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Yeah, I think this will be more efficient. Washington/Wabash has the same kind of long, wide platforms, and exits galore, and it also sees heavy usage (being the closest Brown Line station to West Loop offices).
I like having busy stations that are fairly crowded... it justifies retail concessions inside the station, generous staircases, and a high level of maintenance. It will suck losing the historic Inner Loop stationhouse at Madison/Wabash, though. |
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btw - Check out this Tribune article (and my comments): http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/o...,6715609.story Does anyone know if Mayor Emanuel has appointed his Member to the Metra Board yet? |
Constant tension catenary...
Does anyone have any idea of the Capital Costs to install Constant Tension Catenary over the Metra Electric District and Kensington & Eastern system?
Everybody knows about the problems with catenary caused by temperature extremes Winter and/or Summer: http://bit.ly/195ZJ1p This NE Alliance article says about $450M for 24 miles on the NJ Transit: http://bit.ly/pJY6eZ |
Putzin' along on the 81 westward down Lawrence to the blue line. Oh how I wish the brown line was extended in a subway under Lawrence to Jefferson Park and out to O'Hare. A one seat ride to the airport for the north side of Chicago would be so wonderful compared to this pathetic stop & go every 2 blocks bus ride.
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Yeah, we could use a few of these outer links. I'm really hoping the next BRT project after Ashland is on 55th or 63rd. It would be great to get a connection from Hyde Park to Midway, and bring stronger transit service to some areas that are really struggling.
On the North Side, a Peterson or Irving Park BRT would be useful as well. |
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While I agree that the Illiana is largely politically driven and will inevitably encourage sprawl, I actually think there is a need for a new E- W roadway. Instead of on the edge of south suburban sprawl I can see an E-W or NE-SW road further downstate being useful for those wanting to avoid driving through the Chicago metro entirely. Just looking at a map a rout from Dwight or even further south Pontiac over to Kankakee over to 65.
This actually reminds me of a wish list interstate I've had since of my days growing up in Peoria and that's a Interstate-ified US-24 from Fort Wayne (or even Toledo) to Peoria (onward through to Quincy and KC, Missouri via IL-336 and US-24), filling a large swath of 2 states with inconvenient non diagonal E-W highway connections. |
Well, it's not a terrible idea. I just don't think it needs to be an interstate. Lay out a 4-lane divided highway with intersections at-grade and bypasses of major towns. This is what Ohio and Indiana did to US-24 between Ft. Wayne and Toledo or US-30 between Valpo and Ft. Wayne.
There's also gotta be some cost control. Ohio built its Fort to Port project (the segment between between Napoleon and Waterville) for $8M/mile, to expressway standards, on a greenfield alignment. Illiana is projected to cost at least $27M/mile, even though there are virtually no differences when it comes to terrain, and the economies of scale should make it cheaper than the Ohio project. The way I see it, with construction costs so absurdly high and no movement to bring them down (higher costs = more jobs, right?) we need to be building only the highest priority things, and Illiana is not that important. |
It sounds like the Ashland BRT environmental assessment is going to be delayed due to the government shutdown.
On that topic, this Sun Times article... (hyperlink not working): http://www.suntimes.com/news/cityhal...r-emanuel.html ...makes is sound like Rahm is backing away from the proposal a bit. Does anyone more familiar with City Hall and CDOT have an idea about the level of support for the Ashland BRT and its prospects? It's a project I really want to see move forward, but I know a lot of cranks ad NIMBYs have been agitating against it. |
I take back my complaining about the delay on the Wells St. bridge. It's looking pretty good.
Today http://i592.photobucket.com/albums/t...8ed1c9a682.jpg http://i592.photobucket.com/albums/t...c8ee5ea160.jpg http://i592.photobucket.com/albums/t...4faeaa0ba0.jpg (I want to say this is a Hydro composition that I remembered from a while back) http://i592.photobucket.com/albums/t...57225a7a68.jpg |
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http://img266.imageshack.us/img266/7396/go56.jpg |
Bicycle accommodation could be done on the sidewalk vs the roadway. It's a blank slate through what will be eventually surrounded by master planned development. In this particular situation anywhere, plans would typically call for a separate path off-road for bicycles on an arterial....not bike lanes or cycle tracks.
Bike lanes can only be placed on arterials if circumstances of crowded urban development require it to be there and not a separate path off the street. But this is not the case. So I don't know why it was designed this way, but it could easily be reconfigured in the future. |
It does include some bike lanes,
"The extension runs two lanes in each direction and includes a bicycle lane in each direction between 79th and 87th streets and shared vehicle-bike lanes south of 87th" |
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I'm also an optimist and am hoping for the best. If South Works were a few miles closer to downtown I'd be right there with you. I'm just concerned that its location and the socioeconomic conditions of the adjacent neighborhood will stifle development for many years. My gut wants to see that awesome modern project rise in 10 years, but my brain tells me in reality it will probably be another generation before this sight reaches its potential.
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It would make the Project much more viable if it had Rapid-transit access to Downtown -- BUT present-day Politics make that all but impossible, even though the facilities are already there! |
Is there an official date when the Wells bridge is supposed to open to traffic? Hard to find info anywhere.
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However, as ardecila pointed out, much of this planning came before all the new improvements, so this route has conventional bike lanes which are bit concerning from a safety standpoint. You'll notice a nice buffered lane on that corner, but that may have just been because of available space from the calculated turning radius. Regardless, I love that photo. It shows so much promise and potential for that site. It really does look like something out of SimCity. |
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Honestly, I think it will take more public investment though. A city subsidy for increased Metra Electric service, investment in parkland, and certainly TIF subsidies for McCaffery, at least in the 1st phase. |
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