Daily News (Los Angeles)

Chicago's latest attraction? A rat-shaped hole

- By Emily Schmall The New York Times

Winslow Dumaine was heading to a store on Chicago's North Side when he saw it: a hole in the sidewalk on Roscoe Street with an uncanny resemblanc­e to a rodent.

Dumaine, who is an artist and comedian, said the hole represente­d two themes often present in his work: morbidity and whimsy.

“Had to make a pilgrimage to the Chicago Rat Hole,” he wrote in a social media post this month, including a close-up photo of the concrete cutout.

The post, which has since been viewed 5 million times, inspired an untold number of Chicagoans to make their own excursions to a quiet residentia­l area of Roscoe Village, a neighborho­od known for its cozy taverns, independen­t boutiques and oldfashion­ed bakeries.

People have started making offerings to the mysterious, fat-ratsize crevice: candles, coins, flowers, a small tomb with a photo of a rat, and a bag of cinnamon rolls from Ann Sather, a beloved Chicago restaurant chain.

Both online and off, the “Chicago rat hole” became a shared joke in a city that prides itself on its sense of humor; passersby giggle at the miniature memorial, pausing to talk to other visitors and take pictures of themselves at the hole. And in the city that was recently declared the “rattiest” in the United States — deemed to have the worst rat infestatio­n by the pest control company Orkin — for the ninth consecutiv­e year, Chicagoans have reveled in the symbolism.

Even a local politician, state Rep. Ann Williams, got in on the joke.

In a video posted to social media

Wednesday, she touted the attraction­s of the district she represents, including the many bars and restaurant­s, Wrigley Field, “and, of course, the Chicago rat hole,” she said, as the camera panned down to the sidewalk.

At the rat hole Thursday, a toddler in a pink fleece jacket gleefully prodded a small toy mouse that had been placed in its center — the latest offering.

As Dumaine pointed out the tiny claw marks in the concrete, Jenny Morales and her daughter, Janelle, approached, laughing.

“It's not every day you get to see a rat hole,” Jenny Morales said. “It's a cold winter day so I just figured we'd just come see something.”

“Just see the rat hole!” Lora Bothwell, the owner of a nearby day care, interjecte­d in the style of a carnival barker. “I walk kids past here all day every day, and we always talk about `Is it a rat? Is it a squirrel?'”

Personally, Bothwell thinks it's a squirrel: “I don't think a rat would jump and splat like that,” she said.

Dumaine agreed that the shape of the imprint was not, in fact, so ratlike.

“It has the big hips of a squirrel,” he said, “but `Chicago Rat Hole' is just a great band name.”

The hole's origins are unknown but have been debated online, in local media and at the site itself.

 ?? EVAN JENKINS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A person with an ad agency uses a Chicago-style hot dog to make an image for a client's social media of the rat-shaped impression on a Chicago sidewalk that became a viral sensation.
EVAN JENKINS — THE NEW YORK TIMES A person with an ad agency uses a Chicago-style hot dog to make an image for a client's social media of the rat-shaped impression on a Chicago sidewalk that became a viral sensation.

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