![]() ![]() Purple Line: Linden, Central, Noyes, Foster, Davis, Dempster, Main, South Blvd.Green Line: Harlem/Lake, Oak Park, Ridgeland, Austin, Central, Laramie, Cicero, Pulaski, Conservatory, Kedzie, California, Ashland, Morgan, Clinton, Roosevelt, 35th-Bronzeville-IIT*, Indiana, 43rd, 47th, 51st, Halsted, King Drive, Ashland/63rd, Cottage Grove.Orange Line: Midway, Pulaski, Kedzie, Western, 35th/Archer, Ashland, Halsted.Pink Line: 54th/Cermak, Cicero, Kostner, Pulaski, Central Park, Kedzie, California, Western, Damen, Polk*.Brown Line: Kimball, Kedzie, Francisco, Rockwell, Western, Damen, Montrose, Irving Park, Addison, Paulina, Southport, Wellington, Diversey, Armitage, Sedgwick, Chicago, Merchandise Mart.Blue Line: O’Hare, Rosemont, Cumberland, Harlem, Montrose, California, Western (O'Hare branch), Damen, Washington, Monroe, Jackson, Clinton, LaSalle, UIC-Halsted, Racine, Illinois Medical District, Western (Forest Park branch), Kedzie-Homan, Pulaski, Cicero, Austin, Oak Park, Harlem, Forest Park.Red Line: Howard, Jarvis, Morse, Loyola, Granville, Thorndale, Addison*, Sheridan, Belmont*, Fullerton, Clark/Division, North/Clybourn, Chicago, Grand, Lake, Monroe, Jackson, Harrison, Roosevelt, Cermak-Chinatown, Sox-35th*, 47th, Garfield, 63rd, 69th, 79th, 87th.Here are the stations on the docket for 2021 work: So far in 2021, work has been completed at five CTA work facilities, plus five rail stations on the Red, Green and Pink lines. To give customers a heads-up on when work will be taking place, the CTA has created a dedicated Refresh & Renew webpage and also will be posting signs and messages on digital screens at each station a few days before work starts, while work is taking place, and after it's done. During the winter, crews are usually focused on making repairs and upgrades to CTA work facilities and subway stations, and during the warmer months, they concentrate on outdoor stations. The agency says Refresh & Renew builds on the CTA’s year-round, cyclical maintenance program for CTA stations and facilities launched in 2019. Crews will also be doing behind-the-scenes work, like removing outdated fixtures and equipment, and repairs to utility and plumbing lines. A stairwell upgrade at the 35th-Bronzeville-IIT station.Īlmost a third of the 125+ stops will get more extensive work this year, which may include upgraded LED lighting improved platform fixtures like benches, trash cans, windbreaks concrete repairs updating or replacement of old or damaged signs and more. Work performed will vary by location, but workers will power-wash all of those stations and repaint surfaces like columns, walls, railings, fencing and gates, platform fixtures, and more this year. The CTA says that under Refresh & Renew, it will speed up its existing rail station improvement program, with over 125 of the system's 145 stations scheduled to receive upgrades in 2021. Clean and well-maintained stations are an important part of our commitment to providing a comfortable transit experience.” “Refresh & Renew is our way of rolling out the welcome mat for our returning riders. “Throughout the pandemic, our number one goal has been to provide our customers and employees a safe, clean and healthy travel environment,” said CTA President Dorval R. It's part of the agency’s recently announced When You’re Ready, We’re Ready PR blitz to encourage ridership. Today the CTA launched a new strategy in that department, announcing Refresh & Renew, a program to deep-clean and upgrade 90 percent of the system's rail stations. Litter on a Red Line train last February. ![]() So it's crucial for local transit agencies to lure back rider by instilling confidence that commutes will be safe and sanitary. But according to Chicago Loop Alliance data, we've already been seeing a troubling rising in downtown driving that could lead to major traffic safety, pollution, and congestion issues. Now that more than 60 percent of Illinoisans have gotten at least one vaccine shot, happily workplaces, entertainment venues, and other destinations are reopening. ![]() One of the main gripes is that the stations and carriages have gotten dirtier, partly due to an increase in littering. Ever since transit ridership plummeted in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, there have been complaints that safety and rider experience on the CTA have gotten worse, likely as a result of there being fewer "eyes in the railcars" to discourage problematic behavior. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |