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Blue Line Needs Better Signals, More Electricity, Articulated Trains to Alleviate Crowding
A new study from the Chicago Transit Authority on āLā capacity highlights where trains are running at capacity, and how the CTA can alleviate crowding.
July 7, 2017
RTA Report: CTA Runs an Efficient Transit System Compared to Peer Agencies
This week, rapid transit headaches in Washington, D.C. and the Bay Area highlighted the need for better maintenance of U.S. public transportation infrastructure. However, a new report from Chicagoland's Regional Transportation Authority suggests that the CTA is in a little better shape than its peers.
March 18, 2016
Bike-Share Equity Study Uses Old Chicago Data, But Divvy Still Needs Work
A new study concludes that most U.S. bike-share cities, including Chicago, have provided much better access to stations for whites than African Americans. The report is based on fall 2014 Divvy station location data, but the coverage area has greatly expanded since then to include many more communities of color, so it's likely that geographic access has significantly improved. However, it's clear that more work needs to be done in Chicago before the system can be considered truly accessible to African-American and Latino residents.
March 2, 2016
Study: To Keep Bicyclists Outside the Door Zone, You Need a Buffer
A new study has found that buffered bike lanes are better than conventional bike lanes when it comes to encouraging bicyclists to ride outside the door zone. The study draws its conclusion, in part, based on a test done with bike lanes in Chicago.
July 29, 2014
IDOT Prepares to Ram Through Another Expensive Highway Project
The Illinois Department of Transportation is again seeking the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning's help to build an expensive highway expansion that isn't included in the region's planning blueprint. This time, it's not about a putting a flyover above Halsted Street and a wall in front of people's homes, like the agency plans to do with the Circle Interchange expansion. IDOT, along with the Indiana Department of Transportation, needs approvals from several CMAP committees and the full board so the two agencies can spend $2.75 billion building a brand new four-lane highway in southern Will County.
August 20, 2013