(Patty Wetli / WTTW News)
It’s the moment Chicago photographers — professionals and anyone with a phone — look forward to twice a year.
“Chicagohenge” is here.
During the fall and spring equinoxes, the sun rises due east and sets due west, creating an effect dubbed Chicagohenge (in reference to Stonehenge), when the sunset is strikingly framed by the city’s skyscrapers.
The fall equinox, when the sun is directly over the equator, occurs at 1:50 a.m. Saturday.
Because Chicago is laid out in a grid, the city’s east-west streets perfectly frame the equinox sunrise and sunset.
According to the Adler Planetarium, the best time to view Chicagohenge is during sunrise or sunset. Any east-west street will do, but avenues lined with tall buildings will create more dramatic results.
Don’t worry if you miss it. There’s always spring.
It is time.
The #FallEquinox is here which means #Chicagohenge is back! Between 9/20–9/23, look to the skies during sunrise and sunset to see the sun perfectly in line with the east-west facing streets in Chicago! pic.twitter.com/sFUIpgbqiM
— AdlerPlanet (@AdlerPlanet) September 19, 2023
Contact Patty Wetli:@pattywetli| (773) 509-5623 |[email protected]