Re: L' trains
Posted by:
Jeff_Weiner
(---.sub-70-194-72.myvzw.com)
Date: August 31, 2015 07:02PM
the_mogra Wrote:
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> I view the old Humboldt Park line (which I
> remember only from seeing partial trackage east of
> Western Ave up to about 1963) and the Paulina St
> tracks as totally separate matters, at least as
> far as making my point in this discussion.
> Extending the old Humboldt Park line is an ancient
> issue completely pre-dating the CTA; once the CTA
> got ahold of it in 1947 they wanted nothing more
> to do with it than to close/eliminate/tear it down
> which they succeeded 5 years from that. By
> contrast, the Paulina St tracks were merely
> surplus to the purpose (of getting people
> downtown) in CTA's view once the Dearborn subway
> opened 1951-52
>
Well, had the residents who used the Humboldt Park line insisted on keeping it running, and even convince the City to extend it west, the old structure and tracks between Evergreen Junction (at the portal) and Washington Junction (where the tracks diverged towards Paulina Junction) may have remained, allowing Pauline Junction to become a wye. The Humboldt trains would then proceed to and from the Loop over Lake Street.
> Now the CTA says a Circle Connector is necessary
> because so many blueline riders travel downtown
> into the Dearborn subway when their ultimate
> destination is cross-town (like a person boarding
> at the Western Ave station at one end of the
> blueline and getting-off at the Western Ave
> station at the other end of the blueline, or
> similar scenarios). So they're clogging the
> downtown Dearborn subway portion unnecessarily,
> and it isn't just about getting riders downtown
> anymore. The CTA says a kind of circle connector
> line that travels cross-town will correct this,
> but where's the best place to locate it--along
> Ashland Ave or along Western Ave? Well anybody
> can see the old Paulina St tracks would've gone
> mightily towards this purpose, but the CTA threw
> them and the right-of-way out years ago. Yes
> hindsight's 20/20 but a smart rail-roader has an
> intuition their rights-of-way are to be preserved
> insofar as possible even if temporarily unused.
>
The Circle Line keeps heading west. Back when, it would have been using the Douglas (Blue/Pink) tracks as well as everything north of Loomis Junction to Logan Square. I just don't see where the tracks would have gone, north of Logan.
Now, it seems like they want to follow the route of the Crosstown Expressway, running over, or at least parallel to the Belt Railway tracks.
> The 'money issue' you mention is the battle; the
> CTA's liability insurers no doubt said "even if
> you don't regularly use the tracks you must keep
> them in repair as if they were, or we won't cover
> claims resulting from anything on that old track
> length". But a portion was kept, south of Lake St
> (the CTA's own need then, as opposed to the public
> directly) that is now the pinkline. As I used to
> read about it, when the CTA got the federal gov'ts
> financial help to rebuild the old Douglas Park
> line over a doz. years ago they also said they
> wanted the Paulina St 'connector' elevated
> rebuilt, but the feds replied at first no, funds
> were to be used only on tracks that the public
> travels on directly. So thinking outside the box
> as it were the CTA adapted by making the paulina
> st connector the new Pinkline the public could
> ride themselves, and only then the feds agreed to
> fund rebuilding it (you might say we have the
> federal government entirely to thank for the
> pinkline's existence). So compromises are not
> only possible but necessary IMO in all cases,
> because a destructive alternative is unacceptable
> to anybody.
>
Money is always the problem. And insurance is a real consideration of cost.
> Getting off my high horse, you know nowadays when
> I go into those old neighborhoods--now
> gentrified--and try to envision the paulina st
> elevated structure I saw so much of in my
> childhood I can have a bit of trouble pinpointing
> where it stood exactly, at least in places (like
> around Grand Ave). The trestle over the commuter
> tracks establishes something, and north of
> division st certain homes are set back from the
> front of their properties curiously, because the
> 'L' used to stand immediately in front of their
> 2nd flr windows.
I've tried this using Google Maps on satellite view, scrolling from Loomis Juncion at the Eisenhower Expressway to the old Met bridge over the UP-Metra/BN-SF tracks west of Ashland. Lotsa new houses built where the tracks used to be.