![]() |
Quote:
You will need to write a letter to Lyle Lanley and ask him. He may have a difference of opinion to others on this forum. One of the reasons some here may think it's impossible is due to the opossums that hang out in the closets of monorails. |
I call the big one Bitey.
|
Quote:
About the only good argument is that the airport is a better regional station, with plenty of parking for Chicago-bound passengers, and it's better for them to park at the airport instead of downtown South Bend. The airport stop is also convenient to the US-31/US-20 freeways which link up to Elkhart/Mishawaka, Goshen, etc. Unfortunately, it does nothing to encourage TOD or walkable development. I will note the #4 bus connects downtown to the airport and runs every 30 minutes (hourly on weekends). It wouldn't be too hard to set up a timed transfer with proper signage, bus shelters, etc. Another route is probably needed to connect South Shore to the Notre Dame campus, they already run seasonal service for football games. |
Quote:
Neither Detroit nor Miami has a monorail. |
I've only ridden 3 monorails systems in the US, and only one of them even vaguely resembles an urban mass transit system.
Las Vegas- a 4 mile line with 7 stops. Seattle - a 1 mile 2-stop shuttle Disney World - an amusement park ride. |
Mr. Chicago here,
Fact check: oh yes they do. In Detroit it is called The People Mover and while it runs only from to building to building, the principle, if you will, is the same. Also there is a similar system in Miami. As for the disconnect a monorail system or even light rail may physically have from the rest of the CTA - well- that is the whole point. Let me give an anecdote from locally here in NJ: the ACELA is our answer to the Shinkosan, however, the train never goes faster than 60 mph, Why? The tracks cannot support a train at 150mph. The Chicago system is old much like the NY system, Do not combine the good with bad. The gem of idea is the bid from some enterprise who would want to build, run and maintain the system using the bid money held in trust by the city for any repairs, Tax money to follow. The same financing can follow light rail. There are no possums, raccoons or squirrels here. This is serious business and if Chicago is hold its honored position as a leading business city then the city itself has to become an on-going concern that is worth the investment |
Quote:
The Miami Metromover is successful because it connects their subway system to downtown, as the subway goes around downtown. Chicago has a good subway system in the central city already; a people mover would be for show. |
Lets keep talking about Clybourn and Elston :D
A subway line running under the entirety of Clybourn has been long justified. Also feel the bike lanes should be improved upon and extended northward towards Belmont. I think the natural center of gravity for the north branch is probably North & Clybourn. There's already a ton of foot traffic and it's largely box stores & surface/garage parking. Could easily be more than it is today. Fullerton & Clybourn could also evolve into something similar / secondary node with some major infrastructure improvements (ideally road diets for both Ashland and Fullerton). I think Elston is one of the few streets in the city that could, not without significant headache, go mostly car-free entirely south of Cortland. 90/94, which is the reason Elston sucks so much, is literally right there and traffic is already fairly light in my experience. It would take a bit of time for its use to change into something more destination/entertainment oriented, but it could happen with the right plan in place. |
Quote:
|
How about a new line going from the Blue Line @ Jefferson Park to the Brown Line @ Kimball, continuing along Clybourn to the Red Line @ North/Clybourn, turning south along Halsted to the Blue Line @ Grand, connection to Green and Pink @ Morgan and further on to Orange Line @ Halstead.
Trains could be run from O'Hare to Midway, connecting to every other main CTA line in between and all of the "hot spots" for development in the city. Maybe $20 billion? ~13 miles of subway track + 15 or so stations. An alternative option would turn east from a station at ~18th/Halsted or Roosevelt/Halsted towards a terminus at McCormick Place/Museum Campus (One Central?) instead of going along the Orange to Midway. |
If we're daydreaming about new rapid transit, how about starting a bit smaller, with a 2.5 mile branch off of the Red Line under Clybourn with stops at Cortland, Fullerton, Diversey, and Belmont.
That'd give us stations at every major cross street for bus connections (both east-west and north-south), with a nice fast 2/3 mile spacing between stations just like the Blue Line. And there'd be no walk-shed overlap with any other lines at any station except Cortland (which would be 1/3mi from Armitage, so even there the overlap isn't too bad). This line would be servicing an area without current rapid transit that includes a one of a kind natural resource (the river) that seems destined for massive redevelopment over the coming decades. And it'd be a simple straight shot entirely under the road, so in my dream we could build it cut-and-cover, for a quarter billion per mile, plus another quarter billion per station. Adding that up we could have a new line with 4 new stations in a very strategically important area for under $2B. That's the cost of one large skyscraper; Lincoln yards alone is supposed to cost $6B and it's only a fraction of the land along the river that is likely to find higher and better use over the coming decades. |
Solid
|
I don't love the idea of adding more branches. Think about it; there are limited slots in the State St subway, so every train that goes to the Clybourn branch is a train that can't go to Howard - and the section from North/Clybourn to Howard is the busiest part of the whole CTA system! During nights and weekends when frequency is already low, a branching design makes it twice as bad.
The other option is to run the Clybourn branch like a shuttle, and force riders to transfer to/from the Red Line. But that requires an elaborate/complex station design at the transfer point; you don't want the shuttle train on the same tracks as the main line. I've seen some ideas to do this on the Green Line - all Green Line trains would then run to 63/Ashland, and the Cottage Grove trains would run as a shuttle to Garfield. |
Quote:
But on the other hand, while I'm not a rail expert, I'm skeptical that the State Street subway is an unsolvable bottleneck. Maybe some aspect of current equipment or procedures limits headways to the 5 minutes between trains that is the current maximum rate on the Red Line schedule. But other rapid transit systems have tighter schedules. For instance the MTA's 7 train has some runs scheduled within 2min of each other, and I see people online saying their headways are limited at 90 seconds. If the Red Line could match those 90s headways, we'd more than triple capacity; and if we went from 8 car trains to 10 car trains as well we'd have more than quadruple the current capacity. |
Quote:
The Detroit People Mover is a better transportation project than pretty much any streetcar, and most light rail lines in the US. Unlike streetcars, it's a circulator that actually does a good job of circulating people, coming every few minutes with very high reliability, fairly high speed, and surprisingly high capacity. It does this at a reasonable cost (lower operating costs, per mile and per hour, than, for example, both Seattle's streetcar and light rail). And unlike streetcars and light rail, it provides service that could not be provided cheaper and better just by using buses instead. Is the service it provides more valuable than the costs? It easily is, even only considering its function as a parking shuttle. It makes the use of the downtown parking supply more efficient, since people can park anywhere downtown regardless of where their destination is. It would cost hundreds of millions of dollars and a lot of land to build enough parking garages in each individual area of downtown. Then there's the value it brings by connecting the various hotels throughout downtown to the convention center, and the value of people just being able to get around more conveniently in general. Quote:
|
Quote:
Per mile and per hour cost hardly matter. A non-operating system costs $0 per mile, but it's not useful. I suppose a better question (to be answered in another thread) is: if you redirected that $12 million to buses, what ridership results would you get? Anyways, I'm not Chicagoan, but the Loop exists and I don't see a transportation need for a PRT. |
The Chicago circulator pitched in the 90s was always a light rail/tram proposal not some PRT goofyness. I even remember seeing the logo for it that looked a bit like a Bilbao tram.
|
Quote:
If the People Mover's money was redirected to the buses, you could either increase frequency across the bus network by about 10%, or you could add one additional major bus route (15 minute headways 24/7). Since the People Mover is already the 5th highest ridership route in the city, and since the potential bus routes with high ridership already have routes on them, it's almost certain that redirecting the People Mover's money to buses would result in lower overall ridership. It could be argued that the People Mover's trips are lower value, but people riding it are either downtown workers using it as part of their commute, or visitors taking it to go someplace to spend money. And again, if you shut down the People Mover, hundreds of millions of dollars would have to be spent building parking garages, and I'm not exaggerating with that number. The NE corner of downtown has a football stadium, baseball stadium, and several large concert venues. The SW corner, over a mile away, has a convention center. In between there's offices, hotels, etc. and with more parking. Nowhere individually has enough parking within walking distance, the parking throughout downtown is shared via the People Mover. Does a people mover make sense for Chicago? The idea of using a people mover to connect Goose Island and the upcoming new casino to L lines makes sense. It could go from Lincoln Park to Goose Island to West Loop, and not only hit a fair number of destinations, but also relieve congestion on the loop, since people could use it to transfer between L lines without entering the loop. Or a people mover that started in Chinatown, connected the various McCormick Place buildings together, and then ended at Alder Planetarium. It would connect a bunch of parallel transit lines with a bunch of major destinations. Really, anywhere where you have a cluster of poorly connected destinations, where you don't need the length or the capacity of a full metro line (which Chicago needs several more of!), but where you want something better than buses, shuttles, and rideshare. |
Mr. Chicago here,
I might be imagining this idea but I believe back in the days of Rahm there was some kind of transportation improvement fund established. I seem to recall the amount of 7 billon dollars may be in that fund. What ever happened to that fund if it ever existed? |
I think you're referring to the $7 billion "Building a Better Chicago". It was for infrastructure in general, not specific to transportation. The transportation investments focused on stuff like renovating CTA stations and constructing the 606 trail. The only one that wasn't completed was a full BRT treatment for Jeffery Blvd.
https://news.wttw.com/2012/03/29/ema...structure-plan |
Quote:
I don't how this would work with dekalb county not being part of RTA territory, but with a lot of Chicagoland kids attending northern, it seems like a smart idea. |
If UP-W gets extended to DeKalb then ME gets extended to Kankakee/Bourbonnais. It's only fair.
|
I'm torn on this stuff... service to NIU is nice but I don't see how this doesn't turn into a sprawl generator. Metra expansions are tailor made for sprawl growth - big stations, big parking lots, far from existing town centers or walkable areas. They actively avoid placing stations "in town" - they know most of their ridership will drive to the stations, and it's hard to find parking for everyone in town without building expensive garages.
UP-W is also one of the country's busiest freight corridors. UP will demand a costly third track all the way out to DeKalb, like they did for Elburn. |
Quote:
|
Those stations have been around for 100 years or more... i'm referring to Metra's outward expansions and suburban infill stops, which are entirely about huge parking lots. The UP-W extension to Elburn, the SWS extension to Manhattan, etc are all planned around huge parking lots in the middle of cornfields. Other proposed extensions like BNSF to Plano, UP-NW to Johnsburg, SES, etc have the same problem but at least they haven't been built yet.
It seems Metra refuses to expand the system in a way that encourages walkable urban development, and if they can't do that, why bother spending scarce dollars that are reserved for public transit? |
^ good points ardecila.
if metra won't re-use the existing train station in town, and we instead end up with a new stop in a cornfield on the edge of dekalb surrounded by a 10 acre park n' ride lot (a la manhattan and elburn), then this whole idea is stupid. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
BTW, is there potential for Dekalb to have an arrangement with Metra that's similar to Kenosha? Kenosha County isn't one of the 6 member counties for Metra but has some type of special arrangement for service. Is that a possible avenue for Dekalb County to gain Metra service in Dekalb?
|
A good compromise might be to re-use the existing downtown station and then do a 2nd station west of town that is more of a park-and-ride. The western station would be more convenient to Huskie Stadium and NIU's highrise dorms. Then 2 more stations in Cortland and Maple Park. The Elburn station kinda sucks, but there is at least a pedestrian connection to the town's street grid.
I understand the necessity of park and rides, but it's unacceptable for the train to entirely bypass town centers. Quote:
|
Why couldn't DeKalb County join the 6 county members as the 7th member and fund Metra as they do with a quarter percentage sales tax? Granted, it would only be 1 station to service the county, but it would be a start. Perhaps compromise and add 1 station between Elburn and DeKalb, at Maple Park perhaps?
If that is unpalatable to voters in DeKalb County, then I'm sure something could be worked out ala Kenosha County as some posters have mentioned. I also agree with above posts that the station should be located in the center of DeKalb. Repurposing the old train station should be a priority. If that's not possible, a new station with an emphasis on an urban format should be built. |
Quote:
. . . |
Ridership numbers from the recent Metra board meeting. MED and UP-N's numbers look incredible! Wouldn't be surprised if they're one of the best performing commuter rail line's in the country.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FmzUNgiX...pg&name=medium https://docs.google.com/gview?url=ht...&embedded=true |
Weekend numbers look pretty good too on most lines. It's probably going to be a while before we get back to 2019 numbers. I suspect most people will commute a couple days a week moving forward as opposed to 4/5 days to the office in the city.
|
So.... I was lucky enough to get to ride these bad boys on my way home tonight on the Blue Line....
https://www.transitchicago.com/cta-i...duled-service/ And Wow...... For a few minutes, I almost felt like I was on a train in a different city. They are amazingly bright inside, video screens, much better use of space, and smoother on the rails. There really isn't anything newsworthy to my post... Other than if you see one amongst older cars - Go take that one. I wish every CTA rail car was like this! |
Quote:
That said both times I took it we stopped and had long delays at stations and in the tunnel and also moved much slower than normal. The next train in front of us was 17-20 minutes ahead both times (because the Blue Line is a DISASTER these days) so it wasn't signal related. |
Quote:
|
The US Department of Transportation announced the MEGA Grant awards for FY 2023, and $117,000,000 was awarded for the Metra-UP North rebuild between Fullerton and Addison.
The CTA Blue Line Forest Park Branch rebuild and the Chicago Gateway Project (which included the St. Charles Air Line Connector) were shut out. In downstate Illinois, a request for the 10th Street Rail Corridor through Springfield was turned down for a MEGA Grant, but will be awarded an INFRA Grant instead. Award amount has yet to be disclosed but $78 million was the initial ask. Link to the 2023 MEGA Grant Award Fact Sheet. |
Quote:
|
Yes, but the MEGA was not specifically a rail program. There are several other big pots of money reserved for rail that Amtrak could go for, and there are further rounds of MEGA grant funding in FY23, FY24, FY25 so this won't be Amtrak's only bite at the apple for Chicago Gateway.
Still, I am very surprised that we didn't get a grant considering the regional support lined up behind it. It seems like most of the awards went to projects that have been in the works already for years, not to newer/more transformative ideas. |
Wish this would include the bridges at the Clyborn station. Would be nice to fix that part over Ashland.
|
Quote:
|
Metra and NICTD gave a presentation at Northwestern's Sandhouse Rail Group. There were a lot of interesting info, such as Metra moving to a regional rail model where there's frequent service throughout the day.
The one that caught my attention is that the CTA is exploring a combined station with Metra as a part of the Red Line Extension. Metra's CEO didn't recall where the RLE crosses over Metra and said 103rd St. He specifically said the station would be built over Metra's catenary wires, so it would HAVE to be the MED at 119th St. A transfer station between the Red Line and MED would be amazing, and one of the few direct transfers in Chicago. NICTD's CEO also hints at possible connections between the SSL and RLE at 130th St. Metra is also looking into Proof-of-payment and fare integration with CTA & Pace, once they install their new ticket machines. Video (1:48:35): https://metrarr.granicus.com/MediaPl...=5&clip_id=829 Fares (page 6): https://metra.com/sites/default/file...ile/index.html |
Good news but I'll just throw it out there how depressing it is the mention of potential interagency transfer points and integration is met with surprise at all - or that others like SSL @ 130th is still just "possible" when "of course" should by the ONLY reasonable expectation. BTW this still doesn't make RLE a good project.
*Debbie Downer horn* |
I'd wager a guess that a good chunk of people commenting on Chicago transit on an online forum are also familiar with the bullet point transit issues of other major cities. Yes the KOP extension is likely the worst transit project currently in the country - made more preposterous by the multitude of other more worthwhile expansion and modernization needs in the Septa network.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I was surprised to hear no mention of O'Hare service, and no mention of A-2 replacement, which were the two big topics last time Sandhouse was invited by Metra. |
Quote:
Maybe they could make provisions to add it as a future infill station, but this is all utterly insane to build a 2nd intermodal station 3 blocks south of Kensington. If they really wanted an intermodal station they should have just routed the RLE to Kensington with a short el over 115th or a short cut/cover subway. |
Metra faces delay in plan for battery conversion of F40s
Commuter operator will issue new Request for Proposals after failing to reach agreement with Progress Rail https://www.trains.com/trn/news-revi...rsion-of-f40s/ May this search turn out like the one for gallery cars. If they really want to do this buy Euro BEMUs. |
Quote:
What more could you want from them? The town is so tiny that everything is a 15 minute walk or less from the station. https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/m...compressed.pdf |
All times are GMT. The time now is 4:54 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.