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Village of Burr Ridge
7660 County Line Road
Burr Ridge, IL 60527
Village Hall: (630) 654-8181
Village Hall Fax: (630) 654-4542
Village Hall Hours:
Mon. - Fri., 8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Email:
sstricker@burr-ridge.gov |
Police Department
(Non-Emergency)
(630) 323-8181Public Works
451 Commerce Drive
Monday-Friday
7:00 am-3:30 pm
(630) 323-4733 |
Gary A. Grasso
Mayor |
Karen J. Thomas
Village Clerk |
Steven S. Stricker
Village Administrator |
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Introduction
The Village of Burr Ridge is truly "a
very special place". Conveniently located
approximately 19 miles from the Chicago Loop just off of I-55 and
County Line Road. Burr Ridge is a beautiful community, well known
for it's lovely homes and quiet residential subdivisions. The
Village includes a carefully planned mix of 5 office parks and
limited retail area. It is governed by a Mayor and a Village
Board comprised of 6 Trustees. Village operations are managed by
a Village Administrator overseeing 5 departments. Burr Ridge is located in Cook
County (Lyons Township) and DuPage County (Downers Grove Township), with County
Line Road being the east/west dividing line (DuPage County to the west, Cook
County to the east). Please visit
the areas listed above--and welcome to our web site!
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Location

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History Of Burr Ridge
The area which is now Burr Ridge was
once the home of the Sioux, Pottawattamie, Ottawa and Chippewa
Indians. After an 1835 treaty, most of the Indians were relocated
west of the Mississippi. In the early 1950's the area was
sparsely settled, and large tracts of land were devoted to
farming. The gently rolling hills and wooded sections of the
eastern portion of the area were, for the most part, divided into
five acre tracts.
On October 20, 1956, in the garage of a residence on
Drew Avenue, 143 citizens of Robert Bartlett’s Estates (the one square mile area
bounded by Old Route 66, County Line Road, 79th Street and the east line of the
Denemark Farm, which is now Burr Ridge Industrial Common) cast their votes on
the question of incorporation. Two days later, the results were official (76
votes for and 67 against) and on October 30, 1956 the incorporation of the
Village of Harvester was confirmed. The new Village had approximately 75 homes
and a population of less than 300.
In August 1961, the territory north of Route 66,
including the 414 acre International Harvester research facility (now the J. I.
Case facility and the Fieldstone, High Grove, Oak Grove and Chestnut Hills
developments), was annexed to the Village. The annexation included the area
known as Burr Ridge Estates, which had been developed into 5 acre tracts in the
early 1950s by the Busby family, whose farm included the ridge along County Line
Road near Plainfield Road that they called “the burr ridge” due to the large
stand of burr oak trees. In August 1962, the name of the community was changed
to Burr Ridge. The burr oak leaf became the Village emblem. Its unofficial
slogan – ‘A Very Special Place’ – was the title of a small book written in 1976
to reflect on the Village’s pride at the time of its 20th Anniversary.
It was a small start for the community which, in 1984,
became the first in DuPage County to provide Lake Michigan water to all its
customers and which would, by 1997, become known as one of the 300 wealthiest
communities in America. With the goal of preserving the hallmark woodlands,
ponds and wetlands, while permitting orderly and balanced low-density growth,
the Village fathers, in the years after incorporation, monitored the
transformation of large tracts of open farmland and woodlands into what would,
by the 2000 Census, become a planned community of approximately 7 square miles,
with 11,259 citizens residing in more than 3,000 homes. Today, Burr Ridge is
generally bounded on the east by Wolf Road, on the north by 55th Street, on the
west by Madison Street (and Route 83 in the southern portion of the Village) and
on the south by approximately 97th Street. Ideally situated at the intersection
of the Tri-State Tollway and the Stevenson Expressway, Burr Ridge offers easy
access to Chicago’s Loop and airports.
The burr oaks still exist in Burr Ridge, along with
fine homes on generous lots and distinguished townhome communities. Local
shopping and high quality office parks have been blended into this natural
setting, attracting those who become both residents and valued members of the
business community. The well-balanced mix of the business and residential
communities has allowed Burr Ridge to maintain a healthy corporate fund and one
of the lowest tax rates in DuPage County.
Burr Ridge truly is ‘A Very Special Place’.
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