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The city plans to spend $2 billion+ on the red line extension to the far south side nether region. The Morgan cta station cost $40 million. So do the math on how many additional stations could be added to dense neighborhoods
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Also remember that the city limits carry on much further to the south than they do North. Howard is only 7600 North, the 95/Dan Ryan station is 20 blocks further South than Howard is North. Davis is roughly where 95/Dan Ryan is relative to downtown. The Red Line Extension is a total waste of money. It would be much more practical to reopen closed Oak Park Blue Line stations, Pink Line Stations, and Green Line stops. Literally the California station is just sitting there rusting away in the middle of the Eisenhower. Hell for $2 billion we could probably have connected the Brown Line to the Blue Line along Ashland. At least get Sterling Bay to match the $2 billion to make LY not a transit desert. |
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This is the kind of subliminally racist view that continues to plague Chicago and has led to rising crime rates pretty much all over the city. When you view whole swaths of people as "non-existent" inevitably there will be pushback and frustration which results in rising crime... bringing all of Chicago down. When will this city ever learn that we are all connected. That disinvestment, red-lining and isolation of whole areas.... will be felt in other areas. . |
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Aaron (Glowrock) |
There's also this thing called induced demand. Build it and they will come.
Of course, there are already a lot of people there that would benefit from the extension. |
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Not to say that getting consultants from Lincoln Park to O’Hare isn’t important, just doesn’t seem like a priority when the Red Line stops 6 miles before the city ends. |
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Most of us know about the TOD parking reduction, the other ones are: -reuse of City Landmark or otherwise historic building -change of use for old building (>50 years) that is otherwise not historic -underground parking, for D zones only -efficiency units less than 800sf -minimal parking (i.e. if the total parking spaces needed are below a certain threshold, you don't need to provide it at all) In Sterling Bay's case, they could have done underground parking and reduced their requirement from 680 spaces down to 340. But underground parking is expensive, and even a 340 space underground garage is massively costly to build given Chicago's soft soils and high water table. Or they could have agreed to do only small apartments, but then they probably can't get the rents they need to make the project pencil. |
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This might enlighten the conversation: https://chicagoflaneur.com/2016/06/2...ty-in-chicago/ |
That’s a great blog post and it bears reposting every so often. But Roseland and West Pullman score low both in terms of unit density and people density, so I’m not sure anything in that blog post supports the case for the Red Line extension.
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Maybe you are right, we need to extend Metra to Oskosh or you are calling MY relatives "no one"! Quote:
https://chicagoflaneurcom.files.word...ensitymap4.png It's a fact, no one lives there relative to just about anywhere else in the city. It would be far more useful to extend the blue line to Woodfield or Oakbrook than serving a bunch of SFHs 15 miles from downtown. Notice how much more dense the Howard Redline is than the last four or five stops on the Dan Ryan. |
Pretty sure you could just Uber every potential new rider for a century and still spend less than $2b.
It's actually hard to come up with a worse way to spend transit dollars in the city. |
Residential density may be less useful as a way of evaluating transit need these days.
Dense areas tend to have higher incomes and people who are willing to pay for parking, work from home now or could in the future, and who make heavy use of delivery services and ridesharing to make trips that 10 years ago would be in transit. In Dallas, rail adjacent TOD has not increased ridership while the most demand is in less dense low income areas. The people who use transit are getting on buses in aging 1960s era sprawlburbs, and transferring to a train to go to the downtown community college campus (that’s going to close eventually) or to another bus to some McDonald’s to start their shift. The white collar transit rider went the way of cat videos, bacon mayo, hipster glasses and 1337. Chicago is obviously different but trends like this tend to converge in time. |
Lol..... the 95th Street Red Line stop had 2.8+ million paid station entries in 2019 and over 3 million in 2018. That was more than the Addison Red Line stop had, next to Wrigley Field, in the same years and also more than Clark/Division. Idk - someone want to explain how the 95th street station has more paid station in a year than the stop right next to Wrigley Field and some downtown?
Just a look at the most boarded stations in 2019 in the entirety of Chicago: Lake: 6,450,839 Clark/Lake Brown/Orange/Pink/Purple: 5,830,767 Chicago Red Line: 4,501,851 Washington Blue Line:, 4,176,948 O'Hare Blue Line: 3,811,167 State/Lake Brown/Orange/Pink/Purple Line: 3,783,187 Grand Red Line: 3,780,031 Belmont Red/Brown/Purple Line: 3,745,165 Fullerton: 3,719,544 Roosevelt: 3,466,910 Washington/Wabash: 3,126,070 Monroe Red Line: 2,900,809 95th St Red Line: 2,818,826 Jackson: 2,601,587 Addison Red Line: 2,597,371 Midway Orange Line: 2,477,340 Clark/Division Red Line: 2,452,981 Logan Square Blue Line: 2,261,714 Merchandise Mart: 2,237,817 Washington/Wells: 2,214,522 Quincy/Wells: 2,188,354 Adams/Wabash: 2,087,483 Wilson Red Line: 2,043,387 Damen Blue Line: 2,023,150 Chicago Brown Line: 1,993,375 79th St Red Line: 1,975,866 Jefferson Park Blue Line: 1,896,402 North/Clybourn Red Line: 1,780,616 Division Blue Line: 1,735,843 UIC-Halsted Blue Line:, 1,729,039 California Blue Line: 1,702,462 Diversey Brown Line: 1,651,007 Western Blue Line: 1,649,428 Pulaski Orange Line: 1,465,594 Chinatown Red Line: 1,456,259 69th St Red Line: 1,423,925 Sox-35th Red Line: 1,391,119 Clinton Green/Pink Line: 1,271,865 Western Brown Line:, 1,258,060 Armitage Brown Line: 1,243,651 87th St Red Line: 1,186,724 Sedgwick Brown Line: 1,160,257 Morgan Green/Pink Line: 1,105,090 Harlem Green Line: 1,101,813 Southport Brown Line: 1,084,936 Harold Washington Library: 1,077,009 Polk Pink Line: 869,191 Just the 79th, 87th, and 95th St Red Line stops combined in 2019 saw 5,981,416 paid boardings. That is more than 1 million more boardings than the entire Pink Line between Polk and 54th/Cermak saw in the same year. That is also 367,812 more boardings than Logan Square, California, and Western stops combined saw in the same year. For "nobody living down there" that's quite a bit of demand even relative to other parts of the city for the last 3 stops of the red line. They must be coming from somewhere, especially given the fact that the 95th line stop has around 3 million boardings per year but the next 2 stops (87th and 79th) each have over 1 million with 79th having nearly 2 million. So where are they coming from if 87th and 79th are also busy? The fact is that yes people live down there and there's some people who are actually more reliant on public transit to get around than others. You have to realize this is actually an investment for the overall city considering the fact that a lot of the people who are working downtown jobs whether doorman jobs or at restaurants may be coming from areas on the south side with adequate public transit. Extending it south in areas gives people better access to this and perhaps may even ease up companies being able to find people for work in other parts of the city. Kind of hard to take a job when you don't have a car and it's not worth it taking 4 buses just to get to your not-so-high paying job. Interesting too when you look at where people in these communities work - just take some of the areas that may make up the downtown area and others outside of their neighborhood along or near the red line: * Roseland: The Loop, Near North+West, and Hyde Park = 34.9% of workers * Pullman: The Loop, Near North+West, and Hyde Park = 34.1% of workers * West Pullman: The Loop and Near North+West+South = 31.9% of workers They only list the top 5 so I'm sure it's much more. Also consider the fact that this type of development could actually spur on new development around those stations and for down there, I wouldn't doubt it at all. |
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