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There is no better way to bring a little bit of beauty to your home than to start a garden. In addition to providing a space for beautiful flowers and plants and home-grown produce, gardening can provide surprising health benefits, including improved mood, better heart health and cardiovascular fitness, and even a decreased dementia risk. And once you've started gardening, you won't want to stop. Luckily, there's an easy way to make your gardening hobby a year-round one, even in Chicagoland's cold winters and warm summers -- by creating a stylish and functional home greenhouse. A home greenhouse may seem out-of-reach, too expensive and time-consuming to set up and maintain. But with just a little bit of space, and the right advice, any homeowner can set up the perfect home greenhouse in just a few simple steps.

More than any other city, Chicago is a city of neighborhoods. From the earliest days of its history, Chicago's neighborhoods have built the city's diverse, rich, and sometimes colorful character. Learn how these 9 iconic Chicagoland neighborhoods got their names.

1. Wicker Park

In 1868, alderman and land developer Charles Wicker attended a meeting of the Chicago Board of Public Works at which the board announced its intention to build a park ""lying west of Milwaukee avenue and south of North avenue." Two years later, Charles and his brother and business partner Joel Wicker purchased 80 acres of land and donated four for what would become Wicker Park, with the rest becoming the neighborhood that would bear the park's name. 

Baird & Warner was a pioneer in understanding people's desire to live in the Loop with proximity to their work and public transportation. In fact, the company played a key role in the development of 200 N. Dearborn St., one of the first apartment towers built in the Loop. Baird & Warner partnered with developer Elzie L. Higginbottom to build the 46-story, 310- unit apartment tower on the northwes...

Homebuyers here in the Midwest and across the country are looking for properties with more outdoor space to enjoy — and that includes a rise in homeowners searching for homes that come complete with outdoor pools.  As writer Barbara Ballinger recently put it for REALTOR® Magazine
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought a huge wave of interest and increased desirability for stay-at-home entertainment, but home shoppers should be prepared to pay a premium for a house with a pool or to have one installed.
According to data compiled by Homelight and presented by REALTOR® Magazine, homes with pools are currently selling at a premium across the country. Here in the Midwest region, for instance, real estate agents polled by Homelight project that the estimated value of having a backyard swimming pool has increased by 88 percent since the start of the pandemic. Across the country, 68 percent of real estate professionals say that they expect pool additions to continue surging in popularity within their local markets. 

When it comes to purchasing a home in our Chicagoland market, when you buy can often be as important as what you're buying. After all, no one wants to buy a home right at the top of the market when prices are cresting, or take out a mortgage right before a drop in interest rates.  In real estate, maximizing your "purchasing power" — or the value of the home you can buy with each dollar you have to invest — is crucial when undertaking the largest investment that many of us will ever make. 
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