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The idea that railroads should have to give away free access to their rights of way simply because they are allowed to condemn property doesn't seem right to me. I also seem to remember that there was an act passed, I think in the early 20th century, that absolved railroads of "owing" anything to the governments for allowing them to be built. Maybe it was part of the de-nationalization after world war 1, I'm not a history expert though so my memory could be off. |
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Amtrak pays no rent what-so-ever to the Freight RR corporations for using their RR ROW. That's apart of the legislation creating Amtrak many years ago, when Amtrak took over the intercity passenger train services from the regulated private RR corporations. If Amtrak owns, leases, or operates the HSR trains, they would not be charged trackage rights or rent. Of course, Amtrak doesn't have the financial resources to buy the HSR trains, nor upgrade the existing tracks, or lay new tracks in new RR ROWs. |
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Conventional rail technology peaks out at 79MPH due to FRA signalling requirements, though trains routinely ran faster in a previous era. Getting to 79MPH operation is pretty straightforward.
The Midwest HSR plan only called for increasing speeds to 110MPH. Not actually true high speed rail. They also had a ludicrously low cost estimate of $1 million per mile. Chicago is motivated to build the St. Louis line first because it serves a long stretch of Illinois. But is that the most logical place? Milwaukee makes more sense perhaps, but it is quasi-suburban and the rail line is a busy commuter route today. Indianapolis is much closer to Chicago than St. Louis, and isn't ridiculously smaller. It should be possible to create a 90 minute journey time. There's a potential excellent routing into downtown via the Illinois Central to Van Buren or Millennium Station. The existing freight routing of Amtrak is circuitous, but with lots of flat, open land, I think it's ideal for a new terrain route. There are a lot of assumptions here, but if you assume you can convert part of the CSX Crawfordsville Sub to high speed only out of downtown, you then construct a short parallel segment to get you out of the metro area where you are free and clear to a new terrain route that links to the IC, where you leverage the very wide ROW to allow at least one dedicated HSR track. This could give you a high speed only route to Chicago that could operate at real high speeds - 150+ MPH. I put a price tag of around $3 billion on this. Probably a pipe dream, but one is entitled to dream. |
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http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/theskyline/
Chicago Architectural Club announces winners of high-speed rail station design competition http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune....erspective.jpg If the dream of turning Chicago into a high-speed rail hub ever came true, would the station be an anonymous piece of infrastructure or would it give something back to the city? Inspired by next year’s centennial of the Burnham Plan, which created such iconic features as the city’s lakefront, the Chicago Architectural Club on Sunday announced the winner of an ideas competition, slyly called “Burnham 2.0,” that took up that question. The winner should generate healthy discussion even if it won’t get built. The plan, by four little-known Chicago architects, calls for a mostly underground station, just east of Union Station on a site now occupied by the Union Station Multiplex (the former Chicago Mercantile Exchange Building) at 444 W. Jackson Blvd. and the 222 S. Riverside Plaza office building. The station would be topped by a combination of flat and undulating roofs, as well as large triangular panels of glass. You could walk on those roofs. The station, which would have the feel of a sleek airport terminal, would lead to high-speed train platforms as well as water taxis on the Chicago River. The winners—Michael Cady, Elba Gil, David Lillie and Andres Montana--emerged from a field of 75 qualified entries and will receive a $10,000 prize. Second prize and $3,000 goes to Cheyne Owens of Cambridge, Mass. Third prize winner Lindsay Grote of Chicago gets $1,000. At the announcement, held at the Chicago History Museum as part of the Chicago Humanities Festival, jurors praised the winning plan for making an aesthetic statement without overwhelming the Beaux-Arts grandeur of the existing Union Station. And like all architecture competitions, this one offered a snapshot of its era and its most influential architects. The folded roof looks as “if the surface of the Earth was re-designed by Zaha Hadid,” quipped juror Geoff Manaugh, referring to the Pritzker Prize-winning London architect. |
Well hot damn!
But how come not on the block SE of Union Station - it's bigger, and I presume more ripe for major development. |
That's a very unusual design... I don't like it. It tears down a densely built lot and replaces it with, essentially, a deconstructivist plaza that is inhospitable, unusable, and pointless. The plaza on top of this station design is the most street-unfriendly plaza I have ever seen. I saw this on another forum and I agree with what they said - whenever there is an architectural design competition, you frequently get these completely off-the-wall, impractical, "revolutionary" designs that scream "Look at me, I'm unusual!!!" that do not concern themselves with workability in the real world.
This is not to mention the economic impracticality of building the station there without some sort of air rights development above it, whether it involves the existing building / buildings, or new construction, or perhaps a combination of the two. |
It's just a fantasy designed to get people thinking... no need to take it very seriously.
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Put a green roof and park on the roof and it could be alright.
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Hey peeps, what happened to the OMP/ORD thread? I can't find it; does someone have the link (if it still exists)?
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Has anyone talked to the workers at the Fullerton station? They look like they could open the other southbound track any time now.
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The darned thing had fallen off the page of Transportation threads, probably due to inactivity. I think this must be an error in the SSP system. I was looking for it forever. Now I've got it bumped back up for this week's festivities. |
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http://redeye.chicagotribune.com/new...5183359.column |
^^^ If Damen isn't opened up until December, they will have failed their pledge to have stations down for only 1 year.
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honte - I believe you live near IIT, correct? Do you know if any progress has been made on the 35th Street Metra station? I know you're opposed to it, but it definitely has worth as a transit improvement for the city...
In related news, I found a plan of the station design, which shows access on both the east AND west sides of the embankment. I suppose this is to avoid a pedestrian crossing of the tracks. In this plan, north is to the left. http://www.infrastructure-eng.com/si...g_2_1814_3.jpg |
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The plan always called for access from east and west. |
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