
Lakewood Three
Condominium Association
22545 - 61 Pleasant Drive
Richton Park, Illinois 60471

Lakewood 3 Condominium Association
Whether you are a new resident or a long-time resident in Lakewood Three Condominiums this site was designed with you in mind.
Lakewood Three Condominiums are located in the beautiful Lakewood Manor subdivision of Richton Park, Illinois. It is set on a beautiful tree-lined street just off of Sauk Trail / Cicero Avenue.
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Built in the 1970's, Lakewood Three Condominiums sit in the center of a five-building consortium. Each building, though very similar in appearance, has its own condominium association, board of directors, and management company. The residents of Lakewood Condo 3 take pride in ownership just as their counterparts in the neighboring single-family homes just accross the street.
IMPORTANT DATES
Jun 1
Village Stickers:
2015-2016 village stickers must be displayed by June 1, 2015. More information availabe at Richton Park Village Hall.
Jul 10
Dryer Vent Cleaning:
ABC company will be on premises on July 10th, 21st, and 30th. Click here for more information.
Aug 1
Fire extinguishers:
If you have not done so already, please send the receipt for the purchase of your fire extinguisher to Celtic Property Management.
IMPORTANT PLACES
VILLAGE HALL
4455 Sauk Trail
Richton Park, IL 60471
(708) 481-8950
RICH TOWNSHIP
22013 Governors Highway
Richton Park, IL 60471
(708) 748-6722
RICHTON PARK POST OFFICE
22332 Governors Hwy, Richton Park, IL 60471
(708) 748-1688
POLICE NON-EMERGENCY
(708) 481-8911
HISTORY OF RICHTON PARK
Richton Park has a proud past. European settlers were living in the area in the early 1800s. The Sauk Trail which was used by the Sauk Indian tribe to move between their settlements and their sacred areas stretched all the way from the Mississippi around the Rock Island area all the way to what is now Ottowa, Canada.
The trail was also used by settlers. When the Illinois Central railroad was built, the intersection of the two became a very busy area, laying the foundation of the beginnings of Richton Park.
Did you know...
When Missouri was a territory and was petitioning to become a state many wagon trains of settlers would go west to Missouri on Sauk Trail to make sure that state entered the Union as a free state and not a state that supported slavery. And many years before the Civil War started, Sauk Trail was part of the underground railroad that secretly transported many slaves to their freedom in Canada.
(Information gathered from richtonpark.org)