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If they want to better manage crowds on trains, the new articulated trains are best, but maybe Chicago's curves are too tight for that.
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I don't see what's wrong with it. If anything, I like that they've got their logo engraved in the concrete, gives it a sense of permanence. There isn't enough 'sense of permanance' in the way we do things enough these days, as it often was in the past... |
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. That we all know. But as a graphic designer, I'm telling you it's bad.
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Are there alternative designs for their logo? I'm pretty sure that has been the same logo I remember when I was a kid (90's).
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Since the 80s. Nuff said.
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It's not great, but it's just a company logo. Not sure how much better or worse it could be?
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Paris' city transit agency (this is an abstraction of Paris... circular city with squiggly river... plus a face looking skyward) http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...n_logo.svg.png Dutch Railways... conveys the motion of a two-track rail line, does not rely on text to convey meaning http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...enHft_logo.jpg New Haven Railroad... prominent serifs conjure ties while the uprights of the letters resemble rails. note that this is subtle. http://www.daylightsales.com/images/...0rail%2058.jpg Illinois Central... letters spell "IC/ic" while also referencing the cross-section of a running rail. For comparison: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...a_Logo.svg.png The letters are fussy and inconsistent (each curve has a different radius, there are little points and tabs,varying widths, etc). The lowercase letters are set above the baseline, which is jarring. The letters have a slant - probably the designer's attempt to conjure motion - but it doesn't really work. The double underline is pretty awful, especially when the ends of the lines don't slant the same way as the letters. The New Haven logo was arrived at after hundreds of crappy designs. The Metra logo was fashioned by some bored staffer in his basement. all images courtesy of wikipedia |
Are those better or worse examples!? Lol I guess these kinds of things don't bother me.
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Third Chicago Airport
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2...eotone-airport |
Discussion moved from General Developments thread:
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What surprises most people is that the operating costs are also much less for BRT, about 60% of LRT costs, on a place-mile* basis. *A "place mile" is a passenger place (seated or standing) carried one mile. Quote:
One of the mortal blows to the tunnels was when the Dearborn and State Street subways were built at the same level in the 1930s, cutting all the east-west tunnels as well as removing those two streets from the network. http://i.imgur.com/vo1aNuN.jpg |
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http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1...tion-authority |
Mods/admins: is there a way to get this thread to show up on http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/tags.php?tag=chicago
That's the page I come to now, and it seems to contain every Chicago-related thread on the board except this one. |
But Metra's logo does need a refresh, just like pace did a few years ago. If you want to talk bad logos, how about IDOT's bizarre ligature party?
http://www2.illinois.gov/gov/green/P...mages/IDOT.jpg |
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...symbol.svg.png
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...symbol.svg.png Their graphic isn't the most pleasant either. |
Yeah... the graphic seems to be a gordian knot, which I guess is appropriate for a big inefficient bureaucracy
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LOL... proving that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I always liked IDOT's logo... we have complex webs of infrastructure in Illinois; I always just assumed that was an abstracted version of the weaving between various modes of transportation. It also pays homage to the Celtic heritage of Illinois politicians.
Never noticed the weird ligatures, though, and the gordian knot interpretation is equally apt. |
Has construction started with the new Cermak green line station? I thought construction was going to start in June.
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No Cermak station construction yet.
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Speaking of IDOT...
Concepts for the Eisenhower interchanges have been released formally. Harlem Austin is similar. Note the grade-separated bike path... this reminds me of I-66 in Arlington, VA with the Custis Trail. The decking is similar, too. I love the idea of building a bike superhighway in this area. Oak Park is just a little too far from the Loop to be a comfortable bike commute if the whole length is on-street... http://img200.imageshack.us/img200/3496/e9c.jpg TOD Deck Concept Shown for Austin, but could be built at Harlem, Oak Park, and/or Austin http://img543.imageshack.us/img543/1935/poji.jpg Mainline Concept for "The Avenues" Designed to accommodate a busway or Blue Line extension with minimal fuss later on http://img14.imageshack.us/img14/5830/gair.jpg |
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I think this is an improvement. There are other renderings showing a pretty substantial decorative fence, like the one on Roosevelt in the South Loop, with planter beds, street trees, and other things to break the wind and make the sidewalks more pleasant.
It's not ideal, but the TOD concept that goes along with it will improve things even further. Also: CTA is considering some major changes to the Blue Line stations. Many of them involve widening platforms and revising the vertical access with elevators/escalators, removing or supplementing the long ramps (many of these ramps are not ADA-compliant). It's almost certain that the headhouses on the overpasses would also be replaced with more spacious facilities. |
My contribution:
Get rid of the parking lots in the TOD deck concept. Retailers will almost immediately be tempted to place their store entrances at the lot, and CTA riders will have to "walk around back" to enter the store, defeating the whole purpose. |
Maybe. I think these were largely envisioned as fast food/coffee/etc where shoplifting isn't as big of an issue, so the tenants can maintain two unsecured entrances.
Yes, retailers may try to close street entrances... but Oak Park can always write a two-entrance system into the zoning. With new technology like RFID tags, anti-shoplifting systems are becoming a lot cheaper. I think many retailers will even do this willingly; the front sidewalk is not just a sidewalk but a busy rail/bus station with many potential customers. |
Its great to see the TOD concept. It would be especially appropriate at Oak Park Ave where there is no highway ramp. It would go a long way towards reconnecting the two halves of the small business district which has been bisected by the Ike.
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Love the retail bridge/deck conecpt. Works great in Columbus, Ohio, where it was first tried out. One of the retail buildings is a high-end steakhouse, proof that high-end commercial uses can work in such a building. Visually completes the streetscape, improves pedestrian experience, adds potential ridership to the Blue Line, adds jobs right on top of transit and generates brand new tax revenue where none existed before. Its win-win on all fronts.
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Is there a link for this concept images?
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I am sure that they must have something planned, but in the images there is a new CTA entrance on the East side of the street -- but no visible connection to the train platform (only the existing ramp up to the West side Headhouse).
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The group of truckers discount furniture warehouses that want to prevent BRT on Ashland are meeting twice this month:
"www.saveashland.com NO to Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) on Ashland Avenue YES to Modern, Cost-Effective Bus Service on Ashland with Expanded Service to Andersonville MEETINGS Attend our next Coalition meeting this Friday 8/16 at 1p at First Baptist Congregational Church 1613 W. Washington Blvd. Please RSVP. Attend the Ashland Avenue Meeting on Wednesday 8/28 at 6:30p at Orlando Glass and Trim 641 N. Ashland Ave. Please RSVP." Might be a good meeting to attend. |
This is from last week, but I thought it was worthwhile to post:
Chicago Says Goodbye to 40-Year-Old 'L' Rail Cars Quote:
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So... how's the Dan Ryan Red Line Rehab going? Is it still scheduled to be complete in 2 months?
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It seems if they are rebuilding the corridor down to the ballast level they should have considering using cheaper and longer life concrete ties. |
Concrete ties are way more expensive to buy and install than wood, and they don't have as much benefit in a corridor with few to no curves that will see fewer trains.
The only reason that they are so prevalent in transit construction in spite of the cheapness of wood ties in the US is that the "new starts" funding process prioritizes enormous up-front expenditures (since a significant portion, up to 50 or even 80%, can come from the federal government) in order to achieve an absolute minimum in maintenance costs where 100% of the costs must be borne locally. There is a reason the vast majority of freight railroads in the US use wood ties: in the long term, except where tracks are extremely curvy and/or traffic is very fast or heavy, the total lifecycle cost for wood is lower, even if they have to go through and selectively replace deteriorating ties several times during what would be the lifespan of a concrete tie. |
Also, CTA has had bad experience with concrete ties, including the ones they tore out on this very line (an older two-block design).
The experience with concrete ties in the US has been mixed at best. Amtrak, Metro North, and New Jersey Transit have all put in concrete ties only to remove them a few years later. |
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The two piece French design that the city and the CTA experimented with in the 1960s is found today more in solid fixed-transitways rather than in ballasted track work. The city reimbursed the CTA for removal of the concrete ties and replacement with wood ties in the early 70s. There's still a stash of those ties in the CTA's 63rd St, lower yard. DH |
What about composite plastic ties? I understood they used exactly that type of tie for the track replacement in the Kennedy median a few years ago. It makes more sense IMO for a rail line that's built in a trench below the water table.
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Speaking of track replacement - news about the ORD branch of the Blue Line.
Is this Groundhog Day or something? I thought we already went through all this and eliminated O'Hare branch Blue Line slow zones a year or two ago. http://www.chicagobusiness.com/artic...ravel-to-ohare CTA OKs work to speed up travel to O'Hare August 15, 2013 ... The CTA board on Wednesday approved a $20.4 million contract for the Blue Line renewal project. The project calls for improvements on stretches of the Blue Line where track conditions are so poor trains are unable to travel at top speeds of 55 mph. In some of those so-called "slow zones," trains must limit their speed to between 15 and 35 mph. The work is expected to begin in the spring of 2014 and continue through the fall. ... |
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Truth is that wood treated with creosote is actually a very durable material and stands up quite well to the elements. |
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^ IIRC that's exactly what they're doing. Repairing the drainage system (basins, drain tile, fabric, pumps, etc) is a huge part of the current rebuild. It's one reason why they had to do a total shutdown; repairing the drainage system with active trains running would have been near-impossible.
Unless you're suggesting they should have done the current Red Line work 8 years ago when they rebuilt the Ryan? Forget politics, that's just foolish. Where is everyone supposed to go when 130000 ppl/hr of capacity (expressway & rail combined) is removed from the system? |
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DH |
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Metra is going to allow Ventra to be used on trains. Hopefully it can be used for Divvy next.
http://goo.gl/iV7HWp |
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