Lake Street Elevated Explained

Lake Street Elevated
Type:Rapid transit
System:Chicago "L"
Status:Operational
Locale:Chicago, Illinois, United States
Oak Park, Illinois
Forest Park, Illinois
Start:Harlem/Lake
End:Clinton
Stations:15
Daily Ridership:27,701
(average weekday 2019)
Open:
(Current operation)
Operator:Chicago Transit Authority (1947 - present)
Chicago Rapid Transit Company (1924 - 1947)
Chicago and Oak Park Elevated Railroad (1904–1924)
Lake Street Elevated Railroad Company (1893–1904)
Character:Elevated
Stock:5000-series
Linelength:8.75miles
Electrification:Third rail, 600 V DC
Map State:collapsed

The Lake Street Elevated, also known as the Lake branch, is a 8.75miles long branch of the Chicago "L" which is located west of the Chicago Loop and serves the Green Line for its entire length, as well as the Pink Line east of Ashland Avenue. As of February 2013, the branch serves an average of 27,217 passengers each weekday.[1] It serves the Near West Side, East Garfield Park, West Garfield Park, and Austin neighborhoods of Chicago, as well as the suburbs Oak Park and Forest Park. It owes its name to Lake Street, the street that the branch overlooks for 6.25miles before continuing its route straight west, adjacent to South Boulevard, towards the terminus at Harlem/Lake.

History

The Lake Street Elevated began regular passenger service on November 6, 1893, from its eastern terminal at Madison Street and Market Street to California Avenue. On November 24, 1893, service on the line was extended to Homan Avenue. In March 1894, service on the line was extended to 48th Avenue (now known as Cicero Avenue) and on April 29, 1894, service was extended to 52nd Avenue (now known as Laramie Avenue), which at the time was the city limits of Chicago. When the completed Loop opened October 3, 1897, the Lake Street Elevated became the first line to utilize the entire quadrangle.[2] In 1898, an agreement was reached with Cicero Township to extend the Lake Street Elevated beyond the Chicago city limits into what at the time was Cicero Township. This agreement allowed for the extension of the Lake Street Elevated along South Boulevard, as well as the creation of the Randolph Street Branch and Cuyler Avenue Shuttle. The Randolph and Cuyler branches were part of trackage rights given by the Chicago, Harlem & Batavia Railway, its trains continued east to Grand Central Station.[3] On January 25, 1901, service was extended to Wisconsin Avenue (later called Marion), and C&GW service was abandoned. On May 20, 1910, service was extended to its terminal approximately two blocks west of Harlem Avenue in Forest Park.

In April 1948, the Lake Street Elevated was the first line of the 'L' system to use the Skip-Stop A/B service. Upon the implementation of Skip-Stop A/B service ten stations on the Lake Street Elevated were closed, as was the Market Street Stub, and all trains were routed through the Loop. This new system decreased the travel time of 24–35 minutes, which was considered by the CTA and its users to be a great success.

In 1962, 2.5miles of ground level tracks in Chicago's Austin neighborhood and Oak Park, Illinois were replaced by elevated tracks which run on Chicago & North Western Railroad's track embankment. New stations were built at Central, Austin, Ridgeland and Oak Park. and a new terminus opened at Harlem, replacing the station at Marion and the Forest Park terminus.

Market Street stub

Prior to the opening of the Loop elevated in 1897, the Lake Street Elevated's eastern terminus was the Market Street Terminal at Madison Street and Market Street.[4] After the opening of the Loop in 1897, service continued to the Market Street stub, which had a stop at Randolph & Market in addition to the terminal at Madison & Market. Service to the Market Street stub ended on April 4, 1948, as the CTA implemented its new A/B skip-stop service. The Market Street stub was demolished soon after to make way for construction of Wacker Drive.[5]

New infill stations

See main article: Morgan station and Damen station (CTA Green Line). Construction of the new Morgan station began in Summer 2010.[6] TranSystems led the design team, in conjunction with Ross Barney Architects.[7] Like most currently active Green Line and Pink Line stations, Morgan is ADA-accessible, with an elevator on either side of the tracks. The station will also have bike storage.

The new Morgan station officially opened on May 18, 2012, and grand opening ceremonies were held on May 24.[8] [9] [10]

The new $60 million Damen station filled a 1.5miles distance between the California and Ashland stations. A design for the new station was released on July 9, 2018,[11] groundbreaking of the new station began in August 2022, and was completed and opened on August 5, 2024.[12] [13] [14]

Service history

Until 1969, the Lake Branch was an independent branch line providing service in one direction only, like the Ravenswood and Evanston Express Lines: from the Loop to the West Side, Oak Park, and Forest Park. On September 28, 1969, it was paired with the newly opened Dan Ryan branch to form the Lake–Dan Ryan Line, also called the West-South Route, via the north and east legs of the Loop, the South Side Elevated, and the connection along 18th Street. This operation lasted for 24 years. On February 21, 1993, as part of the opening of the Orange Line, the CTA began to differentiate the "L" lines by colors, and the present day Green Line routing was introduced, effectively swapping the full South Side Elevated with the Dan Ryan branch, which was instead paired with the North Side Main Line via the State Street subway using a new connection.

On January 9, 1994, the Lake Street Elevated and the entire Green Line closed for two years for a rehabilitation project. When the line reopened on May 12, 1996, most stations were rebuilt and equipped with elevators in order to make them ADA compliant, and six stations were permanently closed.[15] [16]

On April 26, 1998, the Green, Purple, and Brown lines lost their 24-hour service.

In 2006, the CTA introduced the Pink Line routing, which runs trains from the Cermak branch to the Loop via the Paulina Connector and the Lake Street Elevated east of Paulina Street. This routing was previously used from 1954 to 1958 while the Forest Park branch was under construction to replace the Garfield Park branch. Once the Forest Park branch opened, the Paulina connector saw very little if any revenue service, but was kept as it was the only track connection (albeit largely reduced to one track) between what would later be known as the West-Northwest route (now the Blue line) and the rest of the system.

Station listing

StationLocationNotes
Marengo Avenue and Circle Avenue, Forest ParkClosed 1962; demolished; replaced by Harlem
1 S. Harlem Avenue, Forest Park
Marion Avenue and South Boulevard, Oak ParkClosed October 28, 1962; demolished; replaced by Harlem
100 S. Oak Park Avenue, Oak Park
100 N. Ridgeland Avenue, Oak Park
Lombard Avenue and South Boulevard, Oak ParkClosed 1948; demolished
351 N. Austin Boulevard
Menard Avenue and Lake StreetClosed 1948; demolished
350 N. Central Avenue
5148 W. Lake Street
4800 W. Lake Street
Kostner Avenue and Lake StreetClosed 1948; demolished
4000 W. Lake Street
3800 W. Lake St.Closed March 18, 1956; demolished
3630 W. Lake Street
3400 W. Lake StreetClosed January 9, 1994; demolished; replaced by Conservatory-Central Park Drive
3200 W. Lake Street
Sacramento Boulevard and Lake StreetClosed 1948; demolished
2800 W. Lake Street
Campbell Avenue and Lake StreetClosed 1948; demolished
Oakley Boulevard and Lake StreetClosed 1948; demolished
Damen Avenue and Lake Street
Wood Street and Lake StreetClosed 1913; demolished
Lake Street TransferLake Street and Paulina StreetClosed February 25, 1951; demolished
1601 W. Lake Street
Closed April 4, 1954; demolished
Racine Street and Lake StreetClosed 1948; demolished
958 W. Lake Street
800 W. Lake StreetClosed January 9, 1994; demolished
540 W. Lake Street
500 W. Lake StreetClosed 1909; demolished

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ridership Report: February 2013. Chicago Transit Authority. transitchicago.com. April 8, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20180204060328/http://www.transitchicago.com/assets/1/ridership_reports/2013-2.pdf. February 4, 2018. dead.
  2. http://www.chicago-l.org/operations/lines/loop.html Loop Elevated
  3. Web site: Vandervoort. Bill. CHICAGO'S LOST STATIONS - CHICAGO & NORTHERN PACIFIC - Harlem Division. March 23, 2021. Chicago Transit & Railfan.
  4. http://www.chicago-l.org/stations/market_term.html Market Terminal
  5. http://www.chicago-l.org/stations/randolph-market.html Randolph & Market
  6. http://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/cdot/provdrs/transit_facilities/svcs/morgan_cta_greenpinklinestation.html Morgan CTA Green/Pink Line Station
  7. http://www.r-barc.com/places/?name=CTA+Morgan+Street+Station CTA Morgan Street Station
  8. Hilkevitch, Jon (May 24, 2012). "Grand Opening for New Morgan CTA Station", Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 27, 2012.
  9. Kamin, Blair (May 29, 2012). "Gleaming New CTA Station Raises Question: What Price Architecture?", Chicago Tribune. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  10. Web site: Butler. Patrick. New Morgan station succeeds with a force from the RFMA. Gazette. gazettechicago.com. January 10, 2013.
  11. Web site: Mayor Emanuel Unveils Design for New CTA Damen Green Line Station .
  12. Web site: Damen Green Line 'L' Station Work to Begin This Month 5 Years After Project Announced . 5 August 2022 .
  13. https://www.axios.com/local/chicago/2023/12/04/green-line-new-stop-damen-avenue
  14. https://abc7chicago.com/post/cta-green-line-damen-train-station-opens-monday-weeks-ahead-dnc-united-center-chicago/15145575/
  15. Web site: Carlozo. Lou. CTA closes stations along the Lake Branch. Chicago-L.org. January 10, 2013.
  16. Web site: Cole. David. CTA Green Line. NYC Subway. world.nycsubway.org. January 10, 2013.