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Overview | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 41°52′59.5″N87°38′17.0″W / 41.883194°N 87.638056°W |
Status | Closed and covered |
Start | Franklin St |
End | Clinton St. |
Operation | |
Opened | 1867 (public), 1890 (cable) 1911 (after lowering) |
Closed | 1954 |
Owner | City of Chicago |
Operator | West Chicago Street RR. Chicago Union Transit Chicago Surface Lines Chicago Transit Authority |
Technical | |
Length | 1,605 ft (489.20 m) (as built) |
No. of lanes | 3 |
Highest elevation | 594 ft (181.05 m) |
Lowest elevation | 534 ft (162.76 m) (after lowering) |
The Washington Street Tunnel was the first traffic tunnel under the Chicago River. J.L. Lake was awarded the contract to construct the tunnel in July 1867 and its construction was completed January 1, 1869. This tunnel was 1605 feet long, from Franklin Street west to Clinton Street, and cost $517,000.
Originally built of masonry with one lane for pedestrians and 2 lanes for horse-drawn traffic, by 1884 it was leaking and had been closed. In 1888 the West Chicago Street Railroad leased the tunnel. If they repaired it and built a vehicle bridge they could use the tunnel exclusively for cable car service. Construction began in 1888 and the tunnel was reopened August 12, 1890 [1] [2] [3]
The reversing of the Chicago River in 1900 lowered the water level and exposed the roof of the tunnel in the riverbed. Several ships ran aground on it, damaging the roof. In 1904 the Federal government declared it a hazard to navigation, it was closed on August 19, 1906. [1] [2] [3]
A wider, deeper concrete replacement was built under the original masonry. The approaches were deepened to a new lower tunnel level. The grades were aligned for the cars to enter from a shallow subway just below street level. The subway was not built, concrete ramps raised the tracks up to street grade. [3] George W. Jackson was the contractor for rebuilding the tunnel. [4]
The tunnel reopened for electric streetcar service on January 29, 1911, and was in use until the end of streetcar service 1953. By 2013 both approaches had been covered. [1] [2] [3] [5] [6]
Plans were made to incorporate the tunnel into a high-level subway to run under Washington Street between Clinton Street and Grand Park. [7] The plans were expanded after the Second World War to add high-level subway running parallel to the Washington Street line under Jackson Street, similarly using the tunnel located between Jackson and Van Buren Streets. [8] Both would be tied into another subway tunnel to be dug under Clinton Street, proposed in the interim. [9] The only construction accomplished in advance of these plans was the pair of portals in the Eisenhower Expressway median, 200 feet east of Halsted Street, constructed in 1952 simultaneously with the pair of portals for the Blue Line, [10] and the double-wide station built at Peoria Street in 1964 to accommodate the anticipated platform north of the UIC-Halsted platform for the Blue Line. [11] In 1951-1952, the plans were modified to use the Washington Street subway as a busway rather than as a train tunnel, while the Clinton and Jackson tunnels were merged and remained a rail plan. [12] The plan was canceled in April 1962, although the design and placement of the Peoria Street station house went unchanged. [13] [14]
The Blue Line is a 26.93-mile-long (43.34 km) Chicago "L" line which extends through The Loop from O'Hare International Airport at the far northwest end of the city, through downtown via the Milwaukee–Dearborn subway and across the West Side to its southwest end at Forest Park, with a total of 33 stations. At about 27 miles, it is the longest line on the Chicago "L" system and second busiest, and one of the longest local subway/elevated lines in the world. It has an average of 64,978 passengers boarding each weekday in 2022.
Park Street station is an MBTA subway station in Boston, Massachusetts. It is located at the intersection of Park Street and Tremont Street at the eastern edge of Boston Common in Downtown Boston. One of the two oldest stations on the "T", and part of the oldest subway line in the United States, Park Street is the transfer point between the Green and Red lines, as one of the quartet of "hub stations" on the MBTA subway system. Park Street is the fifth-busiest station in the MBTA network, with an average of 16,571 entries each weekday in FY2019.
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The Winter Street Concourse is a pedestrian tunnel connecting the upper levels of the Downtown Crossing and Park Street subway stations in Boston, Massachusetts. It facilitates movement between the Green and Orange rapid transit lines operated by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, and consequently alleviates congestion on the Red Line.
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Between 1892 and 1906, Chicago had three cable car tunnels under the Chicago River. Two were built for pedestrian and horse traffic and later converted, the third was built specially for cable-cars. After cable service ended they would be used by electric streetcars.
The Chicago Central Area Transit Plan, generally referred to as the Chicago Central Area Transit Project (CCATP) in the 1970s, was an extensive study of the rapid transit system in downtown Chicago; the study had begun in 1965.
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Ida B. Wells Drive is a major east–west street in downtown Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. It runs east from the Jane Byrne Interchange, where it meets Interstate 90 (I-90), I-94 and I-290. At Wells Street, Ida B. Wells Drive continues as a surface street past State Street and Michigan Avenue, until ending at Columbus Drive in Grant Park in front of the Buckingham Fountain. In 2018, the editorial board of The New York Times praised the Chicago City Council's renaming of the street to honor the journalist and civil rights activist Ida B. Wells.
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