathering spots attract millions annually to the downtown area. Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate, affectionately known as ‘The Bean,’ reflects and distorts the skyline with its polished stainless steel surface, offering an interactive photo opportunity that has become Chicago’s iconic image. The Frank Gehry-designed Jay Pritzker Pavilion, Crown Fountain’s video towers, and the Lurie Garden complete a cultural landscape that showcases how ambitious public investment can rejuvenate urban centers.
- The Art Institute of Chicago - This world-renowned art museum houses masterpieces like Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, American Gothic, Nighthawks, and the most extensive collection of Impressionist paintings outside Paris in its Beaux-Arts building and Renzo Piano-designed Modern Wing. The museum’s comprehensive collection spans Chinese bronzes, Japanese prints, medieval armor, contemporary installations, and nearly every other artistic tradition humanity has produced. The lion statues guarding Michigan Avenue have welcomed visitors since 1894, while free Thursday evening hours make the collections accessible to all, rivaling any museum globally.
- Chicago Riverwalk - The revitalized riverfront promenade stretches 1.25 miles along the Chicago River’s main branch, with its restaurants, wine bars, and kayak rentals transforming an industrial waterway into the city’s favorite gathering space. The walk offers pedestrian-level views of the architectural landmarks lining the river’s banks—Tribune Tower, Wrigley Building, Marina City’s corncob towers—while architectural boat tours depart from multiple points along the route. The river’s famous reversal, engineered in 1900 to flow away from Lake Michigan and toward the Mississippi, exemplifies the engineering boldness that has always characterized Chicago’s approach to challenges.
- Magnificent Mile - Chicago’s premier shopping district extends along Michigan Avenue from the Chicago River to Oak Street Beach, with its upscale retailers, historic landmarks, and architectural treasures creating the city’s most elegant thoroughfare. The Wrigley Building’s white terra cotta, Tribune Tower’s Gothic Revival buttresses embedded with stones from famous buildings worldwide, and the historic Water Tower that survived the 1871 fire anchor a street that balances commerce with cultural significance. The vertical malls, luxury hotels, and restaurant clusters make this Chicago’s most concentrated destination for shopping and people-watching.
- Skydeck Chicago - Willis Tower - The former Sears Tower held the title of the world’s tallest building from 1973 until 1998, with its 110 stories and distinctive bundled-tube structure still dominating Chicago’s skyline. Visitors brave the glass-floored Ledge that extends four feet beyond the building’s edge. The Skydeck’s 103rd-floor observation deck offers views stretching up to four states on clear days, while exhibits explain the engineering innovations that made the building possible. The tower’s distinctive silhouette, visible from across the metropolitan area, remains the symbol of Chicago’s architectural ambition despite newer competitors for attention and height records.
- Downtown / The Loop - Chicago’s central business district derives its name from the elevated train tracks encircling the core, creating the rattling, screeching soundtrack that has defined downtown since the 1890s. The Loop’s concentration of landmark architecture—the Rookery, Monadnock Building, Chicago Board of Trade—documents the evolution of the skyscraper from load-bearing masonry through steel-frame construction to contemporary glass towers. Street-level retail, the Chicago Theatre’s ornate marquee, and the daytime energy of office workers create an urban density that feels distinctly Midwestern in its relative civility and accessibility.
- Navy Pier - Chicago’s most-visited attraction extends 3,300 feet into Lake Michigan, with its Ferris wheel, gardens, theaters, and restaurants drawing families and tourists to an entertainment complex that has evolved continuously since opening in 1916. The Centennial Wheel offers skyline views from 200 feet, while the Chicago Children’s Museum, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, and seasonal festivals provide year-round programming. Critics may dismiss the Pier as touristy, but the lakefront views, summer fireworks, and boat departure point for architecture cruises make at least a brief visit worthwhile.
- Field Museum - One of the world’s largest natural history museums houses Sue, the most complete T. rex skeleton ever discovered, alongside Ancient Egypt galleries, Pacific Island collections, and the Inside Ancient Egypt tomb recreation that has fascinated visitors for decades. The museum’s research departments continue expanding human knowledge of the natural world, while the public galleries present everything from dinosaurs to diamonds in the grand Beaux-Arts building overlooking Lake Michigan. The Museum Campus location, shared with the Shedd Aquarium and Adler Planetarium, creates a concentrated destination for science-minded visitors.
- Wrigleyville - Baseball’s second-oldest ballpark has hosted the Cubs since 1914, with its ivy-covered outfield walls, hand-operated scoreboard, and intimate seating preserving the experience of early 20th-century baseball that other cities demolished for modern facilities. The surrounding Wrigleyville neighborhood offers the quintessential game-day experience with rooftop seating, sports bars, and the crowds of fans who pack the streets whether celebrating victory or commiserating defeat. The Cubs’ 2016 World Series victory after 108 years elevated Wrigley’s already mythic status, making a pilgrimage here essential for baseball fans regardless of team loyalty.
- Pilsen - Chicago’s vibrant Mexican-American neighborhood showcases the cultural richness that immigration has brought to the city, with its murals, restaurants, and the National Museum of Mexican Art preserving traditions while contemporary galleries signal ongoing gentrification concerns. The neighborhood’s 16th Street corridor offers authentic taquerias, bakeries selling pan dulce, and the street art that has made Pilsen a destination for those seeking Chicago beyond the tourist center. The nearby Chinatown and historic Bridgeport neighborhood extend the exploration of immigrant Chicago’s diverse communities.
- Chicago Blues Festival - The Great Migration brought Southern blues musicians to Chicago’s South Side, where Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, and their contemporaries plugged in their guitars and created the electrified Chicago blues that influenced rock and roll worldwide. Legendary clubs like Buddy Guy’s Legends, Kingston Mines, and B.L.U.E.S. continue presenting live music nightly, while the Chess Records building (now Willie Dixon’s Blues Heaven) commemorates the label that recorded the genre’s defining tracks. The Blues Festival each June draws hundreds of thousands to Grant Park, but any night of the week offers authentic performances in clubs that have hosted the greats.

- Digital Map.
- Self-guided walking tour (app)
- Access to the audio guide for 60+ Chicago attractions and hidden spots.
- Digital Map.
- Self-guided walking tour (app)
- Access to the audio guide for 60+ Chicago attractions and hidden spots.
- Private transportation
- Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.
- Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.
- Private transportation
- Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.
- Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.
Experience the ambitious spirit and vibrant neighborhoods of Chicago with a self-guided audio tour, allowing exploration of one of America’s most architecturally significant cities at your leisure. Start at Millennium Park, where Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate mirrors the skyline that pioneered skyscraper design and continues to innovate in architecture…
Experience the ambitious spirit and vibrant neighborhoods of Chicago with a self-guided audio tour, allowing exploration of one of America’s most architecturally significant cities at your leisure. Start at Millennium Park, where Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate mirrors the skyline that pioneered skyscraper design and continues to innovate in architecture today. Stroll along the Chicago Riverwalk, where boat tours reveal how the city reversed the river’s flow and rebuilt with steel and stone after the Great Fire of 1871. Admire the world-class collection at the ICA. Discover the Magnificent Mile’s shopping and historic Water Tower, then explore the lively neighborhoods where Polish, Mexican, and African American communities have enriched Chicago’s culture. Enjoy the blues at clubs where Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy shaped a genre, and indulge in deep-dish pizza at the taverns that perfected this Chicago classic.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.