Modernizing Transit on Chicago’s Red and Purple Rail Lines

Modernizing Transit on Chicago’s Red and Purple Rail Lines
Chicago Transit Authority Chicago, Illinois, USA
Fast-tracked environmental planning and conceptual engineering enabled the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) to secure federal funding for a marquee rail revitalization program.
Chicago’s Red/Purple rail corridor is the city’s busiest—and oldest. The original Red Line “L” trains first started moving Chicagoans in 1900. Reaching the end of its useful life, the system’s infrastructure was hard-pressed to keep pace with the two lines’ more than 150,000 daily riders. To accommodate users for the next 60 to 80 years, CTA is undertaking its largest-ever capital improvement project: the Red and Purple Modernization Program (RPM). Broken up into phases, the RPM will allow CTA to expand capacity along the program’s 9.6-mile corridor, improve access to job markets, support economic development within local communities, and deliver faster, smoother rides with less crowding and more frequency.

One Phase at a Time
Through public workshops and design charrettes, CTA identified two projects for Phase One of the RPM. The first is the modern­iza­tion and rebuilding of four stations—Lawrence, Argyle, Berwyn and Bryn Mawr—and their tracks along the north end of the Red and Purple lines. Upgrades include bringing the stations, which were built a century ago, into compliance with the Americans with Disabil­i­ties Act and elongating them to accommodate higher-capacity trains. The second project involves construc­tion of a new bypass at Clark Junction, originally built in 1907, where the Red, Purple and Brown lines converge. The new bypass will reroute the Brown Line over the Red and Purple lines to eliminate bottle­neck­ing.

To assist CTA in obtaining federal Core Capacity grants, a joint venture (called the CWC Transit Group) comprising CDM Smith, Jacobs Engineering and Wight & Company developed two compre­hen­sive National Envi­ron­men­tal Policy Act (NEPA) analysis documents and provided conceptual engineering for both projects. The Federal Transit Admin­is­tra­tion (FTA) approved the envi­ron­men­tal assessments and issued a Finding of No Significant Impact in late 2015, at the end of an aggressive 18-month schedule. Based on the finding that there were no significant impacts, CTA was able to advance Phase One and apply for further federal funding for the project.

daily riders
miles of corridor
Preserving History and Ensuring Envi­ron­men­tal Justice
Limiting historic impacts was paramount to the success of the envi­ron­men­tal assessments. Both projects pass through historic districts. The station project included two stations with histor­i­cally designated resources. For the bypass, the realignment necessary to modernize and straighten the tracks meant impacting an historic apartment building that was constructed when development first began in the district. Finding acceptable solutions to preserving this history required careful planning and collab­o­ra­tion.

As a result of early and continued coor­di­na­tion with Chicago’s active historic preser­va­tion community, CTA, FTA and city agencies agreed on a plan to develop historic preser­va­tion plans for the surrounding historic districts in the Lawrence-to-Bryn Mawr station areas, incorporate historic archi­tec­tural styles within at least two of the modernized stations, and consider the feasibility of moving the Vautravers Building approx­i­mately 29 feet to avoid demolition or retain specific elements of the histor­i­cally designated building if it could not be moved.

Another important goal of the envi­ron­men­tal assessments was careful consid­er­a­tion of and response to public input. One approach taken was to employ an expansive envi­ron­men­tal justice outreach program. This program involved soliciting feedback from linguis­ti­cally isolated Asian communities in the project area who had been tradi­tion­ally under­rep­re­sented in decision-making for public works. Many indicated that the meetings felt like the first time their point of view was taken into account; the fact that the meetings provided a voice to these communities went far in helping CTA win public support for the project. In addition to the envi­ron­men­tal justice program, the project team conducted extensive outreach to property owners who would be displaced by construc­tion of the new bypass.

Though unusual in the envi­ron­men­tal stage of a project, these consul­ta­tions helped CTA secure early purchase agreements with some property owners, stream­lin­ing the number of properties they would need to acquire later. As a result of CTA and the project team’s outreach efforts, a number of commitments were made to reduce the effects on the community, including imple­men­ta­tion of a neigh­bor­hood rede­vel­op­ment plan with potential for transit-oriented development oppor­tu­ni­ties, the use of sustainable materials in the projects’ design and construc­tion, and the historic preser­va­tion plans mentioned above.

In January 2017, FTA announced it would allocate approx­i­mately $1.07 billion to CTA for Phase One. With federal funding secured and the public on board, the RPM, which received a 2016 American Council of Engineering Companies’ National Recognition Award, is set to bring big benefits to Chicagoans. The 45,000 people who live within a half-mile of the four targeted stations and depend on transit will have improved access and experience with the Red and Purple lines. Commuters will also save upwards of half a million travel hours each year thanks to the bypass, which will eliminate train backups and improve the system’s overall capacity.

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