Norwood Park
The 16.23-acre Norwood Park boasts the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ's only outdoor swimming pool on the North Side with a water slide, making it a favorite destination for summer day camps and young swimmers in the neighborhood. Sports programs for youth include flag football, floor hockey, outdoor soccer, track & field, and tumbling. On the cultural side, they can enjoy music, dancing and crafts programs.
Norwood Park is home to a state-of-the-art fitness center, equipped with circuit weight machines, free weights, and cardiovascular machines. A .22-mile oval [approx. 4.5 laps equal a mile], gravel running track with lights surrounds the baseball diamonds, an outdoor inline skating area, a dog park, and four tennis courts sit south of the park fieldhouse.
Parents with preschoolers gather for such programs as Musical Moms, Pops & Tots, MightyFitFamily, as well as arts & crafts. A range of activities exists for adults and seniors, including aerobics, and basketball leagues. Recently the park added a Special Recreation program for children/adults with special needs.
The Norwood Park Senior Center offers fitness classes, computer classes, a dining room where hot meals will be served, and health screenings for the elderly to the community. Info call: 773.775.6071.
The Senior Center is a partnership of the City of Chicago Department of Family and Support Services, the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ, and Norwood Seniors Network.
Norwood Park, located in the community area of the same name, dates to the 1920s. Thirty years earlier, the City of Chicago had annexed Norwood Park Village, already a community of substantial homes. When residential development surged after 1910, citizens created a local park district to serve the area. Established in 1920, the Norwood Park District was one of 22 park commissions consolidated into the ¿ì²¥ÊÓÆµ in 1934. The Norwood Park District purchased 14 acres for its first park in 1921. Site drainage began in 1922 and streets and alleys were vacated to expand the park, and bath house and swimming pool construction shortly thereafter. In 1928, the Park District added a fieldhouse with a 500-seat assembly hall. The community, the Park District, and the park itself all take their names from Norwood, an 1867 novel by clergyman and abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887). The moniker "Park" was added to the community name because Norwood was already the name of an Illinois post office.
The Norwood Park Senior Center opened in September 2009 on Park District property adjoining the existing Norwood Park Field house.
For directions using public transportation visit .
Free street parking is available around the park.
Facilities at Norwood Park
Programs at Norwood Park
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday from 11am to 4pm
Each Friday from 3pm to 5pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday from 9am to 3pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday from 9am to 3pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday from 3pm to 5pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Each Tuesday,Thursday from 9:30am to 10:30am
Each Tuesday,Thursday from 11am to 12pm
Each Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday from 9am to 3pm
Except the following dates:
Friday, Jul 4, 2025
Each Thursday from 9am to 2pm
Each Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday from 1pm to 3:30pm