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You're right, the Orange Line is a great candidate intuitively, but you'd need to seek zoning changes. Any Toronto-esque TOD would probably come as a PD, since the TOD ordinance only applies to C and B zoning, I think -4.5 to -6 FAR. Industrial parcels do not fall into these categories so they'd need aldermanic permission both for the zoning change and the PD.
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Compare that to any site near the 35th/Archer L station (for example), which offers immediate access to a city wide rapid transit rail line, Archer Ave bus, 35th bus, Western bus (hopefully soon to be true BRT) along with local retail, dining, open space and typical amenities all within walking distance. Providing a dense development with near zero parking is much more feasible in such a setting. |
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Can somebody point me to some details? |
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But for most of the city, I feel that even a development such as 1601 would be overkill, and completely necessary. Boosting ridership along the Pink/Orange/Green lines could be as simple as focusing development of dense four to six floor structures either on single, double or corner lots in these underused areas. Going straight to the 'shock and awe' of large development seems counter intuitive... these areas must first be made attractive to the market before drawing in the masses and larger projects. |
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I'm not sure what the obsession is with Toronto TOD is here. Sure, some highrises outside the core our nice, but last I checked those places are largely devoid of humanity and scale. Think Le Corbusier’s The City of Tomorrow and its Planning. Also, not to rag on Toronto, but what area are you thinking of?
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DC's Friendship Heights and Columbia Heights are great models for how tower developments can be inserted into low-scale residential neighborhoods. DC has other good TODs, but most are way out in the suburbs or built on large tracts of vacant land. |
New Jersey has been successfully pushing TOD since the Early 90s to boost Transit Ridership. The Hudson Bergen LRT Network has generated over 16 Billion in TOD since 2000 , and Regional Rail Station TOD has generated close to 10 billion since 1995. Each town has its own plan , its mostly infill with the Railroad towns in the Downtown area , while the Auto - sprawlly suburbs get the huge 1-2 SQ mile TOD's. There are currently 17 TOD projects underway in NJ that connect into a nearby station or stop. With Extensions of the Light Rail and Regional Rail further into the Urbanized Suburbs I can only see more TOD. Their are some Towns jumping the gun , and allowing TOD before the LRT or Rail Extension like Englewood,NJ and Kearny,NJ...there sites currently have bus service.
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Really, I'm not trying to "gotcha", or keep this thread off-track, I just do not think Toronto is a model for good TOD design. Look at the Bloor-Danforth line east of the Don, its been the same density around the stops since the day that line was built and the neighbors fight like heck to keep it that way. (gross generalization) |
^ St Clair at Yonge is a good model for TOD... I've always thought such a center could grow along Ashland by the United Center.
Greg Hinz is reporting that USDOT has revoked the EIS for the Prairie Parkway, and has allowed IDOT to re-purpose some $209 million that was earmarked for the project by cheerleader Dennis Hastert. :banana: Now if we can just kill the Illiana or at least move it northward... Unfortunately the Parkway money will still be spent on sprawl-inducing projects in the lower Fox Valley - river bridges, upgrades to IL-47 and US-34, etc. The Parkway opposition was a flashpoint for the battle against sprawl, but Kane and Kendall will continue to have massive suburban growth, and in lieu of a new expressway it will simply create miles of congestion on local roads. :koko: |
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At Morse, they tore out the glazed-brick walls and columns, ripped up the battered 90-year-old terrazzo floors and threw away all interior furnishings, then replaced them with new glazed brick, new terrazzo and plenty of durable stainless steel or galvanized fixtures. Riders are delighted. We're following it very closely at CTA Station Watch, a crowd-sourced website covering work at 10 North Red stations. So far, very impressive reinvestment, though it must be said that the trains are running like molasses on weekends when two of four tracks are taken out of service and crews are working on three to five stations simultaneously. The good news is that it's fast-track work and the project should be done by mid-winter. |
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Thankfully the Prairie Parkway dies a quiet death
Chciago Trib Link
It's the end of the road for proposed Prairie Parkway With litigation, low funding priority, 'Hastert Highway' loses federal approval By Jon Hilkevitch, Chicago Tribune reporter 9:34 p.m. CDT, August 23, 2012 The $1 billion Prairie Parkway, a proposed highway in the Chicago region's far outer-ring exurbs that lost momentum when former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert left office, was officially declared dead Thursday. The Federal Highway Administration rescinded its approval of the parkway, which would have cut through miles of farmland, after it failed to receive a high funding priority in the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning's "Go to 2040'' land-use and transportation blueprint for the seven-county area....... |
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Interesting tidbit resulting from the weekend track work in the Loop:
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Based on the 2011 numbers the Brown/Orange would make for 25.7mm boardings with a ton of room to grow along the Orange alignment and possible extended hours... not too shabby |
The Brown/Orange combo would be the obvious choice for a third 24-hour line.
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