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All of you people are welcome to spread your intellect out on the south side if you dare. Speaking is so much easier than carrying on a debate in the internet, don't you agree?? Here's the meeting. Public Open House Scheduled for the Red Line Extension Preferred Alignment CTA is hosting a public open house to provide information on the Preferred Alignment for the Red Line Extension (RLE) Project. At the open house, you will learn more about the Preferred Alignment and anticipated project benefits and impacts. You will also have the opportunity to provide feedback. CTA welcomes your comments and feedback about the Preferred Alignment and potential impacts. Tuesday, February 13, 2018 6:00 - 8:00 PM Gwendolyn Brooks College Preparatory Academy Main Gym (west side of building) 250 E. 111th. Street, Chicago, IL 60628 *Please enter through Door 8. Parking available in rear of building. Parking lot entrance via King Drive.This location is served by CTA Bus #111, 4, 34, 111A, 115, and 119; and Metra Electric 111th Street (Pullman) Station. The facility is accessible to people with disabilities. Peace! |
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Why do you think it's good policy for CTA to extend the Red Line and run eight-car trains on eight-minute headways through an area with such low population and even lower ridership potential? Fewer than 20,000 people live within a half-mile walk of all four new RLE stations combined. I find it hard to imagine that boardings will even cover the station agents' salaries. Quote:
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Peace. DH |
^ Not sure what you mean by "they". It's pretty clear that Rahm is slow-rolling the project until it is politically convenient to give it the chop.
If this were truly a priority for the administration, they would be knocking on doors in Washington and hiring lobbyists to get the dang thing approved and funded. They would be providing CTA with the money they need to continue planning, land acquisition, and early engineering work. Instead, CTA has a trickle of funding to do this work and the periodic announcements of "progress" are just for show. CTA and the Mayor's Office are all too happy to pin the blame on dysfunction in Washington, but that's not the real holdup. Plus, there's the big new station at 95th which has gotten far more hoopla from the Mayor's Office. The stated purpose of the 95th St project is to ease bus congestion and improve conditions at the terminal. But if the Red Line is going to be extended, and bus passengers will be making their connections at 103rd, 111th, and 115th, then why invest all that money adding new bus bays at 95th? I'm guessing the Mayor will schedule a grand opening for the 95th St station in the months leading up to the election. Assuming he is re-elected, the Red Line Extension plans will be quietly shelved, just like all the other big CTA proposals were. Maybe another big new project will take its place in the planning queue, maybe not. |
a quick CTA question.
after spending nearly all of my life as a regular red line rider, our recent move to lincoln square has turned me into a regular brown line rider for the first time. why does the CTA route some brown line trains through the loop and onto the orange line tracks down to midway? and how long has this been going on? |
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Perhaps it could be coupled with a short one-station extension that would put a station directly at Chicago State University (with the potential for a transfer to the Metra Electric eventually). Of course, the future of that institution is also very much in doubt, but perhaps better access would enable it to draw a larger and stronger student body. |
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DH |
25 Years of Color-Coded Lines on the CTA
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Just thinking out loud here, but with the massive boom in the West Loop, access to that area from the north side isn't particularly good without transferring. I'm wondering whether it makes sense to reroute the purple line rush hour service from the Loop? Instead of having it make the left turn onto the Loop for a clockwise route, instead turn trains westward along the Lake Street elevated to perhaps Ashland or wherever trains could be turned back? If purple line express riders want to reach the Loop, they can transfer to a brown line train or red line train at Belmont. Otherwise this option would give north side riders a one seat ride to the expanding employment market in the West Loop during the morning & afternoon rush periods.
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https://www.chicago-l.org/operations...s/tower18r.jpg |
That's a lot of money and trouble just to avoid some (pretty easy) transfers. Purple-to-Green is just up and over to the other platform at Clark/Lake. Brown-to-Pink is just under and over to the other platform at Washington/Wells. Purple-to-Pink is same platform anywhere on the Loop.
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The City really does need to get serious about the Larrabe-Clinton subway sooner rather than later. It's been talked about for 50 years (at least similar plans have been), and it's finally at a point where it's becoming a "need" rather than a "nice-to-have." If the CTA planned well, it could at least start it after the RPM is complete and then either run the Purple all day through Clinton, or switch Purple to Clinton and run Red through Clinton.
In the longer planning, having it touch base in Chinatown and then swing west to Halstead as a subway through Bridgeport, then east at Pershing to the south Lakefront would accomplish a lot as a long-tern plan (completion circa 2040?). |
Are there any plans to building a flyover at tower 18 for the brownline there? It could really use it in the morning rush hours!
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