Naperville, Illinois Naperville, Illinois City of Naperville Jefferson Avenue in downtown Naperville.

Townships Lisle (Du - Page), Milton (Du - Page), Naperville (Du - Page), Winfield (Du - Page), Du - Page (Will), Wheatland (Will) Location of Naperville inside Illinois Wikimedia Commons: Naperville, Illinois Naperville is a town/city in Du - Page and Will counties in the U.S.

In a 2010 study, Naperville was titled the wealthiest town/city in the Midwest and eleventh in the country with a populace over 75,000. It was ranked among the nation's safest metros/cities by USAToday and Business Insider.Naperville was voted the second-best place to live in the United States by Money periodical in 2006. It was rated 1st on the list of best metros/cities for early retirement in 2013 by Kiplinger. As of the 2010 census, the town/city had a populace of 141,853, which was estimated to have increased to 147,100 by July 2015. It is the fifth-largest town/city in Illinois.

Reconstructions of Fort Payne and the Pre-Emption House stand as part of Naper Settlement outside museum village, which was established by the Naperville Heritage Society and the Naperville Park District in 1969 to preserve some of the community's earliest buildings. In 1855 Sybil Dunbar came to Naperville as its first recorded black female resident; she died in 1868 and was buried in Naperville Cemetery on Washington Street. A commemorative marker honoring her was placed in the cemetery in 2015. Naper's Settlement was incorporated as the Village of Naperville in 1857, at which time it had a populace of 2,000.

On April 26, 1946, Naperville was the site of one of the worst train disasters in Chicago history.

The accident killed 45 and injured approximately 127 passengers and/or crew members. This event is memorialized in a metal inlay map of Naperville on the southeast corner of the Nichols Library's sidewalk area. In 2012, author Chuck Spinner presented The Tragedy at the Loomis Street Crossing which details the tragedy and gives the stories of the 45 persons who perished. On April 26, 2014, a memorial entitled Tragedy to Triumph was dedicated at the train station.

A dominantly non-urban improve for most of its existence, Naperville experienced a populace explosion beginning in the 1960s and closing into the 1980s and 1990s, following the assembly of the East-West Tollway (now known as the Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway) and Interstate 355 (originally known as the North-South Tollway, now the Veterans Memorial Tollway).

The March 2006 copy of Chicago periodical cites a mid-1970s decision to make and keep all parking in downtown Naperville no-charge to keep downtown Naperville "alive" in the face of competition with Fox Valley Mall in Aurora and the subsequent sprawl of strip shopping malls.

Naperville marked the 175th anniversary of its 1831 beginning in 2006.

According to the 2010 census, Naperville has an region of 39.323 square miles (101.85 km2), of which 38.77 square miles (100.41 km2) (or 98.59%) is territory and 0.553 square miles (1.43 km2) (or 1.41%) is water. Portions of the town/city of Naperville drain to the West Branch of the Du - Page River inside Du - Page County. Specifically, in the flood of 1996, downtown businesses in the City of Naperville incurred momentous damage.

Naperville borders the communities of Warrenville, Wheaton, Lisle, Woodridge, Bolingbrook, Plainfield, and Aurora.

Climate data for Naperville, Illinois As of July 2013, Naperville was the 176th most crowded city in the United States. In 2011, 14.9% of Naperville's inhabitants were Asian, making it the Chicago suburb with the tenth highest percentage of Asians. Naperville is inside the Illinois Technology and Research Corridor.

Tellabs has its corporate command posts in Naperville, and Con - Agra's Grocery division branch office employs approximately 400 workers. Kraft Foods opened their Naperville site in 1968, and employs over 200 individuals at the plant, which supplies all Triscuit products for North America. Naperville is also home to the command posts of Dukane Precast, and their double-wall precast concrete manufacturing plant. Fermilab and Argonne National Laboratory are also nearby.

Naperville was one of the ten quickest burgeoning communities in the United States amid the 1990s. The Naperville region is home to many prominent retailers, restaurants and shopping centers, such as downtown Naperville, Freedom Commons, Springbrook Prairie Pavilion, and the Route 59 and Ogden Avenue corridors. Naperville has over eleven automobile dealerships, and in October 2006, the town/city opened the country's first public-private automobile test track, situated on a 9-acre (3.6 ha) course, at a cost of $1.5 million. Businesses in Downtown Naperville 5 Naperville Community Unit School District 203 2,575 10 City of Naperville 998 The Naperville Public Library has been ranked number one in the United States each year from 1999 through 2010, for metros/cities with populations between 100,000 and 249,999 by Hennen's American Public Library Ratings. The Nichols Library is in downtown Naperville, at 200 W.

Naperville is home of the Naperville Independent Film Festival, an annual film festival which features the work of autonomous filmmakers. The Naperville Historic District is a set of 613 buildings in the older easterly section of Naperville and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1999, Naperville was designated a White House Millennium Community, due to the assembly of the Moser Tower and Millennium Carillon.

It was dedicated in an Independence Day event on June 29, 2000, with a reception attended by over 15,000, and a performance by the Naperville Municipal Band and the Naperville Men's Glee Club and Festival Chorus.

Disputes over funding the culmination of the fortress were debated before the Naperville City Council amid the fall of 2005 (and are still not resolved).[needs update] The tower's design won an award for "Best Custom Solution" from the Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute (PCI). Dupage River in Naperville This place is called as the "Crown Jewel" of Naperville.

The Naperville Riverwalk was created in 1981 as a permanent commemorative to honor Naperville's 150th anniversary.The Naperville Riverwalk was created in 1981 as a permanent commemorative to honor Naperville's 150th anniversary.The Riverwalk has amenities along its path.

Naperville is positioned in six townships in two counties.

In Dupage County, the Northwest portion is in Winfield Township, the Northeast portion is in Milton Township, the West central portion is in Naperville Township, and the East central portion is in Lisle Township.

In Will County, the Southwest portion is in Wheatland Township, and the Southeast portion is in Du - Page Township. The biggest number of Naperville inhabitants live in Lisle Township, followed by Naperville Township.

North Central College is on a 59-acre (24 ha) ground in Downtown Naperville on Chicago Avenue.

It was established by a predecessor church to the United Methodist Church in 1861 and has been in Naperville since 1870.

It has been in Naperville since 1997.

The College of Du - Page Naperville Regional Center is on Rickert Drive. De - Vry University maintains a satellite ground on Westings Avenue in Naperville.

Governors State University recently opened a satellite ground on West 95th Street in Naperville.

Northwestern College has a Naperville ground on North Mill Street.

The University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign opened a Business & Industry Services ground in Naperville in 2007.

Two K-12 enhance school districts serve the town/city of Naperville (along with a number of private, parochial schools, including private schools in neighboring Aurora and Lisle).

Naperville Community Unit School District 203, established in 1972 through the consolidation of elementary and high school districts, serves central and northern Naperville (as well as portions of neighboring Lisle and Bolingbrook).

The 203 school precinct has two high schools: Naperville Central High School and Naperville North High School, 5 junior high schools and 15 elementary schools inside Naperville town/city limits. Additionally, the school precinct has one junior high and one elementary school in Lisle.

Neuqua Valley High School, along with three middle schools and 19 elementary schools from this district, are inside Naperville town/city limits in the southern part.

In total, IPSD runs and maintains 3 high schools, 7 junior high schools, 21 elementary schools, 1 preschool, and 1 alternative high school.

The precinct serves and southwestern Naperville, along with easterly Aurora and parts of Bolingbrook and Plainfield. Naperville Academy, established by law in 1841, incorporated in 1851, and opened in 1852. It became a enhance school in 1860 and the school building stood until 1928. Naperville Christian Academy, Classical Christian school, preschool through 12th undertaking Naperville Community Television, NCTV17 (Channel 17) Community-based programming that includes news, sports, and talk shows. Naperville Sun WCKG (1530 AM) The Voice of Dupage County and Naperville's News/Talk.

Edward Hospital serves Naperville while Good Samaritan in Downers Grove, Central Du - Page in Winfield and two other hospitals in close-by Aurora also serve the city.

For many years, Edward Hospital and the rest have tried to introduce a new hospital into Naperville only to have their request turned down.

Thus, Naperville remains the only large Illinois town/city with only one hospital.

Edward Hospital presently is trying to open a hospital in close-by Plainfield to help Naperville people with travel times to Edward Hospital. Riverwalk Quarry in Naperville.

The Naperville Park District manages and provides leisure and recreational activities for Naperville and close-by residents.

As of 2007, the Park District manages over 2,400 acres (10 km2) of open space, including over 130 parks and four sports complexes. The Park District also manages two golf courses, Springbrook and Naperbrook. In addition, the Park District is responsible for the Naperville Riverwalk, assembly of which began in 1981, marking the 150th anniversary of the first Joseph Naper's settlement.

The Naperville Riverwalk is 1.75 miles long and runs along the West Branch of the Du - Page River.

In addition, the riverwalk features the Dandelion Fountain, the Naperville Century Walk, the Riverwalk Eatery, and the Commander Dan Shanower-Sept.

The memorial also includes over 140 faces made by small-town school kids symbolizing the casualties of September 11. As of April 2015, a 2.4 acre Water Street District evolution has started just south of the Naperville Riverwalk between Main and Webster streets.

The town/city of Naperville and Naperville Park District are planning to grew the riverwalk to add an art wall and seating areas.

The Water Street universal is expected to be instead of in the fall of 2016. Also, North Central College with the help of the town/city of Naperville is planning to construct a park along the riverwalk, but the universal has been suspended for the time being. Some of the other facilities managed by the Park District include: Commissioners Park, which includes Naperville's first official Cricket pitch, opened in 2006.

Naperville Sportsman's Club, Public trap shooting range In 1941, New Deal artist Rainey Bennett painted an petroleum on canvas mural for the Naperville postal service titled, George Martin's Home Overlooking Old Naper Hill. As a typical American suburb, Naperville' uses automobiles as its chief mode of transportation.

The Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway (the tolled portion of Interstate 88) runs near the north edge of Naperville with 3 exits serving the town/city at IL 59, Winfield Rd.

(in Warrenville), and Naperville Rd.

People wishing to reach Naperville from I-55 exit at Weber Road and head north.

US Route 34 Ogden Avenue enters Naperville in the west at Illinois Route 59 coming from Oswego and Aurora at an east-northeast/west-southwest angle.

From 75th Street south Naperville numbered east-west streets roughly follow the same grid layout as the City of Chicago.

In other words, if 75th Street continued east past its end at Illinois Route 83, in Willowbrook, it would eventually be the same 75th Street as found in Chicago town/city limits.

However, the older part of Naperville has a second numerical grid, starting downtown at Main and Benton, with 4th and 5th Avenues just north of the BNSF tracks, and closing through 15th Avenue.

Along with these are streets titled after the town/city they lead to, i.e., Naper/Plainfield Road heads towards Plainfield, while Aurora Avenue leads to Aurora and Chicago Avenue to Chicago (it becomes Maple Ave.

See also: Naperville (Amtrak station) and Route 59 (Metra) Pace bus at the Naperville Amtrak/Metra station Naperville presently has three tracks belonging to the BNSF Railway that run through the north end of town, with passenger rail service provided by Metra and Amtrak.

Amtrak's four daily trains through Naperville are the Illinois Zephyr and Carl Sandburg (both destined for Quincy, Illinois), the California Zephyr (destined for Emeryville, California), and the Southwest Chief (destined for Los Angeles).

In addition, Pace directly operates bus route 530 from Naperville to Aurora (which serves Aurora's Westfield Fox Valley Mall) and bus route 714 from Naperville to Wheaton (which serves the College of Du - Page), both through its Fox Valley division.

Pace also directly operates route 888, a rush hour express route titled the "Tri-State Flyer," from Homewood and South Holland to corporate employment sites in the suburbs, including those in the northern part of Naperville; this route is directed by Pace through its South division.

Intercity bus service in Naperville consists of a route from Chicago and Naperville to Davenport, Iowa, and points further west, directed by both Burlington Trailways and Greyhound Lines.

The Burlington Trailways buses stop at the Naperville Metra and Amtrak station, downtown on Fourth Avenue; the Greyhound Lines buses stop at the Route 59 Metra station.

Main article: List of citizens from Naperville, Illinois "Naperville History".

"Naperville honors its first female black resident with grave marker".

Nichols Library Map Naperville Illinois on Flickr Anatomy of an art universal Naperville Sun February 28, 2014 Pages 1,6 & 7 By Susan Frick Carlman Chicago Sun Times Media "Monthly Averages for Naperville, IL (60540)".

"Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2015".

"Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places of 50,000 or More, Ranked by July 1, 2013 Population: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2013".

"Fact Sheet for Naperville, IL".

"Locations: Naperville, Illinois".

"Kraft Foods' Naperville Plant Celebrates 41st Anniversary".

"Naperville Auto Test Track".

City of Naperville.

"City of Naperville CAFR" (PDF).

Naperville Public Library.

"American Libraries Naperville to Launch Fingerprint ID System for Internet Access".

"Naperville Public Library Fact Sheet" (PDF).

Naperville Public Library.

"Naperville Film Fest: 8 days, 80 flicks".

"Millennium Carillon Naperville, Ill." City of Naperville, Illinois.

"Naperville Regional Center".

"Links to Schools Naperville Community Unit School District 203".

"Schools K-12 Naperville, IL Schools, California Schools, Texas Schools, Florida Schools, Arizona Schools".

Naperville Woman's Club Commemorative History (second ed.).

Naperville Illinois Radio Station.

"Naperville Park District | Parks & Facilities".

"Naperville Park District | Golf".

"Official Site of the City of Naperville, IL".

"Naperville Riverwalk park plan on hold after grant suspended".

"City of Naperville || Sister Cities Commission".

"Naperville gains new sister town/city in Mexico".

Ruth by Lake and Prairie: True Stories of Early Naperville, Illinois.

Naperville, Ill: Gnu Ventures Company Publication.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Naperville, Illinois.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Naperville.

City of Naperville, Illinois official website Naperville Area Chamber of Commerce Naperville Naperville, Illinois

Categories:
Naperville, Illinois - Chicago urbane region - Cities in Illinois - Populated places established in 1831 - Cities in Du - Page County, Illinois - Cities in Will County, Illinois - 1831 establishments in Illinois