The Oak Park Arms is an impressive four-story red brick building marked by bold white trim, arched windows, and green awnings-look to the corner of Oak Park Avenue and Washington Boulevard, and follow the line of parked cars and the tall radio antenna poking into the sky.
You’re standing in front of a place where grand ballroom dances mingled with the hum of live radio broadcasts, and now laughter from toddlers mixes with friendly chatter of lifelong Oak Parkers. When the Oak Park Arms first opened its doors in 1922, it was the height of luxury-imagine shiny marble floors, gents in tuxedos, and maybe even Eleanor Roosevelt checking in for a night! Over the years, this building has welcomed society weddings with cake that could feed a neighborhood and celebrities who knew how to make an entrance. During the lively Roaring Twenties, radio station WTAY sent music and news straight from here, with a young Ray Kroc-who would one day make McDonald’s famous-playing piano live on air.
The Arms was a retreat for everyone from Chicago mobsters-who, rumor has it, liked a good view with their morning coffee-to radio hosts debating baseball scores in smoky studios. In 1978, this spot transformed into a retirement community, offering seniors a place filled with friends, independence, and enough events to rival a cruise ship. On the fifth floor today, there’s a daycare for adults, and even a place where big-hearted seniors and tiny tots meet-proving that here, laughter really doesn’t age. And above it all, that radio antenna is still part of the skyline, a reminder that the Oak Park Arms is always ready to broadcast its next great chapter.




