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The Circle Line would be routed through the State St. subway, so presumably somebody had the idea that it would be doable. Unlike the Loop, there aren't any tricky junctions except at the north end. Routing something through State St. would also have the benefit of increasing off-peak frequency along what should be the most heavily trafficked section of the el system.
However, I'm pretty sure that there's no "exit" from the subway on the south, just a junction north of the Chinatown stop that allows trains coming from the south to switch onto the Loop tracks and vice versa. So the Red Line can run elevated, but the Brown Line can't run in the subway (unless it turns into a Dan Ryan train). |
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This is all just a big fantasy right now, of course...
But I think the State Street Subway could in fact handle more trains if the interference between Brown and Red at Clark Junction were alleviated with a flyover. This would allow CTA to better coordinate the trains on the North Main Line and allow for a more complex system of train movements. IIRC, the flyover was considered as part of the current Brown Line project, but it was found to be not cost-effective, and the demolition it would require would not be popular in the community. (It would also increase the amount of noise exponentially.) |
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There's definitely plenty of Chicago in Obama's administration, and there's even a handful of ex-CTA personnel within the administration. I really hope this will translate into funding for the CTA, and with the prospect of a new, more level-headed governor down in Springfield, the future looks sunny. |
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That said, I think the Clinton Street subway should be built regardless. |
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Current Brown Line operations run about 192 trains a day. Combined Orange and Pink line operations run about 266 trains a day, which are surprisingly balanced across the two. So, running both to Kimball would probably work. If you maintained all pink and orange trains, cross-the-day average frequency for the Kimball route would rise from about 9 trains per hour to 12 an hour. Y ou could probably trim a few Pink and Orange trains during rush hour, when the numbers add up the fastest, but you would probably be making a high off-hours frequency for the Brown Line. Your other option would be to only route the Pink Line through at rush hours and circle the Loop the rest of the time. |
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Another, unrelated, routing - if you're building things - would be to complete the west-bound portal from the Dearborn Street subway and run the Green Line through the Lake Street subway, turning onto Dearborn subway and then using the new Block 37 connector to connect to the State Street subway and up the Roosevelt portal to the Green Line tracks. It would put into use the "airport connector" under Block 37. Then the City could focus on an airport express as part of a West Loop Transportation system under Clinton utilizing mostly Metra routes, which would be faster and put people closer to the Metra stops. Part of that, too, could be to through-route more Metra routes, which would enhance the efficiency of Metra routing. Coupled with a subway loop created with a Clinton Street subway and the extra routing possible with a Clinton Street subway, and a Circle Line, the central area would be set for decades of growth. Bloomingdale Trail's ROW could also be dug under the river and routed into either the State Street or new Clinton subways, adding central area train frequency while drawing in more west neighborhoods, and the Pink Line routing could be changed to go west through the South Loop connecting with the N/S routes there. These are big ideas with big price tags, but coupled with appropriate TOD zoning they would set up the Central area and surrounding neighborhoods for decades of a type of growth making cars a luxury and not a necessity, putting Chicago into the same league as any international city for transit purposes. |
The Green Line is already through routed. However, my experience is that it is rarely filling cars to capacity. I usually board at Clark/Lake outbound in the afternoons. A lot of times, Green Lines that go by have actual seats available and I don't recall ever seeing a time you couldn't get on. Contrast with the over-jammed Ravenswood. I think there's actually room to reduce headways on the Green Line if necessary at peak of the peak. Those precious slots need to go to full trains.
The beauty of my Brown Line-Orange Line through routing is that it uses the State St. subway, thus taking runs off the Loop completely so that you can still run decent headways there on all lines. |
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Just because this one hasn't been mentioned yet and we may as well throw around all the possibilities, has anyone thought about using the Block 37 connection to split Red and Blue into a Howard-O'Hare line and a Forest Park-95th line? These lines would be a little more balanced in their ridership patterns. Admittedly this is almost certainly a crappy idea. |
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1) Drive it to Clybourn and have it merge with the State Street subway. 2) Drive it to Clybourn and run it under the State Street subway until Larrabee where it'd turn south to become the Clinton subway. 3) Two routing no one in their right mind would propose (so of course I have to mention them), which is to run it under Armitage to Lincoln, or up Racine to Fullerton, then for either of those to Clark, Delaware and Fairbanks/Columbus to McCormick Place (and maybe eventually south). With this routing, instead of it being a CTA-style rail line, it could be a re-imagining of the Metra Electric service into rapid transit a la a super "Gray Line" implementation. |
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Ahhh, a Chicago transit thread.
All talk and no action. Great ideas but no money to implement them. You gotta love the mental masturbation that goes on around here.. |
^yeah but have you rode on it lately. It is actually working. Busses and trains - okok before everyone jumps on me, from my experiences but remember I don't own a car and take the CTA somewhere about everyday. I don't mind going across town and taking the bus because the busses are now reliable. The CTA is starting to work.
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The new hybrid buses are a major breath of fresh air. Smooth suspension, good lighting, decent acceleration. Only problem is we're still stuck with the NABI articulated buses for a long time.
I think the system might soon be in good enough shape that it would make sense to start thinking about expansion again. At least they've gotten the incredibly lengthy process to apply for federal funding going on the Red Line extension and Circle Line. |
^NABI articulated buses
those are the freakin' worst pieces of junk and I'm no bus expert but I do know that much. Never buy from them again! |
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Don't remember seeing this posted....
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I like the idea if they can actually set up a decent transfer system between Metra, CTA, and Pace.
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North Main is over 20% slow, all of the Purple Line and the Purple Express tracks are over 20% slow. And the majority of those slow zones are the middle or the slowest rating out of three slow zone speeds listed in their report. On the South Side, the only portion of a line that's over 20% is the Englewood branch of the Green line, affecting all of two lightly-used stops (combined ridership for those two are lower than all but two single Red Line north main stops). The Dan Ryan portion of the Red Line is just over 10% slow, however 90% of those slow zones are the 35mph variety - the fastest of the "slow zones" defined by the CTA - so the impact is even less than half as compared to the north main portion. Slowest branch overall is the Englewood one on the Green Line (two stops long). After that, though, the next three slowest are the Purple Express, North Main, and the Purple Line in Evanston. Conversely, NONE of the six fastest lines are North Side lines - Pink Line, Green - Jackson Park branch, Lake Street branch, State Street subway, Dearborn subway and the Orange Line. If anything, the CTA has focused on downtown, first, and then a fairly well-distributed set of projects in the neighborhoods, but giving the least amount of focus on the extremities fo the system. That may not be perfect, but it is pragmatic and roughly fair to their ridership. |
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The CTA has clearly invested in its system in inverse order of ridership. First the Green Line, then the Douglas, then the Ravenwood. Meanwhile the North Main, the crown jewel of the system, has received limited upgrades. Strange investment policy if you ask me.
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From RedEye
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If I were creating the route, I'd probably run it from the Belmont Blue Line stop, south along Clybourn to Larrabee to Chicago to Kingsbury to Grand and then south on Wells to Van Buren and back north on Franklin/Orleans to Grand. That way you'd serve that whole part of western River North that is radically different than it used to be and could benefit from a direct route to the commercial area along Clybourn, as well as a tie-in to the financial district. Alternately you could also have it go east on Jackson to Grant Park, as a useful route for the north areas to get to Grant Park, or South Loop Residents who don't like the subway to get to the Clybourn commercial areas. |
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Does Huberman have relevant education experience? I think there's a big difference between running the CTA and running the schools. Running the CTA seems to be mostly about efficiency and sound decision-making--relatively transferable skills--whereas running the schools seems to require more substantive knowledge about education (not necessarily through teaching--Duncan has never been a teacher). The CTA's performance has improved drastically during Huberman's tenure--though I realize that some of those gains are at the expense of future income--but I think the schools should be managed by someone who combines executive ability with deep knowledge of education. Hopefully the federal climate will change enough that whoever heads the CTA for the next few years won't have to put the agency into as much debt to keep it from falling apart.
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Huberman is awesome. I think he'd do great at CPS - however, it will be a big blow to the CTA. I wonder, though, whether Huberman might not have wanted out of the CTA. He's doing the Lord's work over there, but there's a limit to what can be accomplished unless the region decides to up its commitment to transit funding, which doesn't appear to be in the cards. That must be very frustrating to Huberman.
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Irrespective of the particulars of the personalities/qualifications, I can't say it would be a good thing to send the CTA bureaucracy into another round of turmoil with complete turnover in the executive ranks, reorganization of responsibilities, and revision of company goals/strategy. Such things are inevitable with a change in administration, and periodically necessary, since after a while the deficiencies of one administrative regime can come to light in serious ways (e.g. track maintenance under Kruesi). But an organization in constant tumult will always be chasing its tail and unable to engage in anything resembling actual business strategy in terms of transforming business operations and employing long-term plans to restructure costs & revenues, and adapt service to the constantly changing environment. This sounds jargony, but people who've spent time working in either government agencies or public corporations with high visibility (visibility which comes with the imperative for new blood to "quick! do something!") probably know what I'm getting at about the sort of morale-killing, productivity-clamping turmoil inherent with the drastic change that follows a new chief executive.
I guess my point being, even regardless of the merits/criticisms of Huberman's tenure at CTA, the transit organization would suffer some major setbacks as it retools with a new batch of administrators. Depending on what CPS's problem is (if it is management/organizational/financial in nature), Huberman could do a lot of good there, but from what I've seen I'd say he hasn't quite finished the job of transforming CTAs operations into something more viable long term that isn't just limping from one crisis to the next, though he's made some progress. |
Crain's and Chicago Public Radio are reporting that the Huberman choice is confirmed:
http://www.chicagobusiness.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?id=32751 I agree with Viva. Daley could have given us only one humongous, critical agency with a new chief executive, and now we will have two. How much credibility can Huberman present at CPS if people are going to think that Daley will keep bouncing him around? |
are performance metrics now coming to a CPS school near you?
seriously, seems that Carol Brown would be a good replacement. She's been as transparent as any public official has been in Chicago in my lifetime. I'm not at all saddened by this news. Huberman will have the most important job of his life ahead of him. I'm curious to see if his approach is holistic rather then just test driven. |
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I think Carol Brown would be an excellent chice as a replacement, and would continue to build on what Huberman has accomplished. Quote:
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But the bigger question will be how do you improve student achievement? Involved parents helps an immeasurable deal but what happens when you can't count on parent involvement? what do you do in a school systems when the parents are many times the problem? Not to mention that longer range plans need to be addressed. At some point, the school system will again begin to gentrify. How will that be done smoothly? What steps will be taken to update the curriculum and how will technology influence the way children learn? When it comes down to it, telling some kids to memorize the details of a picture is a lot less useful then having them break down why the details in the picture were chosen. |
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perhaps the discussion should have focused on who's next in line for CTA boss... |
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The linked article has a good example of why I think her name keeps popping up as the possible replacement: Quote:
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The CTA needs a strong chairman/president combo. The great thing Huberman brought was his operational and organizational change capabilities. We need someone else in that mode running the CTA, someone who is going to stay the course with Hubeman's program and won't feel the need to send things off in a different direction just to put his stamp on things. The Chairman needs to be out there getting the politics and funding right to get the game changed. Two different interest areas if you ask me.
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^ I vote for VivaLFuego
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I hear the governor may be needing a job here soon, maybe he'd be interested ...
*ducks* :haha: :P |
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