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A more complete answer would involve Manhattan and Brooklyn's higher residential density, substantially larger office employment by the teens, and New York's long river crossings; and the rather byzantine politics (and associated graft) of Chicago's traction franchises and rejection of public ownership in the 1920s. And bear in mind that New York's Els didn't come down in Manhattan until the late 40s, and remain to this day in the outer boroughs. |
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^^^^ I agree completely. As more people become transit/green enlightened and desire a good, diverse transportation system, i think you will see a more genuine interest in actually getting something done. Or, quite simply, their community will flounder. It is becoming time for communities to either sack up or skulk away.
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The only real slippage Chicago encountered during subway construction was in the cut-and-cover work done for the stations. There was a drop of about four inches that affected some buildings near State and Chicago. |
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Also, obviously what makes sense about putting it in the median is that people on both sides of the highway suffer equally. In a bygone era, there would have been no great difficulty putting the 35th Red Line station on the west side of the Dan Ryan to favor Bridgeport users, but I imagine things are different these days. |
^ Well, yes, but obviously my idea was not to favor one of the other neighborhood. Putting it west of the Dan Ryan makes sense because Bronzeville already has the green line. Putting it north of the Eisenhower would make sense because the commercial parts of Oak Park along the highway are there. Etc.
It is true that this kind of thing could be misconstrued, but really, people need to understand reason at some point along the way. |
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Without getting too philosophical, one could argue that at least sometimes it's a good thing when politics trump reason, though usually it just results in missed opportunities. For example, it's probably good that the Lake Street Elevated was saved rather than torn down in the 90s, given how strong ridership has gotten on that branch. The obvious choice circa 1992, though, was to abandon it. Despite this exception that proves the rule, I still agree with you... |
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In Chicago's case we need long term planning....letting people know we are going to build transit oriented villages at major stations and encourage it at minor stations. That if a neighborhood fights it we will move the station to an area around it that would like the benefits of a direct gate to the city and dense development. |
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^ I would agree that the engineering in our soil conditions is much more complicated.
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Towers present a completely different problem than tunnels. The watery soil above the clay is trying to seep into the hole from the sides, flooding is a problem for any spaces below the water table, and the "boat" is trying to float out of the hole.
Tunnels through Chicago's blue clay present only the problem of support for the soil above. Chalk or sandstone is about the only thing easier to work and virtually all tunnels--even through rock--require lining for support. I will stand by my opinion that hardly any city is easier to tunnel under than Chicago. Remember that it is crisscrossed by dozens of water supply and sewer tunnels, and that 65 miles of freight tunnels were easily dug by a private company under virtually every downtown street. Some interesting articles on how the Chicago subway was built appear in Engineering News-Record August 1, 1940 and Jan. 30, 1941 and the Journal of the Western Society of Engineers, Dec. 1938, April 1941, and June 1944. |
Off-topic: VivaLFuego (or anyone else for that matter), are there any plans in the near future for renovation or to completely rebuild the Wilson station on the Red Line? Or better yet, an extensive overhaul of the entire north branch?
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Some near-term improvements have been underway at Wilson the past couple months...replaced canopy, lighting, stairwells, and platform decking. Other modest improvements along the North Main are also underway, including canopy and lighting replacement. There is no fixed/holistic plan in place to rehab the entire North Main. It is a terrifyingly large and expensive job to do a thorough and effective reconstruction, and thus a bit of a hot potato.
There is a medium-term plan to completely reconstruct Wilson - in fact there has been for 15 years or more - but it's a very major job. Of course there is ongoing debate about what the replacement should be: a local/express stop with dual island platforms, or a local-only stop with a single island platform. There's also debate about location: should Wilson be eliminated and a new station built at Montrose instead for better station spacing? Should Wilson and Lawrence both be demolished and combined into a single super station generally over Broadway? For such a big project, what is the potential to bring in private developers for a TOD to use some private financing to aid in redevelopment? And then of course, how to configure/use the historic station house. These are major, fundamental issues, and I'm not sure if any of them have been resolved. I believe preliminary design work for the rebuild was started a few years ago but halted because of possibly changing demands for the station. Naturally, there are a lot of political stakeholders involved in this sort of decision. For reference, reconstructing Howard Station (a project of comparable scope) will have taken around 30 years from serious inception (i.e. inclusion in the capital plan) to completion. |
^ This is the biggest pipe dream on earth given the financial state of our transit, but has anyone ever thought about reconstructing the Frank Lloyd Wright station design as a part of something larger? Wouldn't that be amazing? It definitely would be a major attention grabber, especially if Chicago wanted to shine some light on its new transit emphasis.
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