Summary:
Iâm an interior designer and longtime Superhost who believes you deserve better than scratchy sheets and a suspicious futon. Everything here was chosen with intentionâand a sense of humor. From the oversized plastic hand chair to the overly friendly bird moment above the bed, this space is a little odd, very clean, and designed to feel like someone with great taste lives here. (Because, well, they do.)
The Space:
10 takeaways for people who donât have the patience to read my ramblings
(but still deserve a very nice place to stay)
âą Sleeps 2 (Queen bed)
âą Full kitchen + fast Wi-Fi
âą Tub with (occasionally moody but mostly good) water pressure
âą Professionally cleaned by people who care deeply and would benefit from other hobbies
âą 20-minute walk to Wrigley, 10-minute stroll to the Brown Line
âą Ground floor unit in a vintage building (quirks included, free of charge)
âą Hosted by a creative human, managed by professionals who actually pick up the phone
âą Thoughtful touches, neurotic art
âą 24/7 phone support after booking
âąThe towels are nice and the bath products arenât from a gas station. Youâll be fine
Youâre getting the best of both worlds here: I get to be your friendly, creative hostâsharing local tips and a well-loved spaceâwithout also being the person scrubbing behind the toilet. (You're welcome.) Thatâs because Iâve partnered with a top-tier management team to handle logistics and cleaning, so you get both thoughtful design and professional support.
You'll find soft, nice sheets (not the nylon nightmares other hosts offer up), good pillows, a nice mattress, thick towels, and Public Goods bath products. I also keep you stocked with coffee and a few small extras to make mornings feel less like punishment.
This is a vintage Chicago building with the quirks to prove it: a bedroom where the closet is in the wrong place and itâs best not to ask why, the hallway has an attitude, and yes, you may spot the occasional rogue cobweb despite my excellent cleaning team. But if youâre into character, comfort, and staying somewhere that doesnât feel like an abused IKEA showroom... welcome home.
There are four steps down into the unit, so itâs not great for guests with limited mobility. And yes, it's the ground floor of a 120-year-old building, so you will hear footsteps above and encounter a radiator that is passionate and not afraid to express itself. But also: you'll sleep well here. Itâs quiet for being in the city. Itâs comfy. And the bluebirds on the bedroom wall are watching over you. (Kind of intensely.)
The furnishings took a while to find. The giant plastic hand chair? Not strictly necessary, but hard to regret. The bathroom features a weeping clown portrait. I could say itâs all âcurated,â but that makes it sound like someone tried too hard. This place was built on instinct and good shopping.
Location:
The flat is in Ravenswood, a peaceful, tree-lined neighborhood with itâs own vibe. Youâre tucked into a quiet pocket of the city just a few blocks from Clark Street, where things get lively fast. Walk ten minutes and youâre on the Brown Line train (a super scenic trip that takes you straight into the heart of the city); hop the Clark bus and youâll be down in Wrigleyville or up in Andersonville before your phone finishes loading the weather.
Wrigley Field really is a 20-minute walk or a 5-minute cab ride. Cubs game nights bring extra energy and temporary parking dramaâmore on that in the next section.
Parking:
Iâll say this, and really mean it: we are so well located with transit and ride share options you probably wonât need a car unless you are using it to get to Chicago. If you are insisting on it, thereâs no designated parking spot. Street parking is generally available on our block and surrounding ones, except during Cubs games or Wrigley Field events between 5â10pm. At those times, the city enforces a strict âwe will absolutely tow your carâ vibe. Itâs very effective.
Your best bet? SpotHero. Itâs an app that lets you book a spot in advance and avoid the whole âcircling for 40 minutes while reevaluating your life choicesâ thing. Put in Montose and Greenview to show the nearest spots.
Otherwise, the city parking restrictions drop off a few blocks over even during game days, but city street parking in Chicago is an art form, on game days it requires cunning and skill, plus panther like parallel parking abilities.
Also, a universal city tip: please read the signs. All of them. Chicagoâs parking rules were clearly written by a sleep-deprived poet with a grudge.
Exclusive perks:
Guests staying under 14 days get access to The Metropolitan Club, a members-only co-working and dining space on the 66th and 67th floors of the Willis Tower. Yes, itâs fancy. Yes, the view is outrageous. Yes, you can take your laptop and pretend to be someone who owns a watch that ticks.
Guest Access:
Youâve got the entire flat to yourself. I promise you wonât somehow find your host staring into the refrigerator at 2 am. If youâre a smoker, please head off-propertyâoutside the back door or in the courtyard garden still counts as âon property,â so plan accordingly. Vaping indoors also counts. (And no, that one clove cigarette you brought back from Berlin doesnât get a pass.)
Other Things to Note:
Q: How do I get to [place] from here?
A: Google Maps is your best friend. Weâre near the Montrose Brown Line stop, which connects easily to everything. Need to drop in a search pin? Use Greenview and Montrose to explore the immediate area.
Q: When is check-in/check-out?
A: Check-in is at 4pm. Check-out is at 11am. If you need a place to stash bags before or after, I can recommend a local luggage drop service. It never hurts to ask about early check-inâŠif we can, we do it. But a late checkout is always going to be a no, as our team of cleaners get their hustle on during the day so they can go home to their family at night.
Q: Do you have air conditioning or heat?
A: We do! Radiator heat is supplied by the building (and turned on/off by folks who are not us with keys to the boiler room). In warm months, window units will be installed starting mid-May. The space stays comfortable year-round, though folks often crack a window in the winter months when they start feeling the vapors.
Why stay here?
Because Iâve done the hard part. Iâve figured out how to make a space thatâs both beautiful and genuinely comfortable. A space where you can fall asleep under weird art and wake up to good light. A space that feels personalâbut doesnât have anyoneâs toothbrush forgotten in the silverware drawer.
Iâm the kind of host who wants to tell you where to get the best almond croissant and how to dodge Chicago parking tickets. I love sharing this place with people who notice detailsâwho get joy from great sheets, unhinged bathroom paintings, and the quiet thrill of exploring someplace new.
Before you book, our virtual front desk is available from 9am to 7pm CST to answer any questions you have. After you book, youâll get access to that same virtual support during those hours plus a phone number where you can reach a real, live human being 24 hours a dayâwhether youâre locked out or just panicking about how the stove works.
Hope you love it.
Hope you come back.
Hope you donât try to steal the hand chair.
Interaction with Guests:
This is a home in the city. There will be sunlight pouring through the windows. There may be noise. You might hear a neighbor sneeze upstairs. Occasionally, someone will stand outside on speakerphone and describe a medical condition in excruciating detail.
But in return: you get privacy, personality, and a bed that doesnât judge you for eating snacks in it.
We donât do daily housekeeping, but if you need something during your stay, just reach out.
Communication is kind of our thing.