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If Reilly is going to attempt to hijack the Jewel site with their redevelopment plans, perhaps he could just get them to do something to help integrate with whatever the city has planned for that remodel. I know one of the original rejuvenation plans for Clark/Division included putting in an entrance at Lasalle, although I don't know if they're still considering that. It'd be nice if they did, though. It's really too bad that the city hadn't just spec'd out all the remodels and had them ready to go so they could have captured more of the stimulus funding. It might be nice, too, if Rahm asked CDOT to come up with some better-looking tile options. The current standard isn't really one I think is worth maintaining just for consistency's sake. |
Apparently I'm the only person who thinks Chicago's subway stations should be restored rather than remuddled. Chicago's subways stations had a handsome, though spare, WPA Moderne design. Curved gray Vitrolite walls led to stairways lined with "radio black" marble. Down on the platform, bright (for the time) fluorescent lights illuminated clear, open platforms. Signage used a modern sans-serif design created specifically for the system.
Now we're intent on wiping out all of this moderne design just because the stations need fresh paint and better lights, and replacing it with a third-rate imitation of the IRT. |
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Speaking of the North Avenue bridge, the recent advent of bright and inexpensive LED lighting would allow the city (or NS) to bathe the entire underside of the Garfield viaduct in light, hopefully addressing one of the main worries there. |
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Fortunately the long awaited combination of loop stops over Wabash is also still slowly moving forward. http://www.chicagotribune.com/classi...4960861.column |
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My one complaint is that there is no auxiliary entrance at Belmont which really hampers it's ability to serve the extremely dense areas north of Milwaukee/Diversey as well as they should be served (Spaulding Aux is the only entrance within reasonable distance of that area and it's practically a 5 min walk once you are on the long ass platform). Any idea if there are plans to build an auxiliary entrance at Wellington/Wisner and Kimball? I assume the station was designed with that as a future option. In any case they at least need to add another set of stairs on the West side of Kimball because the current station entrance is just not big enough to handle the amount of traffic Belmont Blue gets. I regularly find the platform there crowded to the point that it is almost dangerous during morning rush. There are huge numbers of people piling out of buses and onto the train. |
The news about Clark/Division is very welcome. CTA is taking the opportunity to extend the platform by an additional 2 cars, and building an entirely new mezzanine at LaSalle will prevent the annoying disruptions to riders that occurred at Grand. Then, once LaSalle is mostly complete, the Clark entrance can be shut down completely for modernization. It's a really smart move, even if it does extend the construction timeline. 2017 is really not that far out.
I wonder, though, if the new mezzanine is meant to forestall discussions of a new Brown Line station at Division. I'm less thrilled about the new station at Washington/Wells. The east stationhouse at Madison is an architectural gem, and the stationhouses at Randolph are the same kind of elegant early-Modern design as the subways. On the positive side, it seems like there will be lots of access points to the new station, so the consolidation shouldn't affect walking times too much. Quote:
Especially in harsh situations like an underground cavern, architects really need to future-proof their designs (within reason) so that ongoing maintenance and replacement can occur. Unfortunately, the WPA Moderne designs were a creature of their time, and shoestring public-transit budgets don't allow for expensive preservation work. I do, however, wish the new designs had something more to offer than tacky multi-colored mosaics. SOM really set the bar for underground facilities at Millennium Station - easily my favorite train station in the United States. The CTA architecture has gotten better, though - I like the dark-blue barrel vault in the mezzanine at Grand. It really helps to organize the space. The new interior at North/Clybourn is also fairly well-done and restrained. Also, they all seem to use the same long box-shaped lighting fixtures, so that if one is broken, it can be replaced easily. |
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The Division Brown Line stop will have to be built as well, particularly when the Atrium Village redevelopment goes ahead and the redevelopment of the CHA land gathers steam in coming years. |
10-car Red Line trains? I don't even see that as a possibility. North/Clybourn, Grand, Chicago, Harrison, and Roosevelt are not long enough for 10 cars (are they??) South of there, it should be fairly easy to add 2 car lengths to the Dan Ryan platforms, and the Loop stations are all one continuous platform anyway.
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What about extending the North end of the Washington/Wabash station (or a
walkway) to provide an enclosed connection (stair & elevator) to the Pedway. This would provide an all-weather connection to both the Red Line Lake Station and Millennium Station. I wonder about CTA planners in that they didn't include this from the start. I will be contacting CTA and CMAP. |
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I noticed the City Inspector General's report estimated that making LSD a toll road might net the City around $80 million a year, depending on how much it discouraged driving on the Drive.
At that rate, that alone (assuming a typical range for State and Federal matching) would be enough to finance the rebuilding of the North Red Line. Which would seem appropriate, given a better-performing Red Line would be necessary if LSD started charging tolls since I think a lot of people would switch. Thoughts? |
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In the Blue Line, I believe they cut through the platform north of Washington. In the Red Line, they never did anything to the platform (but still closed the Washington stop anyway). Actually, my guess is that the Washington closure was more about speeding up service than the actual availability of platform space. Having a station at Lake is just more convenient for transfers and for serving the river corridor. |
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Nobody posted this awesome news...
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I just hope they're not like the stupid "L" ones that flash the arrival time for like 2 seconds every minute, so you have to stand there and literally stare at the sign for a minute just to know the arrival time while the date and time slowly scroll past. Speaking of which, the CTA MUST know that method in the "L" stations is completely stupid - when will they fix it? |
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I'm more frustrated by the constant reminders to renew my Chicago Card. That's information better relegated to a poster. |
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I've always thought Chicago's encouragement of major arterials as bike routes as rather crazy. Buses, trucks, and 6-way intersections, on top of the usual rush of passenger cars, are incompatible with 200-pound blobs of metal and flesh. There is no overriding reason why the major arterials are where bicyclists' routes need to go. Instead, designating a side street, just 1 block over, into a major bicycle arterial would seem to be a better solution (assuming you could get past NIMBY issues, including loss of street parking). This could be repeated at regular intervals throughout the street grid. Bicyclists could still have access to arterials, but ideally it would be people whose origin/destination was there, while thru traffic would use the side streets.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...enways01m.html Seattle plans side-street pathways for cyclists By Mike Lindblom Seattle Times transportation reporter For several years, Seattle has painted bicycle lanes or icons on nearly all major streets, in hopes of encouraging people to ride. Cycling has increased, but a lot of people remain ambivalent, including Jennifer Litowski of Ballard. She's comfortable riding some of the less-busy arterials. But when her 5-year-old son's bike is attached to the rear, she's not so nimble. The two detour to a calmer side street. That's the idea behind "greenways" — networks of residential roads outfitted with speed bumps, landscaped curbs that make portions of a street narrower, or stop signs to give cyclists and pedestrians priority over cars. Seattle is building its first greenway across the Wallingford area this fall and will install signs for a future route on north Beacon Hill, while advocacy groups are suggesting routes in at least three other neighborhoods. Mayor Mike McGinn is proposing $150,000 for design and public outreach on a route in Rainier Valley next year. ... "It's not about getting people out of cars, it's about letting people who want to ride bikes get out and ride their damn bikes," said a smiling Eli Goldberg, a University District greenway advocate who encouraged an audience last week to campaign for Proposition 1. ... |
and the slow death continues.....two sets of fare increases and two sets of service cuts in 4 years is a lot to take.
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The unions are going to have to give, substantially, now that they can't enjoy the absence of a disinterested mayor. Claypool will certainly have Rahm's backing on getting the concessions he needs to maintain service levels...probably including a modest fare increase as well.
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The long term funding situation is something that needs to be addressed by the City however the mayor does not seem amenable to tolling presently free roads. |
Roads within the city should not be tolled. They should be tolled at the city limits to punish those who choose to live outside of the city.
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And I'm talking about something politically suicidal like putting new tolls on roads in the city. I'm talking about a metropolitan region, like the existing Kennedy tolls in schaumburg and elsewhere, be put into improving blue line service because they do benefit from it. That is flexing. |
^^^ That's not possible. The tolls in those locations back bonds and their revenue is already spoken for and used to back those bonds. It is state revenue anyhow and would never be diverted to Chicago even if it were legally possible.
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Other metropolitan regions do flexing. We should start to advocate for it to begin to mitigate this infastructure problem the whole region has. |
The suburbs already fund CTA through the sales tax.
To be honest, I don't think Chicagoans will put up with a European level of taxation. A new tax would only make the city less appealing to businesses and residents at a time when the city faces huge demographic issues. Personally, I'd rather focus all of CTA's energy on exacting greater savings out of the unions. If absenteeism is such a huge problem, then the problem employees should be fired, immediately - not sheltered behind a protective union. I'd also aim for claiming a greater share of the existing sales tax revenue collected in the city. Where does the rest of the revenue go currently? |
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It's interesting. The Cook County portion has more or less kept up with inflation, although it has varied some year-by-year. Overall, for Cook County only, 2010 generated 25% more sales tax revenue for the CTA as compared to 2000. According to this inflation calculator, inflation between 2000 and 2010 was a nudge over 26%. Adding in the revenue now collected in the other counties, though, the CTA received 37.8% more in 2010 than in 2000. Year-by-year, Cook County CTA sales tax (deduced from this RTAMS page): 00-01 < 1% decrease 01-02 ~$2.5 million, ~1% decrease 02-03 ~$3.5 million, ~1.3% increase 03-04 ~$8 million, ~3% increase 04-05 ~$10 million, ~3.7% increase 05-06 ~$20 million, ~7.3% increase 06-07 ~$4.5 million, ~1.5% increase 07-08 ~$12.9 million, ~4.2% increase + $30 million from outer counties 08-09 ~$4.4 million, ~1.4% decrease + $32 million from outer counties 09-10 ~$14.3 million, ~4.6% increase + $33 million from outer counties In 2000, the CTA had a budget of about $819 million. In 2010, the budget was proposed at $1,285 million, and increase of 57%. In the 2010 budget, labor alone accounted for $852 million, 66% of the total budget with about 9,500 positions. In 2000, labor accounted for $613 million, which was nearly 75% of the budget, with 11,290 positions. 39% increase in wage costs, which exceeds inflation even on top of fewer workers. All things being equal, if the ratio of labor to non-labor expenses is decreasing, it points to a bigger issue with non-labor costs than with labor costs. In this particular example, though, given the reduction of workforce at the same time as over-inflation increases in labor costs, I think it points to an across-the-board problem with costs being out of control. In 2000, the CTA carried 450.5 million riders, in 2010, the CTA carried about 517 million riders, an increase of about 14.8%. I think that probably means that the 9% increase in employees is at least somewhat defensible even if steps could be taken to make it not strictly necessary. What seems to be less defensible, however, is the much-higher-than-inflation growth in wage costs. But looking at the budget numbers, what really jumps out to me is not just the accelerated growth in employee compensation, but the jump in the category of "Other Expense," that leaped from $49 million in 2000, to $192 million in the 2010 budget. One thing that has been unavoidable, for the most part, is the jump in fuel and electricity costs from $35.5 million in 2000 to $139 million in 2009 and $103 million in 2010 (bus cuts=less fuel). Fuel is what it is. We can help address that by replacing regular buses with hybrids, or continuing to have higher load factors and drive riders to electric trains but that's not a good short-term fix for a budget crisis. Wages would seem to need to be curtailed. Seeing the wages exceed inflation during a time when private sector wages have increased below inflation is not sustainable. And I really would like to know what the "Other Services" aka "Other Expense" category includes. That seems to have been a significant jump in those costs in 2010 vs. 2000. |
Total revenue for 2010 was only $14 million? Or is that the delta, and the percentage change is relative to the inflated-adjusted budget of the previous year?
I think CTA especially is hobbled because the people in charge of funding (the taxpayers/politicians) have a much more visceral reaction to the plight of the CTA workers than they do to gaps in the CTA's budget. They're perfectly willing to support higher wages for CTA employees, whom they view as members of their own community, but unwilling to pay higher taxes or higher fares to pay those employees. If presented with the dilemma, usually taxpayers will attribute CTA's huge budgetary issues to waste, graft, and corruption, which is a drop in the bucket compared to the huge compensation and benefits that CTA workers collectively earn. Personally, I'd love to see CTA's unionized workers earn a high salary with zero pension benefits and little to no sick days or vacation time (health insurance would, of course, still be included). The high wages would compensate for the relative lack of benefits, and CTA wouldn't be saddled with hugely expensive long-term commitments. I'm starting to get really sick of this "borrow against the future" crap. We've been doing it at all levels of government since Reagan, at least. |
Where did you get that year 2000 labor force number? In 2000 CTA had a headcount of 11,290.
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I assume the two stations are Clark/Division and the new Washington/Wabash station. |
^ I"m lovin' it!
Of course, when I come to Chicago I usually drive and park downtown (if I'm willing to pay for it, I still get to call myself an urbanist--after all, I'm not complaining that the parking isn't free). Here's hoping they build an express BRT along Chicago Ave and have a stop on Damen. I just bought a rental property a stone's throw away from there... |
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Well, those stations are the two that have gotten buzz lately. It seems like the South Loop infill station on the Green Line (16th, 18th, and/or Cermak) has been moved to the back burner. A year ago, it seemed like that was the next top priority for CDOT.
Also, anybody know what happened to the Navy Pier flyover or the LSD/IC bridges at 35th? |
http://www.myfoxchicago.com/dpp/news...metra-20111010
The Englewood Flyover project broke ground this week. This is a big part of CREATE and easing metra and Amtrack congestion. Glad it's going to go ahead now. |
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In other good news, the chicagobus forums have been posting pictures of the new 5000-series CTA cars beginning to arrive at the Skokie yards. http://forum.chicagobus.org/topic/17...post__p__33497 |
This goes out to Mr Downtown who I believe in the past has made the claim that highways are self-funded via user fees....ie gas tax. This puts the lie to that claim.
http://greatergreaterwashington.org/...s-to-highways/ If my memory is inaccurate about said claim I apologize in advance. |
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I know resurfacing projects aren't exactly big news, but Michigan Avenue from Oak to Illinois was all milled down today. Over the last couple of years, the metal plates had piled up, the roadway had sunk dramatically, and street corners overflowed with water. I wonder how many CTA buses died as a result of large potholes and collapsed grates.
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An 'L' stop here is long overdue. Rahm is on a roll.
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Chicago Business |
^^^^The green line could use several more stops on the near south side like it used to have hopefully we'll see one at maybe 18th and say 31st or so. It could really help with developing the area I think.
Also eventually bring back 63rd all the way to stony or at least the 63rd Metra. Tie it in with the gray line or whatever it would be great. Or right I am on the green line cool aid right now.....also extend it out to midway it'd be about 4 miles or so....how much could that be :) |
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