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1. I'm not convinced that improving transit will go very far in promoting infill development in many areas of the south side, as mentioned in Chicago's BRT study. Just looking at the fields of grass surrounding south side Green Line L stops pretty much backs up my assumption. I think gangs, violence, and drugs kind of hold most of these areas from redevelopment. Having a fancy BRT route, even one that is well implemented, may certainly improve ridership and connectivity, but I don't see a lot of infill happening until the whole gang/drug thing is solved. That is why I am disappointed to see that so many of the BRT routes are in those areas of the city. 2. Will the city do anything to addess zoning along these BRT routes? If I can still build a strip mall next to a BRT station, then what's the point of all of this investment? I especially am targeting Western Ave, which already has been pockmarked with strip centers, auto dealerships, and large parking lots. |
Laying track down has more of a sense of permanence to it and more likely to attract transit prompted development.
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Plus, the BRT lines have a regional impact. Imagine the benefits that would accrue from a rapid bus connection between Hyde Park and Midway, for example. The South Side contains 2/3 of the city's land area and many strong neighborhoods. Connecting those isolated areas of strength can only benefit the South Side. |
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However if the plans to go down the Canal/Clinton route were set forth then would that essentially put the 222 Riverside tear down out of play or would there still be a push to redevelop the 222 Riverside with through tracks? If it was still in play then I'm a bit confused why there would be the need to also put HSR/regional tracks under Canal Street. |
No well ever runs dry...just an Old Wives Tale!!!
Yep Ardecila...... a terrible prospect looms before us when the money actually used by our omniscient government is finally not borrowed and printed. By the way....the "well" is dried up and empty.....the hacks and incompetents in Washington just haven't got the memo yet. Don't worry.....they'll be just fine but I worry a bit about you and me. We need to be more self sufficient in terms of our needs.......city needs that is.
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I'm envisioning Union Station remaining as the preferred location for intercity and "standard" commuter trains, with the under-Canal tracks reserved for a new class of regional trains running through downtown, like Paris' RER. Such trains would make all local stops out to the 355 ring, while Metra would continue to operate push-pull trains as express service to the outer suburbs.
This is veering into fantasy territory, but later phases of the Chicago RER could connect Millennium, Water Tower, and Clybourn, with the St Charles Air Line seeing some service as well. If you route the lines correctly you can connect every suburban line to every major downtown destination and employment node with at most one transfer. |
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I would add a connection to Ohare to that fantasy list. The ROW exists and is plenty wide. Add Ohare express service on the new thru tracks at CUS and you can have 1/2 hourly service from Millenium; McMk place and CUS direct to Ohare. Along with a short extension of the ppl mover to either the existing transfer station or to a the existing Rosemont Metra Station on Balmoral St and you have some direct O'hare service from the Loop which I venture would be far cheaper and faster to implement than any Blue Line express that involve new track. |
I was only talking about downtown stuff. I'm assuming that there would also be a suburban branch running through O'Hare Central and O'Hare West, or at least to a spiffy new O'Hare Transfer at the current site with a People Mover connection.
Unfortunately the current plans for the long-term parking site are a huge garage with a not-even-half-assed transit connection. Basically the same as Midway, because the city doesn't seem to give a crap about making connections quick and pleasant. |
Instead of BRT, wouldn't it make sense to re-instate express service on Irving Park, Western and Ashland first? (I don't remember which other corridors were cut)
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Why not build a short spur off the NCS line just south of the Rosemont stop and take it under Mannheim Rd and right into the surface parking lot of Terminal 5 next to the ATS station?
That has to be cheaper and more direct than most of the plans put forward. Also in other news apparently the city will open the new Halsted bridge just south of Division on Friday. To celebrate they will immediately close the Halsted bridge north of Chicago until May. Way to go CDOT. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2...-branch-street |
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Closing both at the same time would have created major problems. The other bridge is in terrible disrepair. I can't believe a bridge is allowed to exist in such condition. |
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The other brige is in terrible shape but I trust it more than the Grand Ave. bridge, which I am convinced will just fall into the river one way when I'm walking across it. |
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If one wants to maximize convenience and have x-press to terminal service it would be best to just run the trains into one of the domestic terminals though its so congested there I'm not sure how easy or cost efficient that would be to do. While train to terminal service would be nice I think I lean towards an enclosed super station of sorts where the NCS/x-press and the ATS can meet given that many passengers will make the ATS part of their travel anyway to get to their final terminal. Such a state would also still be able to cater to Metra passengers and perhaps even Amtrak/HSR trains as well. |
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O'Hare express, plus downtown circulator subway loop. Dotted blue stops are local stops only for the circulator. Solid blue are airport express stops. Green dots are transfer to intercity HSR. Other than cost, the biggest problem with this is probably that HSR cars couldn't make most of those turns. http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5052/5...1258020a_z.jpg mine - Click to enlarge. |
Exactly... The deep foundations of the skyscrapers really limit your alignment choices. SF is facing that problem right now trying to design tunnel access into the new Transbay.
This is not to say you couldn't tunnel beneath a skyscraper if you absolutely HAD to, but it's best to avoid it if possible. |
I had occasion to be in Union Station a couple times on the 23rd and 24th to meet family coming into town and predictably the concourse was a disaster.
Luggage carts blocking pedestrian flow? Check 2 of 4 Quick Track ticketing machines broken down? Check People trying to cluster around the tiny ancient displays that show track locations for arrivals and departures? Check. Anonymous boarding lines extending out through the doors of the waiting area an into the ticketing room? Check. LOTS of lost people? Check. Meanwhile in the Great Hall there were a few random people waiting for long distance trains and what looked like a flea market taking up most of the space. Fantastic use of real estate. |
^I can't disagree with you, but how would you ever get people to go into the Great Hall rather than wait as close as possible to their gates?
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After all that is done they can gut much of the concourse and rework it into something useful. At the top of the list would be queuing areas for boarding to keep the lines from stretching all through the waiting/ticket areas which consequently blocks traffic flow. |
I don't understand why they can't just queue on the platforms, or just have open access to the trains and do ticket checks on board with a several-hundred-dollar fee for ticketless riders. European trains have been remarkably terror-free considering how many intercity trains are run every year.
The reason train stations are ideal for a dense urban environment is the simplicity of rail travel, which requires only simple compact facilities. Overly complex security and boarding procedures are cumbersome, expensive, and unnecessary. |
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Amtrak also needs to aggressively roll out more e-ticketing and Quick Track stations. |
^^ Agreed about the machines. Metra should really switch to machines for their downtown terminals, too. A bank of machines would be far cheaper than a handful of ticket-sellers. Then there could be a consolidated ticketing hall with maybe 5 or 6 Amtrak ticket-sellers, one Metra seller, and a bank of machines off to the side for Amtrak and Metra.
If you think about it, there's no reason you couldn't sell all kinds of Metra tickets from a machine. Reduced fares, which require ID, and elderly/disabled persons could continue to use a greatly reduced number of ticket sellers. Metra Electric already works this way. Rather than firing the existing ticket sellers, you could transfer them to stations that are currently unmanned. Jefferson Park comes to mind, or Clybourn, Ravenswood, or Grand/Cicero. |
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^^^ I'm thrilled. This is exactly the kind of policy that chokes the suburbs while not driving businesses out of the metro. There is nowhere they can go to avoid these tolls. They can go all the way out to Rockford and STILL get tolled. So the logical answer is to go downtown where your employees can pay as much as they pay in tolls and avoid gas money by taking the Metra.
Driving's not so appealing when you start having to pay the full cost of it. |
^Tollway drivers have always, by definition, paid the full cost of driving.
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^No more than in the numbers for Metra. It's pretty tricky to allocate externalities or indirect costs to things, but not indirect benefits.
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Of course not, but fuel-tax money obviously goes towards transit programs and CMAQ which reduce emissions in selected areas.
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They have only paid for the full cost of road construction. This ignores the massive subsidies given to the auto industry in Detroit that drove down the price of vehicles in the first place. It also ignores the fact that the government acquired land for the tollways using eminent domain in many cases leading to far lower land acquisition costs than the market would demand. And of course there are the oil industry subsidies on top of all of that and, additionally, 30 years of ethanol subsides that are just now ending. That's not to mention the massive cost of our military adventures to protect the low price of our oil against repeated threats in the past. If we didn't spend half a trillion dollars a year on defense and have troops stationed all over the middle east you can bet that gas prices would have been far far higher over the past 30 years. Just look at the recent Libya conflict which sent prices soaring over just 1.5% of global output or the fact that Iran's unrealistic threat of shutting off the gulf sent prices up $2 a barrel yesterday alone. The price of building the driving surface is only a tiny fraction of the full price we pay for our automobile-industrial complex that controls massive parts of our government. Quote:
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^ I meant to say all that, too. :D
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I don't care much for tollways, but they're the last component of the roadway system you can criticize for being "subsidized." Not only do their users pay the entire cost of constructing, maintaining, and expanding the system, but the ones in urban areas also throw off huge amounts of gas tax revenue to other levels of government and roads. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illinoi...hway_Authority Quote:
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Finally, even if it weren't a load of shit, what you just said would be besides the point. This is second time I've had to point this out to you; this isn't a discussion about who else is guilty of being subsidized, this is about whether or not vehicle owners pay the full cost of driving. Whether or not a plank road or Metra has gotten land through eminent domain is irrelevant because we aren't talking about that. The fact is eminent domain is a form of subsidy and the Tollway has that direct power. Period. End of Debate. You lose this point whether you like it or not no matter how many additional tangential arguments you want to make. |
Oh, and another thing, the fact the the government has a power to collect a gas tax on all gas sold that they use to pay for infrastructure projects is a subsidy in principal as well. No private enterprise has the capability to tax everyone that uses a product in order to provide an additional venue in which consumers may use its product. The government provides this overarching ability to coerce all participants in the market to fund the construction of such a venue. This is nothing more than a mild form of a mandated monopoly which constitutes a subsidy of the entire market as the natural state of the game would mean no participant would be willing to sink so much money into the construction of an asset that is difficult/impossible to control access to and would likely benefit its competitors equally as much as themselves.
And yet another example is the hyper-inflated tax mileage tax write off for businesses supported by the IRS. Of course you are going to drive when you can write off 58.5 cents a mile of your income. If you drive 10,000 miles a year for business that's $5,850 in income you can write off for a savings of at least $1,500 a year. That's about as direct of a subsidy as you'll ever see for anything. Or ANOTHER example. You can write of the purchase of a vehicle "for business use" in its entirety. This means that millions of small business owners a year dodge probably more than a billion dollars worth of taxes by writing off the purchase of their vehicles. This is ANOTHER direct subsidy where the government is literally paying people to drive. Oh and let me mention again the trillions we've spent on overseas adventures over the years to keep our gas prices low. |
Additionally, if I recall the tollway authority received interest subsidy for build america bonds via the ARRA.
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^^^ There you go, that's another excellent example. The government can borrow at far far lower interest rates to construct such projects than a private firm would be able to.
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Sec. 1. Every railroad company heretofore or hereafter organized under the laws of this State . . . shall have power . . . including the power of eminent domain |
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So tell, are tollways subsidized or are they not. You have presented absolutely nothing to refute what I'm saying and have chosen to spend your time trying to change the topic to "but sometimes railroads are subsidized as well". |
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The very heart of eminent domain law is that the fair market value is paid for any property taken, so it should theoretically make little difference whether the transaction is willing-seller or eminent domain. For every landowner complaining that he got too little, there will be another who quietly got more than he would have on the open market. For every farmer who loses five rows of crops because the tollway angled across his acreage, there's another whose land value immediately quintupled due to tollway frontage. As we discussed a few weeks ago, the federal government in 2009 tried to jump-start the bond market by providing modest direct payments to bond-issuing agencies. Since the federal program didn't care if the bonds went to finance roads, buses, dams, or schools, I would consider that a cost of the financial crisis; a subsidy to the financial markets industry rather than the tollways specifically. In 2010 Illinois tollway mileage generated $124 million in fuel excise taxes (plus another $72 million in state sales taxes assuming a price of $3.50 per gallon, and another $10 million or so in local sales taxes). None of that went to the tollway system. More than half of it went for non-road uses. |
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The self-funding nature of our tollway system is awesome, but the downside is that Chicago doesn't get anywhere near our fair share of dollars from Washington. Since our expressway needs are mostly funded locally, we should get an increased share of transit dollars, but the two Federal pots of money aren't fungible despite the fact that both pots ultimately come from the Highway Trust Fund. I'm gonna get some Ron Paul-style eye rolling for this one, but I'm starting to think we should dramatically LOWER the federal fuel tax to a level that funds only interstate maintenance and periodic roadway reconstructions. The interstate highway network has been complete since 1992. Mission accomplished. The rationale for a huge, redistributive transportation funding source is gone. States that want to dramatically expand their suburban expressway networks should pay for it themselves, just like we do, in whatever way they see fit. As a side effect, states could then set their own transportation policies instead of being a slave to the pet policies of road builders and Sunbelt politicians. |
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One could argue, either way, on the extent to which external costs still aren't captured by the users, but in the overall scheme of economic distortions and cross-subsidies in our daily lives (in countless ways beyond merely transportation), that has to be pretty far down the list. |
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Fascinating news from the world of RFPs
CDOT put out an RFP for the Cermak Green Line station. It's great to know the ball is rolling on this. The RFP calls for a "staggered island platform", which I believe is a configuration similar to Loyola. Platform length will be 725 feet and designed for 8-car trains. The grade-level station house will be on the south side of Cermak with auxiliary entrances on the north side of Cermak and the north side of 23rd.
CTA seems dreadfully afraid of structural failure on their steel viaducts. To reduce the loading on the steel, they pitched a staggered side platform design for Morgan until the engineers told them it would be cheaper just to beef up the steel. That just shows that the Cermak configuration is not set in stone. It's good to see CTA noting the need for multiple access points, though. Also, CTA released another RFP for a renovation of all the North Main stations between Jarvis and Lawrence, with the exception of Loyola. Canopies will be cleaned and spruced up, wooden platforms will be replaced with concrete, and all interior spaces will be blown out and reconfigured, with some tenant space being converted to station house space. The brick facades, doors, and windows of the station houses will also be replaced, probably with some sterile Duplo-block crap like the new North/Clybourn. Elevators are not included, but the concrete viaduct will also see structural repairs and new drainage systems. The total budget for this project is only $57 million. CTA wants to start by this April and finish by Fall 2013. Wilson and Loyola will be renovated in separate projects, with Wilson being completely rebuilt for $100 million and Loyola being renovated in partnership with the university. No word on Sheridan, possibly the rattiest station on the North Main. Any project there will have to tackle the curves as well and probably take out a good swath of the neighborhood as the tracks are realigned. |
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