Edison (Thomas Alva) Park
Located on Northwest Highway in the heart of its namesake community, Edison Park is 0.84 acres and features a quaint, historic fieldhouse that serves primarily as a community and cultural arts center. Edison Park offers such art classes as: mixed media, drawing, painting, and ceramics.
The park serves a large number of preschool-age children with programs such as storytime, crafts, as well as Moms, Pops & Tots, an interactive class that involves the parent and child. With its outdoor, soft-surface playground, Edison Park entertains the little ones with their popular and affordable 6-week summer play camp.
Many seniors gather at Edison Park weekly for an active social club always welcoming new members.
Upstairs, the Northwest Society of Model Railroaders meets and works on a public display of an electric model train that twists and turns along a massive, elaborately designed track.
We invite you to stop by and check out this great neighborhood gathering place!
Edison Park takes its name from the surrounding Edison Park community, named in 1892 for American inventor Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931). The area's first settler, Rev. Christian Ebinger (1812-1879), Sr., headed west from Detroit with his family in 1833. When their horse fell dead from a rattle snake bite 15 miles northwest of Chicago, the Ebingers decided to settle on the spot. In 1907, the Village of Edison Park built a new public school, naming it for Christian Ebinger. After Chicago annexed Edison Park in 1910, Ebinger School came under the jurisdiction of the Chicago Board of Education. The financial pressures of the Great Depression necessitated the consolidation of Chicago's 22 independent park boards into the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ in 1934. Two years later in 1936, the Park District began leasing Ebinger School and its site from the Board of Education. Though the Park District inherited more than 100 parks from the 22 independent boards, the Ebinger School property was the first park to be developed by the new agency. Renaming the property Edison Park in 1937, the Park District began rehabilitating the school building and its grounds to provide fieldhouse facilities and an attractive surrounding greenspace. The ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ acquired the property from the Chicago Board of Education in 1986. The fieldhouse soon offered a library; game and club rooms; and spaces for wood working, weaving, and other crafts. In 1988, a new soft surface playground was installed adjacent to the historic fieldhouse.
For directions using public transportation visit .
Capital Projects
Facilities at Edison (Thomas Alva) Park
Programs at Edison (Thomas Alva) Park
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday from 10:30am to 11:30am
Each Friday from 12:45pm to 1:45pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Each Wednesday from 12:30pm to 1:45pm
Each Wednesday from 3:15pm to 4:30pm
Each Thursday from 4:15pm to 5:45pm
Each Thursday from 1pm to 4:15pm
Each Tuesday from 4pm to 6pm
Each Tuesday from 1:30pm to 3:30pm
Each Tuesday,Thursday from 7pm to 9:30pm
Each Monday from 3:30pm to 4:45pm