(Kenilworth Fountain circa 1910)
A visit to the Village's website gives the reader a sense of what Kenilworth is all about: if you promise to help coach the winter basketball league for children in grades 1-3, your child is GUARANTEED to be on the team that you coach!
Kenilworth has a dedicated police force, and receives fire protection services in cooperation with Winnetka. Library services are shared with both Winnetka and Wilmette.
By reputation, Kenilworth is not an inexpensive community in which to purchase a home; the current average list price of home is $2,588,732. That's a significant number, but homes can also be found in the $700-$800,000 range. In reaction to a rising number of "tear downs" by home builders in Kenilworth, the National Trust for Historic Preservation placed the entire village on its 2006 list of 11 endangered places, right up there with the Arts and Industries Building of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. and Mission San Miguel Arcangel in San Miguel, California. The image provide here is a home that recently escaped demolition, saved by the efforts of a local community group that is dedicated to preserving these magnificent homes of distinction.
(157 Kenilworth Avenue)
Beautiful in its design and proud of its tradition, Kenilworth offers the blend of hometown ambiance and a Metra commuter train station in the heart of town to whisk you into the city.
Modest in size, but note-worthy on the North Shore is the Village of Kenilworth. Tucked in between Wilmette to the south, and Winnetka to the north, Kenilworth enjoys its location along Lake Michigan and a fascinating history. The original acreage that was to become the Village of Kenilworth was purchased by a fellow named Joseph Sears. Sears had a dream: a planned community where streets were plotted to maximize sunlight in every home, where land was set aside for a school building (Sears School bears his name, and enrolls K-8 children) and a place of worshp. The gracious entrance into the heart of Kenilworth at the east corner of Green Bay Road and Kenilworth Avenue is attributed to architect George M. Maher, who also designed some 37 homes in the village. Other notables whose talents molded the growth of Kenilworth include Jens Jensen (landscaping) and Frank Lloyd Wright. The village annexed more land in the 1920's to grow to its current size of a diminutive 0.6 square miles, and a community of some 2,500 souls.
Kenilworth today is primarily residential, with a few commercial sites along the west side of Green Bay Road, primarily service entities (dentist, financial services, etc.).
A visit to the Village's website gives the reader a sense of what Kenilworth is all about: if you promise to help coach the winter basketball league for children in grades 1-3, your child is GUARANTEED to be on the team that you coach!
Kenilworth has a dedicated police force, and receives fire protection services in cooperation with Winnetka. Library services are shared with both Winnetka and Wilmette.
By reputation, Kenilworth is not an inexpensive community in which to purchase a home; the current average list price of home is $2,588,732. That's a significant number, but homes can also be found in the $700-$800,000 range. In reaction to a rising number of "tear downs" by home builders in Kenilworth, the National Trust for Historic Preservation placed the entire village on its 2006 list of 11 endangered places, right up there with the Arts and Industries Building of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. and Mission San Miguel Arcangel in San Miguel, California. The image provide here is a home that recently escaped demolition, saved by the efforts of a local community group that is dedicated to preserving these magnificent homes of distinction.
(157 Kenilworth Avenue)
Beautiful in its design and proud of its tradition, Kenilworth offers the blend of hometown ambiance and a Metra commuter train station in the heart of town to whisk you into the city.
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