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Anybody go to the BRT meetings this week? I couldn't make it, but I'm interested to see what was presented.
Based on the description, it sounds like the meetings were just intended as a trial balloon to see how the community might accept various BRT features. I'm guessing an actual proposal will come in the next round of meetings in the fall. |
CTA To Hold Hearings On Red Line Shutdown Plan
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/06/...shutdown-plan/
Updated 06/13/12 – 6:18 p.m. CHICAGO (CBS) — CTA officials have been working hard behind the scenes to have some answers to placate South Side Red Line riders when two public hearings take place next week on the reconstruction project, and its scheduled five month shutdown. “Folks from Altgeld Gardens could face three-hour trips to get to their jobs downtown,” said rider Michael Payne, in comments to the CTA’s board Wednesday. He said a bus-dependent plan is fraught with problems in the event of accidents and the inevitable rush-hour traffic tie-ups. CTA Chairman Terry Peterson said that has already been anticipated, and said Thursday that he has initiated talks at the highest level to minimize problems. He said he has met with Acting Metra Chairman Larry Huggins and that CTA President Forrest Claypool and Metra CEO Alex Clifford also have spoken. The focus is how Metra can adjust schedules on its Electric and Rock Island Districts to accommodate more riders. The Electric District’s lines, in particular, were built for far more riders than it carries today. Payne suggested setting up CTA fare equipment at Electric District stations and letting riders use either fare card. Peterson asked Payne for a detailed proposal. The first hearing of the hearings will occur 6-8 p.m. Monday at the South Shore Cultural Center, 7059 S. South Shore Dr. CTA will host a second hearing at the same time Thursday in the gymnasium of Kennedy-King College, at 6343 S. Halsted St. CTA will reroute Red Line trains to the Green Line, and close the south Red Line stations from Cermak/Chinatown to 95th, for complete track reconstruction and other upgrades. The $425 million project is the second round of heavy overhaul on the line since 2004, although CTA officials say this will be the most complete renovation since the line opened in 1969. Peterson said his goal is to operate trains, without slow zones, at a minimum of 55 miles an hour. The shutdown will allow the work to be completed in five months instead of an estimated four years if limited to off-peak and weekend hours. CTA expects train schedules to be shortened by 10 minutes once the work is completed in the fall of 2013. The CTA will also provide shuttle buses to Green Line rail stations as an alternative during the Red Line project. The closures affect nine stations, between the 95th Street terminal and the Roosevelt ‘L’ station. (See map below) Here is the tentative re-route plan for the CTA Red line. (Credit: CTA) |
Final South Lakefront Corridor Transit Study Meeting
TO: Members of the South Lakefront Community
FROM: O-H Community Partners DATE: June 12, 2012 RE: Flyer for South Lakefront Public Meeting on June 28th, 2012 Public Community Meeting for the South Lakefront Corridor Transit Study When: Thursday, June 28, 2011 from 6pm-8pm Where: Apostolic Church of God – Banquet Hall, 6320 S. Dorchester Ave. (at 63rd Street), Chicago, IL 60637 You are invited to the public community meeting for the South Lakefront Corridor Transit Study. This meeting will present the project evaluation results and the draft recommendations of the South Lakefront Corridor Transit Study. The study has focused on improving public transportation and enhancing Transit-Oriented Development in order to enhance mobility for residents and increase access to jobs within the South Lakefront Corridor. It is the third in a series of meetings. We want to hear from you. Please join us for this important public meeting and feel free to invite others. A copy of the flyer is attached. For more information please visit our website http://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en...nsitstudy.html and follow us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/South-...99444600080441 RSVP: lisa.green@o-hcommunitypartners.com *If you require ADA assistance please let us know. Lisa Green Senior Associate O-H Community Partners, Ltd. 372 West Ontario Street, Suite 501 Chicago, IL 60654 Direct: 312.705.6860 Main: 312.850.0600 Fax: 312.850.0601 lisa.green@o-hcommunitypartners.com www.ohcommunitypartners.com www.thefundwell.com http://www.cityofchicago.org/dam/cit...cMtgSept12.pdf |
CHGO TRIB - CTA gets $20 million grant to expand 95th Street terminal
From the Chicago Tribune website...
By Jon Hilkevitch Tribune reporter 4:43 p.m. CDT, June 19, 2012 The CTA plans to begin upgrading and expanding the Red Line’s 95th Street terminal, which is the sixth-busiest station on the rail system, by 2014, although all the funding needed for the $140 million project has not yet been secured, officials said Tuesday. Officials announced a $20 million federal grant to help overhaul the rail and bus terminal, which is a transit gateway for about 20,000 commuters on the South Side and south suburbs. The improvements are designed to reduce bus and pedestrian congestion while enhancing safety, help speed up arrivals and departures at the busy station and create jobs, officials said. The CTA is in the early stages of planning and design, they added. Construction details aren’t set yet, but the agency will keep the station open during the project, said CTA spokeswoman Molly Sullivan. The station project will follow a $425 million track-replacement project on the Dan Ryan branch of the Red Line that will require the shutdown for five months starting next May of the branch between 95th Street and the Cermak-Chinatown stop. The 95th Street station, in addition to being the southern terminus of the Red Line, has the most bus routes of any CTA rail station. The buses include CTA, Pace, Greyhound and paratransit services. More than 1,000 CTA and Pace bus trips are made to and from the terminal daily, officials said. The 43-year-old station has “reached capacity and current conditions do not allow for optimal bus operations and pedestrian movements,’’ Sullivan said. jhilkevitch@tribune.com |
So... After a five-month closure that forces thousands of riders to make sacrifices, CTA will begin a huge construction project at 95th?
I wonder what they're gonna do? Wider platforms for each bus route would be nice, and additional stairs/escalators from platform level. |
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Something's fishy here. It seems odd that we haven't heard a whisper about the Red Line extension in a year and yet Rahm's CDOT has been loudly trumpeting the station rehabs and infill stations to anyone who'll listen.
Makes me wonder if the Red Line extension is being sidetracked so that Chicago can use its New Starts dollars for the North Main project. |
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I’m agnostic about the extension being sidetracked—on the one hand, it’s a long-delayed project that will benefit an area that has the ridership potential to support a short extension. On the other, it’s also an area with decreasing population and running eight-car trains to 130th will only increase the CTA’s operating costs, whereas the Red-Purple project doesn’t increase operating costs and serves denser areas with stronger growth potential—plus, maintenance should always take precedence over expansion. Also, I think it’s likely Rahm’s trumpeting all these rehabs because he has the money in hand and wants to get things done, which is a smart move because it gives him something concrete to point at if he ends up having a tough election cycle (which I could see happening if murders get out of hand or a scandal breaks) and serves as a nice way of distinguishing his administration from the endless fantasy-mapping-amid-deferred-maintenance that occurred under Daley (a caricature, of course—look at Brown and Douglas—but it often felt that way). Plus, we frankly don’t know how much longer New Starts will be around, so we might have to be satisfied with small stuff for a long time. |
Well, for a $140 million cost, they ought to be doing something big. That seems about right for adding another 12 bus bays.
I wonder how they'll do it? They could push State and Lafayette outward, suspend the bays over the Ryan's traffic lanes, or shift the offramps northward and extend the bays in that direction. Regardless of how they do it, I hope the new area includes wider bus platforms. The current ones are unpleasant and shamefully narrow; in winter I've gotten splashed by buses several times. |
Ina Q&A with Grid Chicago Forrest Claypool commented on the status of the Red Line extension:
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Well I had an interesting experience today. I was on the brown line heading to Lincoln Square. When we stopped at Southport, I stepped out of the train so that people could exit. Just as I was stepping back into the train, the woman standing next to me moved to the space where I'd been standing, causing me to momentarily lose track of my feet placement. I ended up stepping down right on the rather large gap between the platform & train and down I went. My *entire* left leg fell completely down between the train & platform. I heard a few gasps from people on the platform who had just exited the train and they helped pull me up and I immediately got inside the train, the doors closed, and we were off. I doubt the conductor even saw what happened. I'm relatively thin, but I'm still surprised my entire leg coud fit between the gap, particularly at a newly rebuilt station where I would have thought more attention would be placed on eliminating large gaps between the train & platform.
Btw, the brown line runs wonderfully between the north main line & Western. No slow zones. Such a change from my days living in Lincoln Square! I also checked out the new Morgan station on the green/pink lines and it looks good! I wonder if they'll stick with a similar modern design for the Cermak infill station in the south loop? |
^ Glad you were ok.
---------------------------- Well several weeks ago I should have known better than to put "very very soon" and a reference to a CTA construction project in the same sentence. However, the Purple Line viaduct swap-ins presumably will happen this weekend, as there are el closures over the weekend there. The new steel viaducts for Greenleaf, Dempster, and Grove were pre-constructed and these giant structures were left waiting in the middle of streets or parking lots, waiting to be shifted into place upon the demolition of the crumbling existing ones. (Today, the CTA website refers only to Dempster and Grove, so not sure of the date for Greenleaf.) Anyway, exciting picture-taking apparently awaits this weekend for people interested. |
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So when the Red Line is extended, 95th will be much less important. $140 million is a chunk of change. I don't see why they'd dedicate that much to a station that they're also working to reduce the importance of. It just seems like an enormous waste of money. |
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A decade of intensive use as the Red Terminus alone justifies the investment... additionally, if the extension is completely, what kind of passenger traffic would the Dan Ryan be experiencing? |
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Brown Line stations cost, what $540 million for 17 stations that have at least a 20-year life and served about 37 million riders last year. That's 73 cents per rider (for 20 years of riders at present ridership). THAT's a good deal. $5 per rider - not so much. Take $20 million, give 95th a good make-over, and put the other $120 million into the extension. That's nearly 10% of the projected cost of the extension right there. |
Seems to me the CTA needs to time all of these projects a little better. If they push off the Red Line Track Reconstruction to summer 2014 they can potentially have the Cermack Green Line station in place (would need a slightly accelerated timetable) and can rebuild the 95th Street Station in conjunction with its closure.
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There is one slow zone southbound between Irving Park and Addison that drives me crazy solely because it is so soon after I get on the train. Other than that, most slow zones are below Diversey. The total slow zones on the Brown line are the third worst at 21 percent, behind the Dan Ryan leg and Purple Express, so that tells you how slow the trip is below Diversey. Quote:
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Wow, OhioGuy, that was a scary experience for you!
Glad you're still with us... |
Just out of sheer curiously I am interested in the cost differentials of replacement and upkeep regarding subways lines versus exposed grade/elevated lines have to deal with weathering. Any of our transit experts here know of a good site that parses out the differences?
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