A Chicagoan's quest to visit every public library branch

A Chicagoan's quest to visit every public library branch

Chicago's 82 public library branches stretch far and wide, so visiting every single one is a feat.

  • City Cast Chicago host Jacoby Cochran took up the task.
  • The big picture: Cochran's quest started as a new way to explore Chicago's many neighborhoods — how each branch represents the area, the interactions between patrons and staff, and as a place to meet new people.

    By the numbers: Since last November, he's visited 56 locations.

    His favorites: Each has its own virtues, so the host, writer and educator broke it down by category.

  • Art: Legler (Garfield Park), Woodson (Washington Heights) and Little Village
  • Photography: Altgeld (Altgeld Gardens)
  • Nature: Sulzer's Koi pond (Lincoln Square)
  • Architecture: Blackstone (Kenwood) and Independence (Old Irving): "Blackstone (1904) is the oldest branch and looks like a granite and marble Greek tower fit for a museum campus. The dome of the rotunda is one of a kind," he says.
  • What's next: Cochran still needs to explore branches in West Lawn, Scottsdale and Clearing on the far South Side and Jefferson Park, Dunning and Edgebrook on the Northwest Side.

  • Plus, the Obama Presidential Center branch, the city's newest public library, is still on his list. "I am going to save that branch for last!"