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In the 90s they ripped out over a mile of the green line in Woodlawn with the bizarre idea that it would help the area's development. It actually killed a lot of the ridership on the line as a whole because it made transfers much more difficult. As anyone who's been around there can see, it's been less than a success.
Something that also makes a big difference in ridership is that the southern portion of the red line and both outer parts of the blue line were rebuilt in highway medians in the 50s and 60s, putting them in a kind of dead zone when it comes to transit oriented development. I've been thinking recently of ways these stations could be retrofitted a bit to make them more appealing to pedestrians. Platform screen doors could block out a lot of the wind and noise that make them so uncomfortable, as well as allow them to be heated in the winter. If some kind of enclosed hallways could be built that would allow people to walk to the stations without feeling that they're on top of a busy highways overpass that might help too. These seem like reasonably cost effective solutions that could bring in more riders and propel some nearby development. On the blue line at least, many of those stations are more than due for an overhaul. |
^^^Wholeheartedly agree about the highway median L stops......not a solution to spur local transit use it seems....more a foreboding excercise in how not to make a system usable
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mid 1970's video ride on the CTA Redline from North/Clybourn to Howard. I am wondering why after Belmont the Redline train goes to the outside track where the Purple Line Express of today is.
Brown Line Loop to Paulina Purple Line Evanston to Wilson and what! A CTA train faster than Metra! Polk to Jefferson Park Blue Line. Trains were only two cars long, wow. But on all the videos those trains sure seemed to move along well Part 1: From Sox/35th Redline towards the Loop and to Ashland. it doesn't go underground?? It stays elevated much like I think the Orange Line does when approaching the Loop today. the train loops through the Loop and after Clark/Lake goes directly west where the Green Line does today. Part 2: Ashland to Harlem/Lake and back to downtown. 95th st to downtown. Again different route than today it appears Jackson Park/63rd st to the Loop. This line no linger exists I assume |
Before 1993, the Green Line ran Oak Park-95th and the Red Line ran Howard-63rd/Jackson Park. They switched in 1993 after a short subway connector was built between Cermak/Chinatown and Roosevelt.
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An Open Letter to Gabe Klein (soon-to-be former director of the DC Department of Transportation)
Elevating Chicago Ted Rosenbaum on 12.08.10 at 9:59 PM Quote:
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Addison used to be a side-platform station before being rebuilt as an island platform int he 1990s --- so North-South B trains would switch the outside tracks to serve Addison, then switch back to the inner tracks. This was the result of how the Northwestern Elevated was first built and operated (inner express tracks, outer local tracks), and Addison was a "local" stop. Looks like there was also some track or station work farther up the North Main when the video was shot, too. |
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Great idea courting Gabe Klein for the CDOT or CTA - he's worked wonders in DC. He's a real visionary in trasnport and thoroughly understands urbanism - something that I'm not sure can be said about any local transport agency. He's really on par with leadership you'd find in progressive European cities and is exactly who I'd like to see at the helm in Chicago.
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If I were king of the world (or Chicago transit anyway), what I'd propose is creating a McCormick Place-Streeterville subway that then followed Clark to Armitage, then west and jogging back south to meet the Bloomingdale embankment. If built in conjunction with the proposed Circle Line subway near Ashland, it would greatly enhance transportation between Humbolt Park and Lincoln Park and everything in between. Below is a map where the new yellowish markings are how I'd use the Bloomingdale ROW. The Orange Markings are other officially proposed (or at least mentioned in official documents) extensions or lines. Map by CTA. Edits by myself. http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5248/...7421e0c93e.jpg |
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It you don't have a place to park your car, you're effectively forced to take public transportation, whether it suits your particular needs at the time or not. |
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Nonetheless, another way to use that would be to electrify that Metra Line and run the Metra Electric lines north through a subway to Streeterville and along the same alignment. Could be a northern extension of Mike Payne's Gray Line proposal. |
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My one criticism is I just have a fantasy of essentially a city long subway at Western running from asbury all the way south to at least 63rd where it would tie in with a green line extension or perhaps even have that tie in and continue it south to loop into the the redline extension to 130th |
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I have never been able to find an estimate of how much a Western subway would cost? |
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Alternately, you could build a glass partition down the middle of the platform (glass for security reasons). Passengers would just stand on the leeward side of the wall from the wind until the train comes, at which point they could go through one of several portals in the wall. Next-train signs would eliminate the need to peer down the tracks. I'm used to Cumberland, where most people wait in the stationhouse (but inside the faregates) during poor weather, and when they see the train approaching, they head down the stairs/escalator to the platform. The transparency of those stationhouses leaves that open as a possibility, unlike more closed-off stations on the elevated lines or in the subways. |
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Clinton Street Subway: from Division to 18th Street Approximately 3.5 miles of subway: $1.4 billion Maybe 5 individual stations: $500 million One long platform between Ogilvie and Union stations: $200 million 1 1/2 complex integrations with Blue Line: $300 million TOTAL: $2.4 billion Circle Line: Elevated connection to Orange, Subway to Red Approximately 1.5 miles elevated (to Orange): $150 million 1 new elevated station constructed with structure: $25 million Approximate 3 miles subway (to Red): $1.2 billion Maybe 4 individual subway stations: $400 million 1 complex integration with Red Line: $200 million TOTAL: $1.975 billion Brown Line to Blue Line Approximately 1.8 (Montrose) - 2.2 (Lawrence) miles subway: $720 million to $880 million OR 2 miles elevated (alley just south of Lawrence): $200 million Maybe 2 individual subway stations: $200 million OR 2 elevated stations: $50 million 1 complex integration with Blue Line: $200 million OR complex elevated integration: $100 million TOTAL: $350 million to $1.28 billion Mid-City Transitway (along Cicero) Approximately 11.5 miles elevated/existing embankment mix: $1.1 billion Maybe 18 elevated stations: $450 million 1 complex integration with Blue Line: $200 million TOTAL: $1.75 billion Bloomingdale/Streeterville/McCormick Approximately 3.8 miles rehab embankment (Bloomingdale) + extension: $380 million Maybe 8 embankment/elevated stations: $200 million Approximately 5.5 miles subway: $2.2 billion Maybe 12 subway stations: $1.2 billion Highrise proximity/nimby extra cost: $500 million 2.5 miles at-grade: $125 million Metra conflicts engineering fixes: $150 million Maybe 4 at-grade/below-grade stations: $160 million TOTAL: $4.915 billion ALL PROJECTS HIGHEST TOTAL: $12.32 billion Putting this into perspective, this is less than the cost of New York's Second Ave Subway, and less than Boston's Big Dig, and about three times what LA will spend on one single extension of the Wilshire subway from downtown to UCLA. It's also less than the cost of expanding O'Hare. Quote:
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Additionally, if you really really want a line further west a second new N/S line could be built along the already existent North Branch of the river. This would be a simple ROW for a brand new line and would require very little emminant domain. In fact one could feasibly run the tracks low enough near the river that all the existing bridges would be overpasses and the noise/unsightliness of an elevated structure would be eliminated in favor of an all "ground level" set of tracks. Such a line could potentially begin at purple line terminus in Wilmette and share a transfer with the Yellow Line at McCormick and Howard and the Brown Line at Francisco. This would serve parts of the city that are currently transit deserts. Might get some pushback from park advocates, but the river itself is fenced of from the parks along it for the vast majority of its length because its a hazardous, polluted, channel that no one really wants to get near. |
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http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2764/...6628af19_z.jpg Wuppertal Schwebebahn, photo mine |
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So sexy!!! I am going to build that in Chicago once I make my first billion... :D |
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The rail cars themselves would cost about $470 million based on the costs of the new 5000-Series cars on order. After all that, there would of course be the additional operating costs. Even assuming that the costs of new service would be partially offset by reductions in some bus service and maybe some balancing away from existing lines (for example, the Clinton Subway may generate new ridership, but it would also at least partly take some ridership from the existing Brown, Purple and Red Lines), we'd still be talking about increasing the number of stations by 1/3. The cost of operating a station doesn't change much with demand, so that would pretty much be an instant 30-35% increase in stations-related expenses. The full cost of track maintenence would take years, maybe even a decade to be fully realized, but as the track aged it would add to the costs of maintenance. It's about a 30% increase in track amounts, so track maintenance costs would increase proportionally. And then there's the cost of the train operators. Labor takes up about 70% of the CTA buget. The CTA is already robbing from the infrastructure budget to meet operating needs. Only if the economy stages a fairly robust recovery over the next few years would it be able to even consider adding more than small amounts of service. One thing does support this sort of plan, though - the ratio of CTA rail to CTA bus ridership has changed fairly dramatically recently. For a long time, rail ridership was about 1/2 of bus ridership. For the past two years, however, the ratio is closer to rail being 2/3 of bus ridership. Based on the 2011 budget proposal, adding the tracks I estimated for in my first post would result in an increase in operating expense minimally: Security: +$10 million Power: +$10 million Scheduled Transit Operations positions: +333 positions STO labor costs: +$36 million Non-STO labor costs: +$52 million (extrapolated from current ratios) Material: +$10 million TOTAL: approximately $118 million in additional operating expenses IF (a big if) ridership and fare revenue increased at a proportion of new stations, 45 new is 31.25% added to the existing 144 stations, then rail ridership/revenue would increase by 31.25%. If that happened, and rail started from a base of 40% of all ridership, then ridership/revenues would increase by 12.5%. That would mean about $65.4 million in additional fare revenue. Advertising revenue would also go up some, probably only at the same ratio, though, so maybe an extra $2 million, tops. So that means all that extra track work would yield about $67.4 million in extra revenue. With increased costs of $118 million, leaving a shortfall of $50.6 million annually. Now, that's well within the mandated farebox recovery ratio, which is good - that means that it would overall improve the efficiency of the agency. It also doesn't include any of the potential bus savings, although I think that would likely be at most about $20 million a year in savings, at most. Either way, you're left with a structural deficit of several percent of the budget that would need to be paid for somehow. The CTA is estimating that a "normal economy" would yield nearly $100 million a year in more tax revenue, but most of that would be offset by stopping taking money out of the infrastructure budget. The portion that isn't, will soon have to go to catching up the funding of employee pensions. Which leaves us with having to find a new tax source - a source on top of whatever source we'd have to find to support the infrastructure build-out to begin with. Now, over the long haul, if the city aligned zoning with the new stations so that average ridership per station was higher than the system average for the new stations, these numbers could look better. But the per-station average would have to be nearly 80% higher than the current system average for the operating costs to be fully covered by new ridership. That seems highly unlikely. I suppose the easiest way to fund that difference would be through Cook County property taxes. If City residents alone took on $60 million a year in additional property taxes, we'd be looking at something along the lines of $5/month per household (yes, per household, not per person - it'd be about $2 per person per month). That seems reasonable and politically doable to me. If we included all of Cook county, that'd probably drop to $3/month, although I don't know if politically we could get the whole county to participate. Of course that's just for the operating costs. To fund $12+ billion worth of infrastructure, that's over $4,000 per man, woman and child in Chicago. If the Feds paid half of the cost and we spread the costs over 40 years (10 years of construction with 30-year bonds), with inflation and interest we'd probably be looking at something in the range of $90/year per man, woman and child for the next 40 years. For the "average" household in the city, that'd be something like $25/month in extra taxes. Is that a lot to swallow? Yeah, probably, but if the City were serious about building out an improved rail infrastructure it might be politically possible. Another option would be to create micro-TIF districts around the new stations and funnel 100% of those property taxes into the infrastructure coffers. That would be a interesting test of the power of TOD, and it would force the City to better align appropriate zoning with Transit infrastructure because it would be dramatically more transparent if they lost tax revenue due to poor zoning choices. |
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You bet your ass I will, but I won't get distracted by any of that superhero shit...
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I'd personally construct the entire Mid-City as a Light Rail line, running from Old Orchard to Ford City, it would connect most lines, without sharing much right of way & would carry ridership more akin to a light rail project anyway. The cost savings of switching to LRT would likely fund a line up to the former right of way of the Skokie Valley Line, part of the old North Shore Line. The Brown Line extension in the alley just south of Lawrence would require to acquisition of nearly every property bordering the south side of the alley between Kimball & the Edens, as well as large & recently redeveloped properties West of the Edens. Not to mention a complete redesign of the Kimball yards, or a reconfiguring of Kimball ave to gain adequate clearance under the tracks during their ascent. There is no doubt both of these projects could be done, but their execution would be much more complex than dictated by the above costs. I'll post a proposed transit map including these connections sometime today. |
I know that you're doing a pure thought exercise, but I'm not sure I see a need for three in-city circumferential rail corridors.
I would prefer to do a BRT line for the Mid-City Transitway. A BRT line could be located on Cicero itself, in the ROW of the Belt Railway, or some combination of the two. It could be in the railway corridor and then detour to meet existing rail stations, saving the expense of transfer bridges and making the system more user-friendly. Buses could board the line at any point and speed to any other point, so direct O'Hare-Midway services could coexist with "local" services and "limited" services. Laying reinforced concrete pavement is much cheaper than laying rails and ballast, and there's no power distribution or signaling systems to worry about. CTA could also recoup costs by opening the busway to authorized private operators to run specialized regional services (Van Galder, for example). The cost savings over heavy rail would be tremendous, even more than LRT. You could put the savings toward an Inner Circumferential line on the Indiana Harbor Belt (DMUs). |
The debate between LRT & BRT will go on forever, I've yet to see a BRT system that delivers on its promises in North America, & most LRT routes have not had significant changes in land uses to match the successes of European Light Rail systems. I just think that the combination of rail ROW & multimodal connections of any proposed Mid-City transitway, would benefit from using rail technology.
I'm having trouble posting the map of a routing system which would utilize the oft-proposed transit wet dream investments. Creating added connectivity & attempting to maintain additional capacity evenly throughout the system, while providing new services to take advantage of underutilized sections of rail. I'll try to figure out how to post it the most clearly tomorrow, but the basic routes are Purple: Linden to Cottage Grove via State St. Subway Orange: Linden to Ford City Mall via State St. Subway Yellow: Old Orchard to Ford City Mall via Ashland Corridor Red: Howard to 130th via Clinton Ave. Subway Brown: O'Hare to Ashland/63rd via State St. Subway Pink : Jefferson Park to 54th/Cermak via Loop Green : Jefferson Park to Harlem via Loop Blue: O'Hare to Forest Park via Dearborn Ave. Subway This matches most lines with similar ridership on the opposite side of downtown, eliminates crossings in the loop. It adds express lines & some new transfer stops, which would cost significant money, but could change ridership patterns drastically, & potentially reduce crowding on trunk lines. whoap, figured out my mistake http://i98.photobucket.com/albums/l2...outing2050.jpg the map looks northside centric, because the transit system is northside centric, along with population, street activity etc. There is no way this system could work though, until the other lines weren't running 2 car trains at times that the brownline runs 6 car trains. I just liked the exercise of attempting to create different single line connections, such as the Northwestern to U of C Purple line, stopping at almost every major university other than UIC along the way, essentially a university line. A yellow line which ferries passengers swiftly across the city, from Skokie to Midway, but likely at limited frequencies, while providing connections promised by the circle line, without circling. Lastly, a direct O'Hare connection via rail from the most heavily frequented CTA stations. |
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How about an extension of the Forest Park Blue Line to Maywood, Bellwood and Hillside. I can't understand why this is has never been a major priority. Seems to me to be a large transit riding population with many neighborhoods just as dense as the west side. The line could terminate with a large intermodal center at the three way intersection of the Tri-State, the 88 Toll and the Eisenhower. Such a location with quick and easy interstate access would guarantee substantial kiss and ride and parking lot commuters.
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Anhy way you could provide a clickable version that would allow us to zoom in? |
Hey, as long as we're sharing our future CTA maps, I thought I'd post one I made up on google.
I'm sure it's not as well thought out as yours in certain respects. My main idea was to provide rail transit to everywhere within the city limits. Obviously it's extremely ambitious, but I think it would be nice to have a plan that focuses on eventually covering the whole city with a transit grid. I tried to follow existing rail corridors wherever possible. http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?hl=en...d1329&t=h&z=10 |
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I have it in PDF form, is there a way to attach it that way? |
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http://freepdfhosting.com/upload.php http://i98.photobucket.com/albums/l2...outing2050.jpg Link to Map You can see at closer inspection that my map making skills are quite lacking. Also forgive that I forgot to alter a few wrongly colored station names & stops from previous iterations. I'd also love feedback on all aspects of how this system might function, where deficiencies might exist, how to improve the concept, & what other new services could be provided. one such idea? Rush Hour Brown & Purple Line Loopbound service to supplement existing service, which is just what the trains currently do. |
Totally unrelated, but this photo of Dearborn Station was recently posted on the fantastic Shorpy.com and is so stunning I just have to post it:
Dearborn Station, Chicago, 1910 http://www.shorpy.com/files/images/4a24000a.jpg http://www.shorpy.com/files/images/4a24000a.jpg Sure wish they would have reconstructed that gorgeous roof. |
There's a possibly apocryphal story that Mayor Thompson jokingly scolded the firefighters for saving so much of the building. The architecture was always rather eccentric and by 1922 was probably considered hopelessly old-fashioned.
http://i55.tinypic.com/15poadk.jpg Chicago Daily News Collection, American Memory Project, The Library of Congress |
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An extension to Oak Brook has been seriously discussed for several years now. The extra room in the Eisenhower median would potentially allow for express service to compensate for the long trip. Soon, IDOT will move forward on their study of the Eisenhower widening. That study is also investigating potential corridors and ridership for Blue Line service. |
The extra room in the median is only between California and Halsted.
Serving Oak Brook and similar destinations is a job perfectly suited to a busway, so that there's not a long walk from the train station to the office building. Some of the old CA&E right of way next to the Maywood Court House might be used, but most of that is now part of the Prairie Path. |
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Further westward (as I keep mentioning) the CSX's Altenheim Sub (the freight line) is used very infrequently, and the trains that do use it will diminish gradually in the coming years. I'm sure CSX would part with it for the right amount, and IDOT will need to buy it if they want to avoid costly and unpopular property takings through Oak Park for the widening project. Oak Parkers have been the main opponents, so appeasing them is crucial to the whole effort. However, the land available is more than what is needed for two additional lanes. That leaves room for the express tracks. Quote:
The Elgin-O'Hare project is considering both a busway and LRT for its transit component, but the fact that LRT has not yet been ruled out tells me that the politicians driving the process won't settle for less than a sexy new rail line. The busway even has a built-in funding advantage, in that it can be funded entirely with highway dollars, while an LRT would need to seek an FTA grant. |
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Speaking of which, from what I understand that route mainly came on the radar because of the STAR Line taking advantage of the Jane Addams median, which is pretty much a perfect example of “sexy” rail. The northwest corridor report gave a busway excellent marks, putting its ridership basically on-par with the heavy rail alternative (and both ranked higher than light rail). Maybe they were being overoptimistic about the bus, but this makes sense to me—jobs really start fanning out in all directions around O’Hare, and the Rosemont CTA station seems close enough to serve as a good anchor for this. Also, since there would be multiple routes feeding into the busway, there would be higher frequency for on-line busway stations, and there were enough bus routes to allow for skip-stop operation, increasing speeds. Of course, no one in the suburbs would ever think of riding a bus, no matter how convenient. And everyone loves Metra. And thus we get what’s essentially a slightly less frequent light rail line running clunky FRA-compliant DMUs down the middle of a highway from an awkwardly placed Metra station near O’Hare to somewhere outside Joliet. And even though we’re only stuck with it in long-range planning world, the fact that it’s assumed to eventually be funded means that everything still has to be planned around it. |
Wow, you seem very knowledgeable for only your second post. :cheers: Welcome to SSP!
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The J-Line is a good idea, but it needs to tie into Metra better than it does, so that you can access the system from suburban downtowns. You're right - it seems like a good way for city-dwellers to get to suburban office parks, but it wouldn't do much else. |
The most obvious way to serve Oak Brook would be with a bus line every few minutes from Elmhurst Metra to Hinsdale Metra via various Oak Brook destinations.
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That's a great short-term solution, although I'm still not sure it will entice a North Sider to take a three-transfer transit trip to their Oak Brook office job. Out in Barrington, I know the Pace shuttle to Prairie Stone isn't very well-used, even though the transfer is usually perfectly timed. This is possibly because the UP-NW line is inconveniently-placed for many North Siders.
Honestly, I don't know what Pace planners are thinking most of the time. It seems like they're trying to overlay a network-type system over a suburban environment that isn't dense enough to support it. The bus routes should focus on tying existing areas of employment density and residential density into the Metra system. I'm not too sympathetic to the arguments that Pace should serve transit-dependent populations, especially because numerous people have now demonstrated that a basic used car and gas are affordable for all but the poorest individuals. Scarce transit dollars should be spent where they will generate the most ridership (and thereby take the most cars off the road, decreasing congestion and emissions). |
PACE is three different systems. There are the legacy local-service lines, most notably the former Nortran and West Towns networks, which serve towns such as Highland Park and LaGrange and Joliet and Harvey where local routes are pretty important as part of the safety net for those who cannot drive. Then there are the feeder buses taking suburbanites to the Metra stations. And finally there are the experiments done with express routes to help reverse commuters get to suburban employment centers.
I'm puzzled by your assertion that the transit-dependent should be told to buy cars while we chase after fickle discretionary riders. A car on the road is a car on the road, and the experience in LA and dozens of other "new-rail" cities has been that we spend $30 per new rider trying to attract middle-class professionals to sexy new trains, while inexpensive modest improvements to bus service produce huge ridership gains among the working class and recent immigrants. It's just not smart spending to build a rail line to some single terminus in Oak Brook that's a half-mile or more from actual office entrances. Cumberland on the O'Hare line is about the best layout we could ever wish for in a suburban office park on a rail line—yet only a tiny number of those office workers arrive on the Blue Line. |
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See, this is the stuff that confuses the hell out of people. These are three different types of service, performing different functions, that Pace has attempted to whitewash and unify into a half-assed "network". If the services were differentiated clearly, perhaps many riders wouldn't be so intimidated by the system. Visual communication is your specialty - surely you know what I'm talking about. Quote:
Metra is intuitively easy to understand. CTA is a bit more complex, but it makes sense too. But I find it absolutely absurd to expect anyone to understand, let alone utilize, the Pace system. The suburbs are not uniformly dense enough to support transit service, and they do not have the convenient rational grid of streets that the city does. Since I can't understand the pattern in Pace's routes, I can't begin to consider its effectiveness. I can only go by anecdote and personal experience - both of which have been miserable. |
Pace should look to Viva by Toronto for a model that they should follow. That system is awesome and looks fantastic - which of course is something that eludes so many US transit - seemingly complete aloofness over the connection between image(fleet design, technology, integrated branding, station and stop infrastrucutre) and ridership appeal.
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ardec,
I think you've more or less identified the various factors that define the impossibility of Pace's mission. Quote:
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