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I noticed that too as far as the rusting on the Brown Line. Especially at Fullerton and Belmont with the large white girders holding up the platforms, many of them already look disgusting. The railings are also looking pretty gross on a lot of stations.
They really are a sad sorry example of something built a few years ago!! I mean, with the corregated steel roofs on the platforms?? That's something cheap from the 40's. Look at the one at Sheridan, it's absolutely horrid - and I'm sure that's what the Brown Line will look like in 5 years since they never paint or do any sort of maint. |
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Additionally this is not just "another ring road", this is another bypass for what you know very well is the biggest transportation and trade choke point in the country, perhaps the world (rivaling the world's legendary straits). There are very few ways for trucks to get in and out of Southern Chicago and NW Indiana that don't involve passing through extremely dense and built up areas that are subject to heavy traffic. Having a road that ties the 4 or 5 freeways that head into these areas together lets the trucks drive around that traffic and then head directly to the areas they need to access. Also, the excitement over the freeway occurred during a conversation that was specifically about the "huge amount of available product" in the Gary/Lakeshore area. So no, they weren't excited about developing corn fields, though I'm sure they would love to do that as well. Quote:
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Pine?!
Pine won't last more than 2-3 years! Any sort of wet environment should just cause it to rot away, and its so soft that foot traffic (let alone pull-along travel cases) will destroy it. Historic preservation can be ridiculous sometimes. Although they could have used Ipe, but thats spendy. |
Modern industry relies on having freeways near it. Not 20 miles south of it. A freeway that far south of the developed area is simply the dream of someone who wants to make a killing by turning the adjacent farmland into industrial or warehouse space. There are lots of corridors that could be chosen within 10 miles of the Gary lakefront if relieving traffic congestion around the tip of the lake were the real motivation. Hell, we just decided not to bother rebuilding the SH-912 bridge because there's so little traffic in that area.
Where exactly is this huge traffic jam? TravelMidwest statistics show that the worst travel time on I-65 between US 30 and I-80 is only two minutes longer than the average. On the Kingery between the state line and the Bishop Ford it's the difference between six minutes normal and 12 minutes worst-case. How will going 10 miles further south save a trucker coming from Michigan six minutes? I notice the Illiana made The Infrastructurist's list of useless highway projects. |
^ MR DT, Add to your argument that the Illiana is at the top of Indiana's project list, so much so that their INDOT is spearheading and funding the initial studies. Considering the palpable Hostile relationships the 2 states have with Gov. Mitch Daniels crowing about all of the businesses that are relocating to IN you can only conclude that IN sees this as a net gain for their state. The fact that the Illiana (and planned 355/I-57 connection) will give IN counties direct access to the massive new Joliet Intermodal, makes me believe IN will be using even more state subsidies to extract companies in the logistics business over to their state.
I dont see this as a win for IL at all. If one is against the SSA then how can one be for the Illiana, the 2 projects are joined at the hip. NO F%%N way are companies going to open shop in Gary when the green-fields of southern Lake County, Newton & Jasper County await replete with state incentives and property tax give backs and the same old business model that corporations have been using for decades that extracts legalized bribes and kickbacks from the public bank trust. Even more troubling is the environmental cost of the project. The entire length of the proposed southern route is within the Kankakee River watershed. That river water is already used for the drinking water of most of Kankakee County, and far Southern Will county as well as the adjacent towns in the Indiana counties. If the expected commercial development follows the Illiana, then it is reasonable to assume that the river will be tapped to supply water. No studies are being done to anticipate this need. In the long run even more Great Lakes water may need to be diverted to support the development associated with expanding commercial development this far south. |
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Random question: was there once an overpass of the railroad tracks on Sangamon between Kinzie and Fulton?
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Additionally, there were Trolley lines on both Sangamon St., and Morgan St. one block West. |
South Lakefront Corridor Transit Study Meeting Tomorrow
Please attend the South Lakefront Corridor Transit Study Meeting tomorrow at the Apostolic Church of God, 5 pm at E. 63rd St. & S. Kenwood Ave.: http://campaign.r20.constantcontact....ONEud7EriGY%3D
The Church is directly across the street from the 63rd St./Woodlawn Metra Electric District Station: http://g.co/maps/gfntp As the Station is available to the Public at all times I plan to escort small groups to examine the MED infrastructure for conversion to an 'L' operation (I have notified Metra of this, and as long as no one enters areas "Not Open to the Public" there is no problem). I also have a Meeting with Re. Cynthia Soto (D-Chicago) Monday morning to discuss the Gray Line, and the necessity of Metra and CTA Fare Increases and Service Cuts. Hope to see you at the Corridor Study Meeting, Mike Payne |
Has anybody been by the Halsted bridge lately? Just wondering if they finished the abutments and started the steelwork yet. CDOT's flier has a completion date of November 2011.
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Group Wants CTA ‘Gray Line’ on Metra Electric Line
FOX Chicago News - Published: Tuesday, 13 Sep 2011, 7:43 AM CDT:
http://www.myfoxchicago.com/dpp/news...aring-20110913 Chicago - Some South Side residents want to convert Metra's Electric Lines to a new CTA line. They call it the Gray Line. There was a public hearing about the idea on the South Side Monday night. The Gray Line would run from downtown through Grant Park, along the lakefront to the far South Side. Supporters said the Gray Line would provide easy access to the Museum of Science and Industry, Ford's Torrence Avenue Plant and Chicago State University. |
I hope it happens' that part of the southside is fairly dense for the southside and would serve and underserved part of the city.
Would they intend on increasing frequency of service if it is turned over to CTA or would it run as a commuter schedule only |
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By Jonathan Bullington Tribune reporter
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/l...,6390950.story 9:16 p.m. CDT, September 15, 2011 An ongoing study of where to build a new CTA Yellow Line station in Evanston has identified Dodge or Asbury avenues as the preferred locations. At the second in a series of public meetings on the topic, city officials on Thursday night said these spots might be good for a station because they are near current or potential businesses and residential developments. Topics Commuting Transportation Chicago Transit Authority Maps Evanston, IL, USA The officials stressed that the study of where to put a station is still in its infancy. A third potential station location at Ridge Avenue, while not ruled out, has fallen out of favor with the city’s advisory and technical advisory committees because the surrounding neighborhood is already highly developed, officials said. |
The article mentions direct downtown service, hopefully this is something that is seriously being considered.
It shouldn't be to terribly hard to run it over the Purple line routing any maybe switch it over to the Red after Addison to avoid it going over the loop elevated. Run it up the 13th street incline, switch tracks, and head back up north. |
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Back in the 70s through 80s, the Skokie Swift ran at a 4-5 minute headway in the peak, which would provide pretty painless 2-seat service via a cross-platform transfer at Howard to Red Line trains running every 3-4 minutes. However, that also implies nearly doubling the current peak period demand on the branch to justify increasing the frequency to those levels.
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